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IMDbPro

Racket

Original title: The Long Good Friday
  • 1980
  • 12
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
28K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,919
2,227
Bob Hoskins in Racket (1980)
Trailer for this thriller about a British crime boss who has a very bad day
Play trailer2:43
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

An up-and-coming gangster is tested by the insurgence of an unknown, very powerful threat.An up-and-coming gangster is tested by the insurgence of an unknown, very powerful threat.An up-and-coming gangster is tested by the insurgence of an unknown, very powerful threat.

  • Director
    • John Mackenzie
  • Writer
    • Barrie Keeffe
  • Stars
    • Bob Hoskins
    • Helen Mirren
    • Paul Freeman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    28K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,919
    2,227
    • Director
      • John Mackenzie
    • Writer
      • Barrie Keeffe
    • Stars
      • Bob Hoskins
      • Helen Mirren
      • Paul Freeman
    • 188User reviews
    • 74Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Long Good Friday
    Trailer 2:43
    The Long Good Friday
    The Long Good Friday
    Trailer 2:05
    The Long Good Friday
    The Long Good Friday
    Trailer 2:05
    The Long Good Friday

    Photos103

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    Top cast59

    Edit
    Bob Hoskins
    Bob Hoskins
    • Harold
    Helen Mirren
    Helen Mirren
    • Victoria
    Paul Freeman
    Paul Freeman
    • Colin
    Leo Dolan
    • Phil
    Kevin McNally
    Kevin McNally
    • Irish Youth
    Patti Love
    Patti Love
    • Carol
    P.H. Moriarty
    P.H. Moriarty
    • Razors
    Derek Thompson
    Derek Thompson
    • Jeff
    Bryan Marshall
    Bryan Marshall
    • Harris
    Ruby Head
    Ruby Head
    • Harold's Mother
    Charles Cork
    Charles Cork
    • Eric
    Olivier Pierre
    • Chef
    Pierce Brosnan
    Pierce Brosnan
    • 1st Irishman
    Daragh O'Malley
    Daragh O'Malley
    • 2nd Irishman
    Dave King
    Dave King
    • Parky
    Karl Howman
    • David
    Brian Hall
    Brian Hall
    • Alan
    Alan Ford
    Alan Ford
    • Jack
    • Director
      • John Mackenzie
    • Writer
      • Barrie Keeffe
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews188

    7.528.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7SnoopyStyle

    great Bob Hoskins

    Harold Shand (Bob Hoskins) is a successful London gangster aspiring to be a legitimate owner of the abandoned Docklands for a casino and other developments with American mafia money. Victoria (Helen Mirren) is his smarter better half. While he sips champagne with corrupt cops and American mobster Charlie, IRA hit-man (Pierce Brosnan) is killing his right hand man. His other guy Eric is blown up in a car bomb outside of church on Good Friday. Harold tries to uncover the cause and finds that a minor deal unknown to him connected to IRA had gone terribly wrong. The IRA holds Harold personally responsible.

    This is a great staring performance from Bob Hoskins. He infuses this movie with great energy. Without him, the movie does struggle a little. The plot doesn't have much tension. It also has a great young Pierce Brosnan prominently as a nameless IRA hit-man.
    darth_sidious

    CLASS!!!

    What can I say? 2 hours of class! This is a film which pretty much tells it how it is. The gangster world is not glamour, it's not a world we should dream about being in.

    This film is gritty and realistic, it's one of the best pictures ever to be released from the U.K.

    Bob Hoskins is in terrific form here, so damn perfect. Helen Mirren is stunning, great actress and rather eye-catching!!!

    Pierce Brosnan is hardly in the picture, he was unknown at the time. There are a few faces which you'll recognise, most of them appeared in famous British Television dramas!

    The film setting is gritty and shows the real London underworld in the early Thatcher years.

    The direction is confident as is the script, and by the end you'll realise that they had guts! The film score is wonderful, it's always in my head.

    This film is class!
    8martin-217

    a classic that invites re-viewing

    There are so many things to appreciate in this movie. First and foremost, Bob Hoskins and Helen Mirren give outstanding performances as the First Couple of London's underworld. He, with the Cockney-made-good aspirations for status and the "class" he can never attain, epitomizes the hands-on manager overtaken by larger events. She, the cool-headed savvy- tough-and-sexy moll, is almost on top of things enough to redeem the situation but not quite. The key elements of the underworld ruling coalition-- dirty councilor and policeman, lieutenants of varying backgrounds both tough and educated-- make you believe in how this man has achieved peace through strength.

    The film's plot is Byzantine whodunit, with gangland-style violence as an accent piece that seems downright tame in the age of "Pulp Fiction". The real hidden star, though, is late-70's London-- oh so run-down and yet full of the potential that drives Harold's ambitions. The views from boating on the Thames are unrecognizable to those who have only seen modern London--- the sole landmarks in common are Tower Bridge and the Savoy hotel. The towers of the City and modern Docklands are just a twinkle in dreamers' eyes.

    Overall TLGF is a modern tragedy in the true land-of-Shakespeare tradition, somewhere between Macbeth and Hamlet and King Lear: ambition, betrayal, and the sweep of history interact richly without being heavy-handed in symbolism or over-artiness. This is a satisfying and complex film that invites re-viewing and reflection.
    9hitchcockthelegend

    It's not about safety, it's about honour.

    It's the early 1980s, it's Good Friday, and Harold Shand is waiting to entertain some powerful American muscle. He hopes to get them to help fund his dockside development, but someone is murdering his men, and although Harold has a good idea who is responsible, he isn't quite prepared for the events that follow.

