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IMDbPro

Echec à l'organisation

Original title: The Outfit
  • 1973
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Robert Duvall, Joe Don Baker, Karen Black, and Robert Ryan in Echec à l'organisation (1973)
Released from prison In Illinois after serving 2 years and 3 months for carrying a concealed weapon, professional thief and bank robber Earl Macklin (Robert Duvall) is told by his girlfriend Bett (Karen Black) of his brother's execution by the Outfit. Macklin teams up with old partner Cody (Joe Don Baker) and starts to hit the Outfit to accrue $250,000 compensation he feels he's due for his brother's murder.
Play trailer1:58
1 Video
79 Photos
HeistCrimeDramaThriller

Earl Macklin robs a bank owned by the mob, serves his prison time and is released, only to start a private war against the crime outfit that owned the bank.Earl Macklin robs a bank owned by the mob, serves his prison time and is released, only to start a private war against the crime outfit that owned the bank.Earl Macklin robs a bank owned by the mob, serves his prison time and is released, only to start a private war against the crime outfit that owned the bank.

  • Director
    • John Flynn
  • Writers
    • Donald E. Westlake
    • John Flynn
  • Stars
    • Robert Duvall
    • Karen Black
    • Joe Don Baker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Flynn
    • Writers
      • Donald E. Westlake
      • John Flynn
    • Stars
      • Robert Duvall
      • Karen Black
      • Joe Don Baker
    • 78User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    Trailer

    Photos79

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Robert Duvall
    Robert Duvall
    • Earl Macklin
    Karen Black
    Karen Black
    • Bett Harrow
    Joe Don Baker
    Joe Don Baker
    • Jack Cody
    Robert Ryan
    Robert Ryan
    • Mailer
    Timothy Carey
    Timothy Carey
    • Jake Menner
    Richard Jaeckel
    Richard Jaeckel
    • Kimmie Cherney
    Sheree North
    Sheree North
    • Buck's Wife
    Felice Orlandi
    Felice Orlandi
    • Frank Orlandi
    Marie Windsor
    Marie Windsor
    • Madge Coyle
    Jane Greer
    Jane Greer
    • Alma Macklin
    Henry Jones
    Henry Jones
    • Doctor
    Joanna Cassidy
    Joanna Cassidy
    • Rita Mailer
    Tom Reese
    Tom Reese
    • Hit Man
    Elisha Cook Jr.
    Elisha Cook Jr.
    • Carl
    • (as Elisha Cook)
    Bill McKinney
    Bill McKinney
    • Buck Cherney
    Anita O'Day
    Anita O'Day
    • Anita O'Day
    Archie Moore
    Archie Moore
    • Packard
    Tony Young
    Tony Young
    • Accountant
    • Director
      • John Flynn
    • Writers
      • Donald E. Westlake
      • John Flynn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews78

    7.05.8K
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    Featured reviews

    rickygrove

    Well-made crime drama that honors the Richard Stark novel

    Everyone else has covered this movie well. It is indeed a tight, well-made crime drama with an excellent under-played central performance by Duval along with many very good scenes by classic character actors like Richard Jaeckel, Joanna Cassidy (who should have starred in Jim Thompson's "Hell of a Woman"), Marie Windsor, Henry Jones and many others. But the real stand-out (to my mind) is Karen Black. In the kind of roll that is generally reduced to an over-sexed gun-moll, Karen gives her character a real humanity. In one scene during a shoot out, she saves Duval and Baker by driving into and pinning against the wall the two mob men who are just about to take down our two guys. And in another scene she calls home on a pay-phone and is very chilly with her mother, but just about breaks down in asking her father if she can "come home for a while". She has never looked better in a film.

