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 CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration
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CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration

VIP-Blog de tellurikwaves
  • 12842 articles publiés
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  • Créé le : 10/09/2011 19:04
    Modifié : 09/08/2023 17:55

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    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANK de John Boorman 1967

    23/01/2012 16:26

    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANK  de John Boorman 1967


    Un film que j'ai vu et revu plusieurs fois en v.f et en v.o.
    J''aime la musique,le rhytme du film,la présence d'Angie Dickinson
    et la personnalité de Walker (Lee Marvin)

     

    *

    Le Point de non-retour (Point Blank)
    est un film américain réalisé par John Boorman, sorti en 1967.
    Il s'agit d'une adaptation du roman de Donald E. Westlake, The Hunter.

     

     

     

    Résumé (partiel...Ils révèlent tout!!)

    Mal Reese (John Vernon), un voyou qui doit rembourser urgemment une somme importante à une « Organisation » mafieuse, convainc un ami robuste et taciturne, Walker (Lee Marvin), de l'aider à dévaliser des convoyeurs de fonds criminels qui utilisent l'ancienne prison d'Alcatraz déserte comme lieu de rendez-vous pour leur hélicoptère. La femme de Walker, Lynne (Sharon Acker), est également de la partie. Reese tue les convoyeurs puis, découvrant que sa part n'est pas suffisante, tire également sur Walker et le laissant pour mort, part avec Lynn qui s'avère être sa maitresse. Walker survit miraculeusement et parvient même à nager jusqu'à la côte...

    *

    Cast

    Angie Dickinson

     Fiche technique

     

     






    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANK de John Boorman(1967) p2

    23/01/2012 16:30

    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANK de John Boorman(1967)   p2


     

    La critique de DVD CLASSIK

    Olivier Bitoun

    Dans l’île d’Alcatraz, après un braquage, Walker (Lee Marvin, comme d’habitude impérial) est trahi par son complice, Reese, et sa propre femme. Il est abattu à bout portant ("point blank" en VO) d’une balle dans le ventre et laissé pour mort. Survivant contre toute attente à la blessure, aidé par un mystérieux inconnu, il se lance dans une croisade vengeresse sous le prétexte affiché de récupérer la part du butin qui lui est due. Il retrouve rapidement Reese et découvre qu’il n’est qu’un pion d’un vaste consortium, « l’organisation », dont il décide de remonter la hiérarchie jusqu’au sommet.

    Point Blank est le deuxième long métrage de John Boorman et son premier film tourné aux Etats-Unis. En adaptant un roman de Donald Westlake, le cinéaste britannique signe en 1967 l'une des œuvres séminales du cinéma du Nouvel Hollywood. On y retrouve les figures de la modernité qui marqueront le cinéma américain des années 70 : brouillage des repères (dans la mise en scène, dans le récit, dans la perception qu’ont les personnages du monde qui les entoure), perte de sens (le parcours du héros n’épouse plus une trajectoire morale), de but (figure concentrique de la construction narrative), empêchement de l’identification du spectateur, refus de la psychologie, dialogues minimalistes ou non signifiants...

    un héritage européen dont Boorman se sert pour travailler de l’intérieur (il signe son film pour un grand studio) les codes du film noir. Il les défragmente, en propose une relecture à l’aune de ce qu’est devenu l’Amérique dans les années 60 (paranoïa, théorie du complot...) et plie leur logique habituelle à l’univers mental de son héros. Montage fracturé, ralentis et essais expérimentaux nous font partager la trajectoire de Walker, là où le cinéma noir classique aurait pris en charge son voyage au bout de la nuit au moyen d’une voix off ; les jeux d’ombres et de lumières sont remplacés par l’utilisation extrême des couleurs ; la nuit cède la place au plein soleil...

    Point Blank, avec ses images saturées de couleurs et de lumières, est un film aveuglant. Le fait de remplacer la nuit par le grand jour crée le sentiment d’un monde où tout est visible, mais où rien ne se voit ; et Walker se trouve confronté tout au long du film à des figures anonymes empêtrées dans un monde de manipulation et de surveillance, éléments symptomatiques de l'ère post-Kennedy. En quittant les ruelles sordides noyées de brouillard et d’ombres pour les grands espaces désertiques et vitrés de la cité, Boorman nous plonge dans un monde déshumanisé.

