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Le cercle noir

Original title: The Stone Killer
  • 1973
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
Le cercle noir (1973)
Home Video Trailer from Columbia Pictures
Play trailer2:18
1 Video
47 Photos
ActionCrimeDramaThriller

A top New York detective is sent to Los Angeles where he must solve a case involving an old Sicilian Mafia family feud.A top New York detective is sent to Los Angeles where he must solve a case involving an old Sicilian Mafia family feud.A top New York detective is sent to Los Angeles where he must solve a case involving an old Sicilian Mafia family feud.

  • Director
    • Michael Winner
  • Writers
    • Gerald Wilson
    • John Gardner
  • Stars
    • Charles Bronson
    • Martin Balsam
    • Jack Colvin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    4.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Michael Winner
    • Writers
      • Gerald Wilson
      • John Gardner
    • Stars
      • Charles Bronson
      • Martin Balsam
      • Jack Colvin
    • 60User reviews
    • 40Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Stone Killer
    Trailer 2:18
    The Stone Killer

    Photos47

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    Top cast50

    Edit
    Charles Bronson
    Charles Bronson
    • Lou Torrey
    Martin Balsam
    Martin Balsam
    • Al Vescari
    Jack Colvin
    Jack Colvin
    • Jumper
    Paul Koslo
    Paul Koslo
    • Langley
    Norman Fell
    Norman Fell
    • Les Daniels
    David Sheiner
    David Sheiner
    • Guido Lorenz
    Stuart Margolin
    Stuart Margolin
    • Lawrence
    Ralph Waite
    Ralph Waite
    • Mathews
    Alfred Ryder
    Alfred Ryder
    • Tony Champion
    Walter Burke
    Walter Burke
    • J D
    Kelley Miles
    Kelley Miles
    • Geraldine Wexton
    • (as Kelly Miles)
    Eddie Firestone
    Eddie Firestone
    • Armitage
    Charles Tyner
    Charles Tyner
    • Police Psychiatrist
    Byron Morrow
    Byron Morrow
    • Station Commander
    Lisabeth Hush
    Lisabeth Hush
    • Dr. Helen Torrey
    Frank Campanella
    Frank Campanella
    • Calabriese
    Gene Woodbury
    • Paul Long
    Robert Emhardt
    Robert Emhardt
    • Fussy Man
    • Director
      • Michael Winner
    • Writers
      • Gerald Wilson
      • John Gardner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews60

    6.14.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6Witchfinder-General-666

    Charlie Bronson Can Kick Your Ass!

    Michael Winner has directed the great Charles Bronson in several films, all of which can be described shortly as 'bad-ass'. Their collaborations include some truly great films including the 1974 vigilante masterpiece "Death Wish" and the hard-boiled Western "Chato's Land" (1972). All the films that the actor/director team Bronson/Winner made together are highly entertaining, and while "The Stone Killer" certainly isn't one of their best collaborations (in fact, its arguably their weakest besides the hugely fun but very silly "Death Wish 3") it is definitely another testosterone-driven flick that will not leave my fellow Bronson-fans bored.

    Bronson stars as Lou Torrey, a tough New York detective who gets transferred to LA. Soon after arriving in LA, hints lead Torrey to a Mafia-Don's plot to use Vietnam Veterans as assassins... My fellow reviewers seem to either love or hate this film, the division being between Bronson fans and non-Bronson fans. As a huge fan of Charles Bronson, I tend to be on the 'love it' side, though, as mentioned above, it is nowhere near one of the most interesting flicks of his. It pales in comparison to other Bronson/Winner Vehicles such as the first two "Death Wish" films, "Chato's Land" or "The Mechanic", but then, these are all great 70s cult favorites, and while "The Stone Killer" is, in my opinion not quite as good, it is still a decent enough film that promises action and bad-assery. Bronson is his great self once again. To me personally, the man's presence alone makes it impossible for a film not to be at least entertaining. Apart from Bronson, the film features another truly great cult-actor, the magnificent Martin Balsam, who plays the role of a mob boss. Michael Winner has been unfairly scorned by critics throughout his career. Fact is, that the man is actually an outstanding director of gritty cult-cinema, who has been successful in any genre he has worked in, be it Action/Thriller ("Death Wish", "The Mechanic"), Western ("Chato's Land", "Lawman") or supernatural Horror ("The Sentinel"). Some folks only seem to be satisfied when they can claim intellectual superiority over other people's work. Some people seem to complain about this film's lacking depth and not bringing up any ideas. I wonder what these folks expect. This is a Bronson flick: It's meant to be hard-hitting, bad-ass entertainment, not melodramatic drivel. "The Stone Killer" features Bronson, loads of action and is filmed in typically stylish 70s style. What else could one ask for? Recommended to all my fellow Bronson fans.
    9legendaryunderdog

