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Double Jeu

Original title: Der Richter und sein Henker
  • 1975
  • PG
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Jacqueline Bisset, Jon Voight, Robert Shaw, and Martin Ritt in Double Jeu (1975)
Suspense MysteryWhodunnitCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

When a Swiss cop is murdered, a veteran homicide inspector and a rookie are assigned to solve the case but they are obstructed by interfering Swiss politicians.When a Swiss cop is murdered, a veteran homicide inspector and a rookie are assigned to solve the case but they are obstructed by interfering Swiss politicians.When a Swiss cop is murdered, a veteran homicide inspector and a rookie are assigned to solve the case but they are obstructed by interfering Swiss politicians.

  • Director
    • Maximilian Schell
  • Writers
    • Friedrich Dürrenmatt
    • Maximilian Schell
    • Roberto De Leonardis
  • Stars
    • Jon Voight
    • Jacqueline Bisset
    • Martin Ritt
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Maximilian Schell
    • Writers
      • Friedrich Dürrenmatt
      • Maximilian Schell
      • Roberto De Leonardis
    • Stars
      • Jon Voight
      • Jacqueline Bisset
      • Martin Ritt
    • 26User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos25

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Jon Voight
    Jon Voight
    • Walter Tschanz
    • (as John Voight)
    Jacqueline Bisset
    Jacqueline Bisset
    • Anna Crawley
    Martin Ritt
    Martin Ritt
    • Hans Bärlach
    Robert Shaw
    Robert Shaw
    • Richard Gastmann
    Helmut Qualtinger
    Helmut Qualtinger
    • Oskar von Schwendi
    Friedrich Dürrenmatt
    Friedrich Dürrenmatt
    • Lamont Friedrich
    Lil Dagover
    Lil Dagover
    • Gastmann's Mother
    Gabriele Ferzetti
    Gabriele Ferzetti
    • Dr. Lucius Lutz
    Rudolf Hubacher
    • Bodyguard 1
    Rudolf Hunsperger
    • Bodyguard 2
    Norbert Schiller
    Norbert Schiller
    • Dr. Samuel Hungertobel
    Rita Calderoni
    Rita Calderoni
    • Nadine
    Guido Cerniglia
    • Coroner
    Willy Hügli
    • Alphons Clenin
    Margarete Schell Noé
    • Frau Schönler
    Otto Ryser
    • Blatter
    Toni Roth
    • Old Lady
    Wieland Liebske
    • Taxi Driver
    • Director
      • Maximilian Schell
    • Writers
      • Friedrich Dürrenmatt
      • Maximilian Schell
      • Roberto De Leonardis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    5.91.1K
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    Featured reviews

    TheCapsuleCritic

    Swiss Curio With Jon Voight & Jacqueline Bisset

    I saw this 1975 film when it first came out under the English title of END OF THE GAME which literally describes what happens but is not nearly as appropriate as the original title of THE JUDGE & HIS HANGMAN. If you are familiar with Swiss playwright/novelist Friedrich Durrenmatt (THE VISIT, THE PHYSICISTS) then you know what to expect. Durrenmatt is like a Swiss Samuel Beckett with a little of Harold Pinter thrown in for good measure. On the surface this is a standard murder mystery that isn't that hard to figure out. That isn't the point. How it arrives at its solution, the past incident that drives it, and the neatly absurdist dialogue that the major characters exchange are what END OF THE GAME is really about.

    Maximillian Schell, who is much better known for his acting, directed a handful of films of which this is undoubtedly the strangest. In fact it is splendidly strange. That is why it plays better today than it did then. Most Americans (certainly the reviewers) didn't get it at all. The scene with Donald Sutherland as a corpse, his rain soaked funeral, and the verbal exchanges between Martin Ritt and Jon Voight and Ritt and Robert Shaw should have tipped them off. This is no ordinary run-of-the-mill mystery even if the murder turns out to have been extremely ordinary.

    The movie is one of those international or Continental films that were so popular in the 1970s with a mixed cast of British, American, and European actors. Some of the dubbing leaves a lot to be desired and that is even true of the original German soundtrack but it doesn't really detract from the proceedings. It actually adds to the strangeness as does the Ennio Morricone score. Jon Voight, Jacqueline Bisset and Robert Shaw were already well known performers but casting director Martin Ritt (who had acted early in his Actors Studio days) was definitely an eccentric move but Ritt acquits himself well. Schell himself makes a brief cameo appearance (playing the piano for Pinchas Zukerman) and there's another cameo from silent screen star Lil Dagover (CABINET OF DR CALIGARI) as Shaw's mother. Fittingly she doesn't utter a word.