    Les personnages, les pantins de Point Blank font l’effet de zombies, figures sans âmes qui réagissent en fonction de quelques stimuli simples : survie, pouvoir. Ce ne sont plus des êtres humains mais des rouages de la gigantesque organisation que Walker remonte. Lui-même n’agit que dans un seul but : récupérer son argent. C’est une force brute que rien ne semble pouvoir arrêter, un concept. Par cette volonté jamais défaillante, il dérègle le mécanisme et la machine s’emballe d’elle-même. Walker n’a quasiment rien à faire : l’organisation (l’Amérique) s'autodétruit du seul fait qu’elle a été dérangée dans son fonctionnement, qu'elle a été nommée.

    Organisée jusqu’à l’extrême, cadrée, surveillant constamment chacun de ses rouages, elle est incapable de réagir à une force brute et primitive et s’écroule.Mais la trajectoire de Walker fait partie d'un projet plus vaste et Boorman, très finement, utilise un code classique du film noir et du cinéma américain en général (l'individu seul face au système) pour in fine le contredire. Un goût amer reste en bouche, Boorman évacuant toute notion de rédemption, thème central du cinéma noir, ainsi que tout effet cathartique pour ne garder du genre que l’absurdité des trajectoires humaines, l’implacable présence du mal et la déshumanisation (ou monétarisation) de la société.

    Il est étonnant de voir qu’un tel film ait pu être réalisé dans le cadre du cinéma commercial hollywoodien. Si John Boorman a pu expérimenter à ce point et livrer une œuvre purement conceptuelle, il le doit à la volonté de Lee Marvin de laisser les coudées franches à ce jeune cinéaste britannique. En déléguant son droit de regard sur le scénario, la distribution et le choix de l’équipe technique (droit que l’acteur possède par contrat) à Boorman, il impose à la MGM de lui laisser une totale liberté artistique. Marvin avait le nez fin : Point Blank est l’un de ces films qui font avancer le cinéma.






    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANKde John Boorman (1967) p3

    23/01/2012 16:38

    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANKde John Boorman (1967) p3


    Index 121 reviews in total 


    Lien vers toutes les reviews
     
     
     
     *
     
     

    Point Blank contains inspiring visuals, a haunting soundtrack and some stunning acting. Fabulous, groundbreaking cinema.

    Author: anonymous
    15 December 1998

    In the wake of his Cannes Best Director award for The General, Boorman's stunning debut has been released with a new print. Unrelentingly downbeat, this stylish crime thriller made in 1967 seems to have fuelled virtually Elmore Leonard novel.Steely, panther-like hitman Walker (marvellous Marvin) has been fitted up, shot at and had $93,0000 stolen from him all because of ex-pal Mal Reese (John Vernon). A tad upset he decides to resurrects himself, with the help of the shadowy Yost (Keenan Wynn) for revenge and his payment.

    Boorman greets us with a five-minute sequence that is crammed with curious camera angles, fractured time-lines and carefully constructed compositions. We're bombarded by a montage of piercingly violent images blended together with fragments of a failed heist on Alcatraz Island and a pair of slugs ripping into Walker's body. We're only privy to these flash snippets of information, but they're still enough to help us empathise with Marvin's masterly obsessive.

    A year or two later Walker is on a tourist boat trip to Alcatraz, being propositioned by Yost. The creepy Yost knows where Mal and his Walker ex-wife Lynne (Sharon Acker) are and is willing to reveal this to him, just as long as he receives some information on a shadowy body called "The Organisation". Walker simply nods. His dialogue is minimal, his obsession is reflected through his curt questions, his sudden movements, his eyes and the flashbacks that haunt him.

    When he catches up with his cheating ex-wife he allows her to talk uninterrupted in a desperate, forlorn monotone - "He's gone. Cold. Moved out," she says. Walker barely takes it in, all that motivates him is the thought, "Somebody's gotta to pay."While others flounder, Marvin appears impenetrable like one of Sergio Leone's cowboys. Only Clint Eastwood never conveyed this much emotion in his movements.

    Boorman's seminal film preceded the spate of fabulous paranoia flicks that enriched 70s American cinema – The Conversation, The Parallax View, All The President's Men – where a shadowy "Organisation" pulls the nation's strings. Tarantino has since appropriated this organisation theme on a small-time level, plagarising the black suits and the unwavering professionalism of the violence. De Niro's ex-con in Jackie Brown is based on Marvin's Walker, as are countless other performances.

    Even Angie Dickinson, playing Lynne's sister Chris, leaves him cold. In a remarkable scene she resorts to repeatedly slamming Walker's immovable slab of a chest. He remains impregnable, emotionally void. She keeps on punching until she finally collapses on the floor in a heap. They finally make love, only for the isolation, the loss of identity, to continue. Is he an avenging angel? Is he there at all?