    Take away his badge and he'd top the ten most wanted list!

    A Dirty Harry clone? The Stone Killer is an interesting film, Bronson portrays a plain-clothes cop named Lou Torrey, Torrey has a penchant for being a little violent at times and it costs him his badge in NYC. Torrey eventually picks up a Lieutenant position at the Los Angeles department and gets knee deep in some real problems. War veterans (Vietnam) with itchy trigger fingers, anti-war sentiment, druggies, prostitutes, civil rights issues, a mafia-related vengeance plot that has been in the works for forty two years as well as a host of other problems. I had to watch this film twice in order to really follow the films somewhat confusing pace, there are some subplots which confused me a little bit but upon the second viewing I had, the film made a lot more sense to me than in my initial viewing. There are some scenes that go straight from Los Angeles to New York City and back throughout the film but the pace is easy to keep up with. There is a ton of action to feast your eyes upon, many gun fights, a few car chases, etc. Bronson acts in his usual tough-guy role as Lou Torrey and plays it very well in my opinion. The ending is not as satisfactory as I would have liked, but Director Michael Winner is known for having unique endings/twists to his films. As far as rating the film goes, The Stone Killer in my opinion is just a notch or two below other Bronson/Winner collaborations such as 'The Mechanic' or the classic 'Death Wish', but all in all I would recommend this film to any Bronson fan, or anyone who appreciates old, dated action films. I certainly enjoyed it.
    Michael_Elliott

    Fun Bronson Film Packed with Action

    The Stone Killer (1973)

    *** (out of 4)

    Charles Bronson plays tough Detecitve Lou Torrey who finds himself investigating a murder, which no one seems to know what it's connected to. After getting a name the investigation grows deeper and more and more bodies begin to pile up. Soon Mafia boss Al Vescari (Martin Balsam) enters the picture.

    In a lot of ways this film borrows from DIRTY HARRY. Bronson is basically playing the same type of character, although this movie makes sure to show his character as someone who isn't a racist but instead someone who will beat you no matter what your color is. The film touches on several issues including racism but there's no question that the viewer isn't meant to think too much. Instead this is just a fast-paced action movie that has a lot of fights, a lot of gun battles and of course the lead doing what he does best.

    It's really interesting watching the films that Bronson and director Michael Winner made during this period. In many ways this one here contains the most violence and it's certainly the most action pack. I'd say that the story has a bit too much going on as there's a lot of plot here for this type of movie but thankfully the screenplay basically just puts Bronson into one dangerous situation after another. This is a great thing because he shoots bad guys, beats confessions out of people and basically does whatever he can to get the job done.

    Bronson is quite good in the picture and once again he isn't given too much dialogue. The actor always acted with his body and he would have been perfect in the silent era. He turns in a very good performance here and really packs a punch with the role including some very funny bits of dialogue. The supporting cast is also very good with Balsam doing a good job in the Mafia role and especially a scene set in a cemetery. You've also got Jack COlvin, Norman Fell and even John Ritter in an early role.