    I have waited patiently for years for 20th Century Fox to release this title on home video but had to settle for a DVD-R copied off the Fox Movie Channel until now. As another reviewer pointed out, the lack of subtitles is unfortunate as it is clear there are substantial differences between the German and English soundtracks. I was able to access the special features on my Blu-Ray player but without subtitles I can't understand what Maximillian Schell has to say about the film. Anyway, no matter where it comes from, I am delighted to have this in a more than respectable transfer with good sound. It has its flaws but it remains fascinating to watch...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
    9RSamson105

    An unforgettable film

    My wife & I saw this as the second feature at a drive-in (yes, that long ago) and it has stayed with us long after we've forgotten the main feature that night. A marvelous game of cat & mouse between two chess-masters, with Voight as their pawn. We've looked for it on television, on tape and on DVD ever since, hoping to decide if it was as impressive as we thought. Schell's direction is superb, building and maintaining a constant tension throughout. The actors performances are, well, what you'd expect from these actors at the top of their game. Beginning with two young men circa WWII, one betting the other that he can get away with a murder, The End of the Game ranks with the best of Le Carre's work in its examination of a master detective's plot to finally catch his bete noir in a crime.
    9aromatic-2

    Breathtaking performance by Martin Ritt

    Martin Ritt is absolutely spellbinding. He embodies one of the most unforgettable men I have ever met on the screen. It is a neat little thriller, and Shaw is fine as the would-be super-villain, but it is Ritt that still haunts my thoughts and dreams years after my three viewings of this film; I would love to get it on tape.
    6gridoon

    Twisty.

    A very obscure thriller - both in the sense that it's very hard to find (I actually saw what seemed to be the imported British version, under the title "Deception"; the print was in terrible condition), and also in the sense that it has a very murky structure and characters with motivations that are pretty hard to understand, unless perhaps you've read the book. Some good twists and interesting performances (especially by Robert Shaw as the politically powerful villain)....but hold off watching it until you come across a decent print. (**1/2)
    Tails-5

    One hole in the head, two bullets...

    Two bullets. Twoooo bullets. Interesting? Two bullets. That just about describes the wonderful dialogue in the movie. This movie has something in common with "The Sicilian Clan" in the sense that both try to be tense thrillers, but inadvertently end up being awkward comedies. The movie's potential was severely hampered by Martin Ritt, who possesses the worst table manners in the world. He never hesitates to show the world what his food looks like after it's chewed up. Other than that, all the clumsy direction never fails to pull a chuckle or two out of you when it tries to be intelligent (e.g. when the car comes crashing off the highway. It twirls over in slow motion, then lands on the cab and makes a hilarious, synthetic crash sound.) All in all, for me the movie ranks lower than "The Sicilian Clan".

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Robert Shaw claimed that he never received his fifty thousand dollar salary.
    • Quotes

      Richard Gastmann: Another year, your doctor says. That is, if he can operate on Thursday.

      Hans Bärlach: Another year.

      Richard Gastmann: Your last year, Hans. Why waste it on me?

      Hans Bärlach: One day I'm going to convict you for your crimes.

      Richard Gastmann: You can't let go of it, can you? You let it chew up your guts until it has chewed up your guts.

      Hans Bärlach: The Barlach's always had poor stomachs.

      Richard Gastmann: Keep on churning, Old Man; keep on churning. Still hung up on right and wrong. One day you're going to realise, there is none.

      Hans Bärlach: Have you ever seen your victims? I could show you pictures. How many people died because of you? Fifty, Sixty...?

      Richard Gastmann: I could show you...

      Hans Bärlach: ...a hundred, thousand?

      Richard Gastmann: ...earthquakes, plagues, famine, victims more mutilated than any explosions could make. Has to be done, Old Man. It has to be done.

      Hans Bärlach: If you don't do it, somebody else will?

      Richard Gastmann: Quite right. Anyway, I sleep now much better than i used to.

      [looking out the window]

      Richard Gastmann: Take the mob down there; pull ten out put ten back - doesn't make any difference.

      Hans Bärlach: You think you're God.

      Richard Gastmann: Only his humble servant, Old Man, only his humble servant.

      Hans Bärlach: You don't believe in God?

      Richard Gastmann: Oh, yes. I think religion's very good for children; Jesus, suffering on the cross. I don't know anything better. Look, Hans, we made a bet together. I won. You lost.