    "Hey, what's my last name?" asks a post-coital Chris. "What's my first name?" he deadpans, answering a question with another question. Always seeking answers, never providing them. No love left in him, only a need for payment.Point Blank contains inspiring visuals, a haunting soundtrack and some stunning acting. Fabulous, groundbreaking cinema. --Ben Walsh

    *

    Point Blank is one of the most influential films of the 60's
    9/10
    Author: kyle-garabadian from Columbus Ohio
    12 June 2004

    Point Blank is one of those lost gems from the 1960's. It got buried because it was released around the same time as Bonnie and Clyde. This film combines all the great elements of the American action film with flourishes of European art house cinema. John Boorman's direction is excellent, and not enough can be said about Lee Marvin's performance. This is without question one of Lee's best tough guy performances. I don't understand how the previous reviewer can say this film seems "dated" and "funny for all the wrong reasons". It is as fresh and interesting as it was back at the time of its release. Those looking for it on DVD may want to know that the widescreen format version appears on TCM occasionally. You may want to pop in a tape the next time it is on until the DVD finally comes out.

    *

    Alienation at its best
    8/10
    Author: Jugu Abraham (jugu_abraham@yahoo.co.uk) from Trivandrum, Kerala, India
    15 February 2001

    I first saw this movie when I was in college in the Seventies. I viewed the film again in 2001. The power of the film was the same on my senses. Several reasons come up: British Director John Boorman was at his best trying to outdo Don Siegel's The Killers (1967)-which also stars Marvin and Dickinson in somewhat similar roles. I will really be surprised if Boorman denies that he was not influenced by the Siegel movie.Why did Point Blank make an impact on me? Was it Lee Marvin's raw machismo? No. It was Boorman, who gave cinema a brilliant essay on alienation. When Dickinson's Chris asks Marvin's Walker 'What's my last name?' after a bout of sex and gets a repartee 'What's my first name?' you can argue the alienation is embedded in the dialog.

    But Boorman's cinema includes the loud footsteps of a determined Walker on the soundtrack, somewhat like Godard in Alpahaville, contrasting bright wide open spaces for the exchange of money that goes according to plan and closed dimly lit confines of Alcatraz for those that go wrong. There is laconic humor without laughter, pumping bullets into an empty bed, guards who narrowly miss Marvin going up the lift, the car salesman's interest in an attractive customer than in his job, the sharpshooter's smug satisfaction not realizing that he has got the wrong man…The list is endless. The camera-work of Philip Lathrop is inventive, but was it Lathrop or Boorman that made the visual appeal of the Panavision format of this film come alive?

    Viewing the film in 2001, several points emerge. $93,000 was important to Walker, nothing more nothing less. But was it money he was after or was it the value of an agreement among thieves? The open ended finale runs parallel to the end of an Arthur Penn film (also on alienation)called "Night Moves" made some 10 years later. What surprises me is how a good movie like Point Blank never won an award or even an Oscar nomination.

    *

    A genre movie unlike any other.
    8/10
    Author: Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico, USA
    5 June 2006

    When I worked in a psychiatric hospital I noticed that one or two of the patients had a peculiar tendency to stand up, start walking purposefully across the ward, stop and look around, then begin walking just as purposefully in another direction, then sit down again. A kind of ambulatory non sequitur.This whole movie is like that. I mean that to be a compliment. People break up the interactive script they've initiated and do something completely unpredictable. I'll just give one example. Walker (Marvin) and his companion (Angie Dickenson) have an argument and she begins whacking him across the head with her purse.

    At first he guards himself with his arms but then lowers them and stands silently and without any expression as she beats him, slaps him, and pounds his chest, finally slumping to the floor exhausted. At that, he strides wordlessly to the couch, plops down, turns on the TV and begins surfing the channels.It's a neo-noir film if there ever was one. There is betrayal, a false woman, suicide, multiple double crosses, revenge, an urban setting, and an ambiguous ending.

    So, although it is a genre film, it is nevertheless unique. Everything comes together. The production designer gives us sterile urban vistas, featuring bland cement boxes and the Los Angeles River, without which no noir would be complete. The apartments these people live in look like ordinary arid gray middle-class bourgeois digs. Wardrobe, too, has fitted these performers out in ordinary suits and ties, and the women are always rather chic looking.

    The direction and editing are splendid. I'll give an example of what I mean here, too. Lee Marvin throws John Vernon out on the roof of his penthouse, wrapped only in a bed sheet. Vernon begins to tumble over the edge, Marvin grabs for him but winds up holding only the sheet while Vernon plunges some dozen floors to the street below. (His body winds up impossibly intact. A cat might have survived such a fall but a full-grown man would have splashed.) In an ordinary movie, we'd get a cut from the body hitting the street to Marvin staring down at it over the railing. But here, Marvin is still holding the sheet. Not only that but it's WINDY on the fourteenth floor roof and the wind is whipping the sheet up into billows around Marvin, like some demonic object with its own malevolent life force, before he is finally able to unwrap himself and fling it away.