    THE STONE KILLER has a lot of good things going for it but the action and stunts deserve a lot of credit. As you'd expect for the era, there's a pretty good car chase as well as plenty of scenes where bullets are flying and bodies are dropping. Fans of Bronson will certainly eat this one up but he and the director were about to make their masterpiece the following year with DEATH WISH.
    5Coventry

    Charlie VS the Mafia Factory

    I sought relaxing and undemanding action entertainment, I found …. Charlie Bronson! What's better after a hard and long working day than to sit down in a comfortable couch, switch off all still operational brain functions, and watch Charlie kill off some random street scum? During the 70's and 80's, Bronson mastered in depicting unorthodox coppers/relentless vigilantes in ultra-violent and gritty movies, and personally I love each and every single one of them, even though – admittedly – they're not the most sophisticated or even memorable form of art! In this same period, Charlie collaborated a number of times with director Michael Winner, who himself isn't exactly known for his subtlety and flair either, so a joint venture of these gentlemen is a guaranteed piece of uncompromising trash. "The Stone Killer" boosts a slightly more ambitious storyline – one based on a novel by John Gardner – but eventually it just remains a raw 'lone cop' thriller. After the umpteenth "shoot first, ask questions later" incident, lieutenant Lou Torrey gets transferred from gloomy New York to sunny California. There, during a banal prisoner's transport, he stumbles upon a convoluted crime network that brings him all the way back to New York. Torrey, thanks to the help of bizarre informants and dissident interrogation techniques, gradually uncovers the plot of a mafia war to end all mafia wars. Bronson's acting performance is more automatic pilot than ever, but Michael Winner serves numerous exciting car chases and vigorous shootouts, including a wildly out-of-control finale. Did I mention that the film is violent?!? This is early 70's at its best, full of racial slur, realistic dummies falling from the nineteenth floor and gay musicians getting run over by a Cadillac! Oh, and this movie proves that Charlie Bronson is the most efficient shooter ever! With him, each shot is a hit. Whether from inside a shaky helicopter or from an impossible angle on a staircase, it's always bullseye!
    7Enforcer686

    The Stone Face

    You either get Old Stone Face or you don't. I get him. He played virtually the same type of character in every movie from the '70s forward, although his character's profession changed from time to time. Didn't matter if he was an unflinching streetwise cop that walks outside the law to bring justice, an architect, or an amazingly tough journalist that can beat up bad guys as easily as normal people breath air (how often do you see that?), he was always a character that looked out for what was right, the law be damned. And no mamby pamby metrosexual stuff anywhere in sight.....

    This movie was interesting to me in that it was filmed during the prime of the '70s Cop Movie glory days and also happened to be part of the golden age for Bronson himself. I dig the terrible period clothing, hair and lingo. I also dig the neo-psychedelic soundtrack. It was rather amusing seeing Bronson amongst the young hippie burnouts at a wacked out party when he was searching for clues, talk about a fish out of water! And even way back then, the ever popular grouchy old Italian mobster stereotype was in full play, although this was one of the first Bronson films to do this (and it often resurfaced in his movies, even in Death Wish 4 decades later). It also featured several familiar faces including "Mr. Roper" of Three's Company as a cop(!) and "Jack Tripper" of the same show as a bumbling, inept rookie cop. Those with either sharp memories or an extensive Twilight Zone collection will recognize Mob Boss Vescari as the star of the much loved wax figures episode (New Exhibit).

    You're not going to see Oscar type performances in a Bronson film, but then again, that's not what they were shooting for. You do get a glimpse of a great period of gritty American cop films. They didn't have the internet to help them. No GPS. No Google maps. Just coffee, steel revolvers, typewriters and good old fashioned investigational work, and of course real cars that were driven to death by stunt men, not computer generated crashes. And you do get politically incorrect, 150 proof MANDOM of the kind that isn't made any more. And that makes for an enjoyable Sunday afternoon in my book.