      Hans Bärlach: The result of that bet was death.

    • Crazy credits
      Corpse provided by Donald Sutherland
    • Alternate versions
      When the film was released internationally it was cut by 15 minutes. For unknown reasons, only the shorter international version has ever been released on home video. Both versions have a full soundtrack in English. The following sequences are missing in the shorter cut: 01 - After Baerlach visits Mrs. Schoenler there is a brief scene in which we see him feeding bears at a zoo. He then goes to the town hall and sees Gastmann from afar. This prompts a brief flashback of Nadine's corpse floating in the river. Baerlach talks to Lutz and asks him for a new partner. He wants Tschanz. Lutz says Tschanz is on holiday but Baerlach insists. Baerlach lights a cigar and is taken over by a coughing fit, Lutz asks for a glass of water but the secretary brings a flower. Lutz finally agrees to assign Tschanz to him and notes that they will make a great team. Baerlach thanks him and leaves. 02 - During the funeral scene there's an additional shot. After Tschanz notices the name on the wreath is wrong we see a woman's hat falling off and one of the mourners pick it up and throw it onto the coffin. The sound of the woman gasping can still be heard on the soundtrack when the trombonist empties water from his instrument in the short version instead of the correct sound of water pouring out. That shot is followed by another shot missing from the shorter cut in which a uniformed policeman congratulates Lutz on his speech. 03 - The first scene with Anna and Tschanz is a little different. They are first seen lying naked on the floor in silence. She gets up, lights a cigarette, and says "Don't think about it, it was good. I wanted that". She then walks over to the bathroom. In the shorter cut, the line is dubbed over the close-up of Anna and Tschanz and then cuts directly into Anna in the bathroom. 04 - There is another brief moment missing from the shorter cut in this sequence. After Anna says "Call me" Tschanz says "I hate telephones. I'd rather stand in front of your house and wait for you". There is a short discussion and she tells him to go. The scene then proceeds like in the shorter cut with Tschanz asking "Who are they". 05 - Right after the scene in which Baerlach returns home and takes off the arm protector Tschanz is seen in a phone box. He calls Anna but she isn't at home. 06 - After the "Dr. Lutz, the minister is expecting you" line, Tschanz is seen lying in bed looking sick and calling Anna's house again but no one answers. 07 - After Tschanz runs out of the baggage loading area there are two brief shots of Gastmann's henchmen watching him hidden behind crates. 08 - The sequence in which Tschanz and Anna are walking next to the river is longer. In the shorter version the scene ends after Tschanz asks Anna about Baerlach's suspicions but in the longer cut they continue talking. Anna tells Tschanz she wants him to be kind and talk to her. They talk about their families and she tells him he needs to grow up and be kind. Tschanz goes into the playground and starts playing football with the kids. Anna smiles at him. 09 - The entire sequence in which Baerlach leaves and is arguing with Tschanz and is then picked up by Gastmann as well as the entire sequence on the bridge in which they discuss their "game" and in which Gastmann disposes of the dead driver takes place at night. The sequence was originally shot day-for-night but the effect was removed in the shorter version. The scene is exactly the same bar one short insert. When Gastmann's henchman throws the driver's body in the water there is a short flashback of Nadine's corpse floating as seen in the Istanbul intro. 10 - After Gastmannshouts at Baerlach ("You fool") we see Tschanz lying in bed thinking. Then we see Anna emerging from the shower and getting dressed. Then we see Tschanz entering her house. Anna walks into her living room and sees him. He tells her he loves her and forces himself on her. She struggles but eventually says "Alright, if you want me you can have me. But you can't HAVE me. Understand?". She then tells him Robert has more power over her than ever before. They talk briefly and Tschanz concludes she never loved anyone. She is then seen leaving by car.
    • Connections
      Featured in Schach mit Dürrenmatt: Maximilian Schell über 'Der Richter und sein Henker' (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Violin Concerto in D: III. Rondo
      Written by Ludwig van Beethoven

      [played by violinist practicing under tree]

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    FAQ16

    • How long is End of the Game?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 5, 1978 (West Germany)
    • Countries of origin
      • West Germany
      • Italy
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El puente sobre Estambul
    • Filming locations
      • Bern, Kanton Bern, Switzerland
    • Production companies
      • MFG-Film
      • T.R.A.C.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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    Jacqueline Bisset, Jon Voight, Robert Shaw, and Martin Ritt in Double Jeu (1975)
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