    Plot wise, The Long Good Friday is a lesson in under taxing the audience, simplicity in structure and forgoing thunder in the name of telling a solid story. The Long Good Friday is a British gangster picture that owes more to the Paul Muni and Edward G Robinson pictures from the golden age than something like "The Godfather". Where the characters are men of the street, working class villains who literally could be living around the corner from us, their respective antics giving them a reputation as infamous stars to be feared - and grudgingly admired.

    What many modern day film lovers may not be aware of is that "The Long Good Friday" had its release delayed, held back a year as Margaret Thatcher and her merry men frothed at the mouth due to the film's portrayal of the Irish Rebublican Army. This was at a time when the Irish troubles were reaching new and terrifying heights, and here in this film, the government sensed a fall out that could have sent wrong message shock waves across the British Isles. This is one of the chief reasons that lifts the pic high above many of its contemporaries, it may be a simple story, but it's not merely about two gangs striving for power on one manor!.

    Barrie Keeffe's script positively bristles with a hard bastard edge, some of the set pieces play out as true Brirtish greats, once viewed they are not to be forgotten. Some of the dialogue has an air of timeless bravado about it, delivered with cockney brashness from Bob Hoskins' Harold Shand. Hoskins is on fire, seemingly revelling in the role and fusing menace with a genuine sense of earthiness, one moment Harold is the bloke you want to have a pint of beer with, the next he's one step from rage induced retribution. Helen Mirren is fabulous as Harold's wife, Victoria, loyal and unerringly calm in the face of the madness unfolding, while the supporting cast are also highly effective, with a cameo from Pierce Brosnan that is icy cold in making a point.

    Perhaps now it feels like it's only of its time, and it may well be that it's only British viewers of a certain age that can readily embrace the all encompassing thread of gangland London at risk from insurgents? But I will be damned should I ever choose to love this film less with each passing year, for to me it only just stops shy of being a British masterpiece, bristling with realism at a troubled time, and cheesing off Margaret Thatcher in the process, hell it works for me, always. 9/10
    8jgcole

    1970's Gangsters - London style.

    This film opens with several disjointed scenes that leaves the viewer a little breathless and confused: A chauffeur murdered in his car, two men counting cash in a suitcase who are subsequently murdered, a man being knifed in a swimming club and a car bomb exploding outside of a church. We are able to catch up as the story slowly reveals itself but this one does require some viewer participation. While a very intelligent and well scripted film, the action is intense, the body count high and the violence more graphic than is usual for a British film of its era.

    The central character in this crime drama is Harold Shand, a highly successful East End gangster who has just returned to London after a business trip to the U.S. Upon his return he finds his mob under attack, several of his employees killed and his organization the target of an unknown foe. Meanwhile he's trying to put together a semi-legit real estate deal, with American Mafia participation. Harold has to keep his American friends from getting nervous with an all out war going on and get to the bottom of whatever has gone wrong while he was away.

    Harold is aided in all of this by the classiest moll ever: Victoria. She's beautiful, educated, well-mannered and high class (she brags that she went to school with Princess Anne). Her cool as ice exterior is quit the contrast to the crude thug, Harold, who fancies himself a businessman and hobnobs with politicians and legitimate entrepreneurs but is really only a tough Cockney hood (or 'ood as they say). Victoria tries to handle the Americans while Harold and his mob round up the usual suspects in an attempt to find out where the heat is coming from. Harold is at once a ruthless brute and a lovable and vulnerable little man and by the end of the movie it's easy to find yourself falling for him. He actually has real affection for his crew and treats them as family. This may leave him exposed as, like most movie gangsters, his arrogance and belief in his own invincibility are what will bring him down.

    Bob Hoskins, in his first starring role, plays Harold in a performance that conjures up images of other little big men of the silver screen like Edward G. Robinson or James Cagney in some of their great gangster roles. While not as well known as his award winning role in the under appreciated "Mona Lisa", it is the one that put Hoskins on the map. Victoria is played by Helen Mirren and it's hard to take your eye off of her in all of her scenes. Helen was a very good looking girl in her day and was already an established star (having survived her role in "Caligula"). Eddie Constantine, Europe's favorite American, plays the American mafioso and a young Pierce Brosnan, in his first movie, plays an IRA killer.

    The plot is a bit complex with a lot of characters to keep track of and the almost incomprehensible Cockney accents and slang are hard to follow (subtitles are helpful for non-Brits). But the story moves along smartly, the direction is very good and the lighting and photography excellent. This film is well done from its start to its memorable conclusion and is highly recommended.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Bob Hoskins' voice was dubbed over by another actor from Wolverhampton out of fear that Americans wouldn't understand his London accent. After Hoskins threatened to sue Jack Gill and British Lion, the dubbing was removed. He was supported by Richard Burton, Sir Alec Guinness, and Warren Beatty.
    • Goofs
      The last shot of the swimming pool being drained is actually water coming in, but shown in reverse.
    • Quotes

      Pool Attendant: They kept it all incognito. They're gonna collect the body in an ice cream van.

      Harold: There's a lot of dignity in that, isn't there? Going out like a raspberry ripple.

    • Alternate versions
      Some dialogue has been altered on the DVD version presumably for the US audience. "National Service" becomes "Army Service" and in the scene where Harold says they had to carry a wireless about has been changed to carry a bazooka about.
    • Connections
      Featured in Dangereuse Humiliation (1982)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 19, 1983 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Handmade Films
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Du sang sur la Tamise
    • Filming locations
      • Brixton, London, Greater London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Black Lion Films
      • Calendar Productions
      • HandMade Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 54 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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