    More like this

    L'évadé
    6.1
    L'évadé
    Monsieur Saint-Ives
    6.2
    Monsieur Saint-Ives
    La cité de la violence
    6.2
    La cité de la violence
    Cosa Nostra - L'Affaire Valachi
    6.4
    Cosa Nostra - L'Affaire Valachi
    Avec les compliments de Charlie
    5.6
    Avec les compliments de Charlie
    Monsieur Majestyk
    6.7
    Monsieur Majestyk
    De la part des copains
    5.7
    De la part des copains
    Le Messager de la mort
    5.4
    Le Messager de la mort
    Le flingueur
    6.8
    Le flingueur
    L'enfer de la violence
    5.9
    L'enfer de la violence
    Les Collines de la terreur
    6.6
    Les Collines de la terreur
    Un espion de trop
    6.5
    Un espion de trop

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Underworld settings in the USA featured in the movie included Skid Row in Los Angeles and Little Italy and Spanish Harlem in New York City.
    • Goofs
      At the start of the motorcycle chase, Langley emerges from the alley and has to go around a parked red Ford Pinto. A moment later, Torrey's Plymouth emerges from the same alley in close pursuit and the Pinto is gone.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Guido Lorenz: [Lorenz and Torrey, in car, as they watch Vescari enter a church] Nothing changes, only the names.

      Lou Torrey: You gotta be kidding. We're chest deep in water. Screaming against the rushing tide.

      Al Vescari: [cut to Vescari in church confessional, after organizing the hit on the other Dons] Bless me, Father, for I have sinned. I haven't been to confession for ten days. I lose my temper...

      Lou Torrey: [cut back to Torrey and Lorenz in car] You know, last three weeks, in New York City alone, there were 159 homicides?

      Al Vescari: [in confessional] I don't mean to be harsh... but I... struck my son in anger last Tuesday.

      Lou Torrey: [in car] Three thousand criminal assaults, six thousand robberies.

      Al Vescari: [in confessional] Ruth, my wife, bless her, I swore at her.

      Lou Torrey: [in car] You multiply that by Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia, Los Angeles.

      Al Vescari: [in confessional] For these... and all the other sins which I cannot remember, forgive me.

      [exits confessional, pauses to cross himself in front of the altar, and leaves church]

      Lou Torrey: [in car, watching Vescari get into his limo] You remember that cartoon of an old Roman Circus, where all the lions are roaring, and the page boy yells down the corridor...

      [to camera]

      Lou Torrey: you've got five minutes, Christians.

      [Vescari's limo pulls away as credits roll]

    • Crazy credits
      Actor Gene Woodbury is credited in opening credits only.
    • Alternate versions
      In the German video cut 13 minutes are missing. 02:33: Lou Torrey visits his wife. Both talk about their daughter and New York in general. She says: I look at you and I see this town. Complete scene is missing.(1:30 min.) 18:04: Lipper's assassination is prepared. Lipper himself fools a cop in hospital who should bring him back to jail (4:25 min.). 33:11: Vescari explains further details of his plan. All men go back to their cars (2:13 min.). 36:20: Torrey looks at Geraldine Waxton's dossier (0:10 min.). 38:58: Both cops run down the stairs. Torrey searches for Geraldine Waxton in a flower power parish in Carmel. The whole scene is missing. Geraldine asks Torrey if he would be interested in her. Torrey answers: Another time, another place, another cop. (4:19 min). 48:19: The car is driving around a corner (0:06 min.). 59:12: Matthews explains his hatred against the desert mission (0:12 min.). 90:26: Torrey sits in the car and quotes a word that was common in the roman arena: You've got five minutes, Christians. (0:07 min.).
    • Connections
      Featured in En Büyük Yumruk (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      The Stone Killer (Main Title)
      Written by Roy Budd

      Performed by Roy Budd And His Orchestra

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 4, 1973 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • United States
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El triturador
    • Filming locations
      • Antelope Valley Indian Museum State Historic Park - 15701 East Avenue M, Lancaster, California, USA(Exteriors and interiors: Mobsters' desert base called "The Old Wexton Indian house")
    • Production companies
      • Produzioni De Laurentiis International Manufacturing Company
      • Rizzoli Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,386,064
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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