    Having read all of the Richard Stark books (Richard Stark is a pseudonym for Donald Westlake), the film catches the stripped-down, hard-boiled tone of the novels and it's central character who is on a controlled journey into vengeance. In fact the film is very much like many of the great Gold Medal paperback originals published in the 1950's and 1960's. If you like this kind of story, look for authors like Peter Rabe, Charles Williams, Milton Ozaki, Lionel White and many others. "Hard-Boiled America" by Geoffrey O'Brien (recently reprinted) covers the genre and it's authors very well and is highly recommended.

    I have to comment on the music and sound in the film - absolutely top notch! Many other crime films of the period would fill scenes with unnecessary music to amp up the suspense. "The Outfit" is very restrained and the music is used mostly to accent scenes and help transitions. Excellent score by Jerry Fielding. The sound work is great as well. The guns have a meaty sound without being to loud and dry. In one surprising scene, Joe Don Baker punches out a female receptionist and you hear her intake of breath, his fist whacking her jaw and the sound of her falling on the chair. All done with great finesse despite the brutality.

    One previous reviewer got it right when he talked about the last part of the film descending into a Quinn/Martin television style. I think the director, John Flynn, is responsible. "The Outfit" seemed to me to be a lot like TV - with the old, wide master shoot to establish, cut to over-the-shoulder, back to the other close-up and end with the master. The director didn't have a real sense of the style of the film. I disagree that his work is like a "shaker chair". I think John Flynn directed it blandly, not simply, because he has a limited imagination. So many scenes could have benefited from a moving camera or more imaginative lighting. Flynn's work just didn't measure up to the excellent script and the great performances. Still, he didn't kill the film and even today (2004) it remains a little gem of the seventies that deserves a DVD release with extras.
    Wizard-8

    Good of its kind

    "The Outfit" was forgotten for years after its theatrical release, though in recent years it seems to have been revived and starting to find an audience. For the most part, it does deserve its rediscovery. It's directed in an engaging '70s style that sets it apart from many other man against the mob movies. The style is not polished, and gives the movie a rough and dirty feeling that makes what happens on screen seem more realistic. The violence doesn't come constantly, but when it does happen it gives the movie a serious kick, despite the movie in the end earning just a PG rating. Duvall does well, not making his character a superman, but someone who is (believably) well skilled and crafty. Baker makes a good sidekick. If I have any complaints about the movie, they are that there isn't a terrible amount of plot, and that Robert Ryan's character doesn't get quite enough footage. But despite those problems, the movie works well, and is a must for those who are fans of cynical '70s movies.
    matt-201

    POINT BLANK in the style of STRAIGHT TIME

    The first hour is dazzling: Robert Duvall, a bank-heist guy screwed over by the mob, decides he wants $250,000 as recompense. And like Lee Marvin in POINT BLANK, he doesn't take no for an answer. The director, John Flynn, is one of the most underrated in crime cinema on the basis of this picture and ROLLING THUNDER alone: he takes a pretty familiar man-against-the-syndicate story and shoots it with a plainness so eloquent the movie takes on the dignity of a Shaker chair. Duvall is an extraordinarily expressive hard case, especially in his brutally unsentimental scenes with his uncertain moll (a lyrical and volcanic Karen Black). Maybe it's the Donald Westlake source novel, but all the bit parts are beautifully, almost journalistically characterized (with none of the cutesy color of Elmore Leonard). The last act detours into Quinn-Martin territory, but that's not the worst thing in the world, is it? Almost everything in this movie is just incredibly articulate: check out the scene between Robert Ryan, an aging, cock-of-the-walk, but rather insecure mob boss, and the beautiful, put-together young wife (Joanna Cassidy) whom he loves but treats like dirt. A single argument about listening to a Rams game on a car radio speaks novels about their relationship in four terse lines. Flynn could give today's neo-noir directors seminars in the beauties of haiku-like plainspokenness.
    bob the moo

    Tough thriller

    Earl Macklin is released from prison to find that his brother has been killed and he is a target of a hitman. Having dealt with the killer he discovers that a bank job he did had been owned by the mob. Macklin joins with partner Cody to continually hit the organisation until they pay him $250,000 to make amends. However can two men take on the whole mob?