    The editing gives us a couple of brief flashbacks, but not just to evoke a mood. They are instrumental in letting us know what Marvin is thinking. Marvin is holding a gun to his ex-pal's, Vernon's, face and the poor guy faints until Marvin slaps him awake, and then he begs Marvin to trust him. A flashback lasting only a few seconds reminds us of an earlier scene in which Vernon begged Marvin's help in carrying out a heist and shouted at him, "Walker! Trust me!" The editing is so precise that in this -- and in a dozen other scenes -- a few seconds more or less would drain them of their impact.

    The score is by Johnny Mandel, an arranger and composer whose work I've admired for years. He was a child prodigy, played both trumpet and trombone with Tommy Dorsey's band before turning to composing and arranging. He's never edgy or irritating. His music is smooth and melodic and sometimes strangely orchestrated. Here he suits his talents to the demands of the scene. When a man is trying to seduce a woman, a romantic piano melody tinkles behind them. At other times, again depending on the context, the score glides from Henry Mancini to Gil Evans. Nicely done.

    So is the acting. Marvin has been this good in other films but never better. The plot has to do with his regaining $93,000 that "the organization" has cheated him out of. (There is no mafia-ness to the movie. The only foreign language we hear is Portugese.) And $93K was a lot of money then. You could find gas at 29 cents a gallon. Marvin more or less kills his way up the ladder searching for someone in a position to "pay me my money." He finally gets to Carrol O'Connor who explains to him that in a huge corporation like this, nobody ever handles any money. O'Connor has got maybe eleven dollars in his wallet.

    And Marvin, holding a gun on him, hesitates and looks genuinely put out -- puzzled, the way a child might be puzzled by a disappointing reply. ("No, there's no Santa Claus.") I think I'll leave it at that before I run out of space. I've pretty much skipped the plot but that must be adequately covered elsewhere. Besides, the plot is either extremely simple or very complicated indeed, depending on how far you want your conjectures to dig. (Is the whole movie nothing more than the fantasy of Marvin as he lies dying on Alcatraz after being shot at the beginning of the story? See what I mean?) Don't miss it.

    *

    Nobody punches a crotch like Marvin!
    Author: Wizard-8 from Victoria, BC
    22 July 2000

    Still packs a whallop after all of these years, this was undoubtably a big influence on all the tough-loner-on-quest-for-revenge movies to come. What's really interesting is how Marvin's unemotional and seldom speaking character is quite fascinating. Instead of him being bland, we keep studying, somehow trying to find SOMETHING behind his cold stare.

    Though tough, this movie is not without a sense of humor, though it's quite subtle, such as the test drive sequence. It's good stuff, though I did have one problem; the ending is quite confusing. I am sure other viewers will not quite be able to determine what's going on.

    *

    Very good and tough in its time
    Author: Darth Sidious (darth_sidious@talk21.com) from England
    6 August 2000

    Tough and brutal, that best describes Boorman's excellent direction. Lee Marvin is perfect as a man who is out for revenge. The story is quite raw, it features flashbacks which haunt the character. The ending sums up the character, but you'll need to see it to find out for yourself. The supporting cast is very good, but this Marvin's baby and he is terrific.Boorman makes full use of the widescreen frame. Watching in full frame ruins the entire picture. You have only truly seen Point Blank if you've viewed in widescreen.
    *

    "I want my $93,000!"
    Author: Camera Obscura from The Dutch Mountains
    9 February 2007

    Love it, great film.

    For one thing, POINT BLANK, directed by British director John Boorman, has all the good looks of the various movements of the European New Wave, but walks the walk and talks the talk of an American thriller, and I mean that as a good thing. Boorman's brilliantly composed combination of European artfulness with film-noir elements make for an exceptionally rich and multi-layered crime thriller.

    Lee Marvin, in typically emotionless fashion, is the remorseless Walker who, after pulling off a successful heist from the mob, is double-crossed, shot and left for dead in the now abandoned Alcatraz prison by his wife (Sharon Acker) and his partner-in-crime (John Vernon). Walker survives, escapes and moves to LA, where he kills his way up the ladder of a vaguely defined organized crime syndicate called "The Organization", hardly distinguishable from a legitimate cooperate business, in order to get his $93,000, occasionally aided by his sister, Chris (a great Angie Dickinson), who seems to know Walker's targets pretty well.

