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Get Carter
Film Description Michael Caine plays the title character, an ice-cold, efficiently lethal London mobster investigating his brother's death in the seedy Newcastle underworld. Based on the novel 'Jack's Return Home' by Ted Lewis.
Film Information
DVD Extras Audio commentary by Michael Caine, director Mike Hodges, and cinematographer Wolfgang Suschitzky, music only soundtrack, 3 trailers.
Technical Details
Reviews & ArticlesShare your thoughts and opinions - write a review
Review by dexy on 30th October 2001 Mike Hodges' Get Carter is a tough and thoroughly compulsive crime thriller that delivers the gangland goods with great aplomb. Michael Caine is Jack Carter, the London-based villain returning to his native Newcastle to bury his brother, who sets about antagonising the local gangsters until he finds out who was the killer. Caine is suave, sadistic and sexy, but then everyone here is pretty nasty. Playwright John Osborne appears as one of the camp Newcastle bosses, while the late Bryan Mosley (Coronation Street's Alf Roberts) also has a key role.
Review by Neil Ryan on 26th September 2003 'I know you didn’t kill him, I know!' So screams Michael Caine's character Jack Carter, as he stabs to death a participant in the Newcastle blue movie racket that led to the death of his brother. Here stands Get Carter in the line of great gangster movies. No attention to motivation, lacking any post-Tarantino quips, yet nonetheless utterly compelling. Based on the novel Jack’s Return Home by Ted Klinger, Mike Hodge's debut film charts London heavy Jack Carter's Sisyphus like quest to avenge the killing of his brother, and he almost succeeds. Caine is sublimely cast as the eponymous character, contrasting sharply with his sugary sixties persona as The Ipcress File's Harry Palmer had similarly provided a welcome antidote to the macho heroics of Sean Connery's James Bond. Violence and whiskey also ooze from the pores of playwright John Osbourne, appearing as a honeycombed gangland boss (providing EastEnder's script writers with the inspiration for Jack Dalton). The ending set a precedent for later gangster flicks, notably Bob Hoskins in The Long Good Friday; indeed Hodge's film, with its bleak panorama of pre-industrial Newcastle, looks forward to the fall out of the seventies and the anger of post-industrial Britain portrayed in its ideological successor. View more reviews by Neil Ryan
Collections & ListsThis film is part of the following Film Collections
Including: A Fish Called Wanda, A Matter of Life and Death , A Room With A View, Blow-up, Brazil, Brief Encounter (Lean, 1945), Brighton Rock, Caravaggio, Dont Look Now, Get Carter.
This film is part of the following Customer Film Lists
BFI Top 100 British Films by MovieMail In 1999 the British Film Institute surveyed 1000 people involved in UK film and television to create the BFI Top 100 British films made in the 20th century. Here is the result - each film here stands up to repeat viewings, and shows the incredible contribution Britain has made to cinema.
Faves by Matt
my top ten cult films of all time by john watson these are the ten best cult films ever made...fact!
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