    I approached this as someone who has seen plenty of tough 70's mob movies – both good and bad. However my wariness soon vanished as this turned out to be genuinely hard boiled stuff. From a great script the plot follows the two men as they repeatedly hit the mob. The dialogue is hard but also informative – not just tough for the sake of being tough. The action is also quite shocking – women being beaten etc, even for this type of movie it was quite pretty harsh.

    Duvall is excellent – many actors may have played it a bit softer to try and keep the audience but he goes all the way as a cruel violent man. Baker is more affable but is less effective for just that reason. Black has a small role but makes the most of it. The mob support cast is good but really Duvall takes this and makes it his own.

    Overall if you like the 70's hard boiled thriller genre then this is for you. Even if you don't then there is still much to appreciate here – not the best film in the world (plot is a little linear) but still a good tough thriller.
    7Ghostshadow187

    Interesting take on the revenge flick

    I was surprised at how much I enjoyed The outfit. Robert Duvall is great in his role as the not so likable ex con Earl Maclin, on a revenge mission against the outfit(sort of a non Italian mafia) for killing his brother. The film does this in a very different way, in that Maclin, doesn't go about the clichéd "Kill everyone" approach. Instead he demands monetary compensation and warns the outfit that he'll bleed them dry until he gets it. I really enjoyed the first two thirds of the film that deal with Maclin and his accomplice Cody(Joe Don Baker(who was also great in his role)) and how they go about robbing the outfits operations. The finale goes a bit too exploitation and OTT for my liking, which is something of a disappointments. The other problem I had was Maclins relationship with his moll(who only seems to make about 2 major appearances in the film) which i felt was underdeveloped. Overall, The Outfit is a nice little film, that deserves a bit more attention than it got.

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    Related interests

    Robert De Niro and Val Kilmer in Heat (1995)
    Heist
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Brian Garfield, in an introduction to a reprint of the novel on which this film is based, notes that it originally was written by director John Flynn as a period piece, intending to be set in the postwar 1940s. That's why such "film noir" veterans as Elisha Cook Jr., Richard Jaeckel, Marie Windsor, and Jane Greer appeared in it. The studio, however, decided it would be too expensive to shoot a period picture, so the script was superficially updated --- the World War II vets became Vietnam vets, and actors and actresses like Robert Ryan, Karen Black, and Sheree North joined the cast. The result was that the story was restored to its original concept. (The series on which this book was based was written and set in the then contemporary 1960s and 1970s). Had the period piece idea gone through, this would have represented a rare case of backdating a character.
    • Goofs
      A killer fires a revolver with a silencer on the barrel. The gun would still make a loud sound due to the gap between the cylinder and the barrel.
    • Quotes

      Buck's Wife: [alone with Jack Cody, who's sitting on the porch of the 'hideout', while she's just out of the shower dressed in nothing but a see-through bathrobe] Wanna come on inside 'n have a drink?

      Jack Cody: No, thank you.

      Buck's Wife: You sure? We got time...

      Jack Cody: No, thank you, *ma'am*.

      Buck's Wife: You got a problem?

      Jack Cody: [smirking] Lady, after a while, a fella learns things. Some women are trouble.

      Buck's Wife: Suit yourself.

      [goes into the house, pissed]

      Jack Cody: I always do.

    • Alternate versions
      SPOILER: The TV version plays out as a true noir with Echec à l'organisation (1973) ending as Earl and Cody are trapped within Mailer's burning house while the police and fire department surround the building.
    • Connections
      Featured in TCM Guest Programmer: George Pelecanos (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Your Guess Is Just As Good As Mine
      Written by Steve Gillette and Jeremy Joe Kronsberg

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    FAQ14

    • How long is The Outfit?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 23, 1975 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • En contra de la organización
    • Filming locations
      • Biltmore Hotel - 506 S. Grand Avenue, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Aurora Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 43m(103 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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