    Philip Wisethrop's widescreen compositions are absolutely stunning. One of the most impressive scenes is when Walker is fighting two hoods in a nightclub, against a swirling psychedelic backdrop, to the strains of the R&B houseband, with its black singer hysterically shouting letting the mostly white clientèle shout with him in his microphone. But every scene is a marvel to watch, with every detail painstakingly composed without getting stiff or forced in any way. Even the car windows are almost unrealistically spotless, in order to film Walker through the glass with the reflections of the city on his face.

    The film is packed with all kinds of surreal surroundings and lots of flashbacks concerning Walker's past. Boorman's games with narrative time, with extensive use of echoing flashbacks and jump-cuts, are the perfect reflection of Walker's dream-like struggle for justice, He's the typical tragic (noir)-hero, in a perpetual struggle to grasp what happened to him. He desperately tries to comprehend the situation he's in, but hasn't got a clue who's who and his outdated moral codes make him seem an even bigger anomaly in the modern corporate world he works his way into.

    Whether this is all actually happening or it's all a mind-spin inside Walker's head is impossible to say. Best to enjoy the ride in this true genre classic, definitely one of the best American thrillers of the '60s. If you get the chance, watch it together with Melville's LE SAMOURAI (1967) and Seijun Suzuki's BRANDED TO KILL (1967), in many ways its French and Japanese counterparts.Camera Obscura --- 9/10

    *

    Raw, Lyrical, and Bullets
    Author: Aaron Bates from Ohio
    6 October 1998

    Point Blank kind of came and went in theaters but I can't imagine anyone who saw it in 1967 left forgetting John Boorman's tough and beautiful film. A simple story told in a very stylish and, at times, surreal manner. Though the storyline is a variation on "revenge" themes, it is Boorman's images that open it up and find pay-dirt. Images of Lee Marvin emptying his pistol in slow motion, the sound of footsteps over a string of pictures that curdle the mind, and the seemingly limitless use of rawness perfectly realized in the action and performance by Marvin and,interestingly, Angie Dickinson. There is a wonderful conflict between the primal Marvin and the Corporate Crime world which he cannot understand. Marvin knows survival of the fittest- not the richest. It's hypnotic and aggressive. Boorman balances perfectly on the line between the two.

    *

    Seeing the pursuit of vengeance through a fevered mind--wonderful
    8/10
    Author: ALauff
    15 February 2005

    *** This review may contain spoilers ***

    In the film's best and most famous scene, Lee Marvin's forsaken criminal trudges purposefully through a white-walled corridor, the echoes of his leaden footsteps filling the empty chamber like gunshots—CLOP! CLOP! CLOP! The caroming reverberations seem to lull him into reflection, and as the camera suddenly cuts away from his impassive face, the following quickly edited images evoke the disorienting sensation of flitting back and forth through his memory. Some of these images, like the eternally recurring shot of him lying supine on a cell floor in Alcatraz, we've seen before; others curiously herald events yet to happen. As the camera jumps between mind fragments, his footsteps plaintively persist on the soundtrack, like a metronome keeping track of the cumulative effects of Marvin's regret, rage and guilt.

    Although this sequence only lasts several minutes, it is significant in how it carves out a first-person psychological perspective from which the film rarely wavers and it is provocative for suggesting that Marvin might just be imagining his bad ass quest for redemption as he lies dying an undignified death in a dirty, abandoned prison; what we may be watching are the confused, dying thoughts of one who is simultaneously regretful (that he hadn't gotten out of the crime game sooner), heartbroken (that his best friend and wife betrayed him for $93,000) and determined to recapture what's his (the money, his honor, his anachronistic moral code).

    The rest of the film is also deeply unconventional: As Marvin makes his way through the ghosts of his past—including a deeply lyrical reunion with his wife and a hauntingly narrated (by her in distant, foggy undertones) stream-of-memory précis of their relationship—and he delves deeper into his mission, the world makes less sense. He has to negotiate with a shadowy corporation called "The Organization" that purportedly has his money; several bizarre deaths later, he is no closer to recompense and cripplingly unable to reconcile his direct moral universe of duty and accountability with the seriously corrupt bureaucracy he must contend with.

     The conclusions the film makes are profoundly anti-institutional: his perception is clearly the least cynical of the dialectic, and by film's end his mission seems almost benign, his revenge less an act of violence than in claiming a rightful bit of solace in death that The Organization won't allow him. This is one of the most innovative films of the '60s—and clearly due to its overlapping, stream-of-consciousness narrative, one heavily inspired by the European vanguard—persuasively evincing a world where individual responsibility is dead (for once, a perspective on existentialism that sees the idea past simple notions of defeatist loneliness and despair) and the abstract, terrifyingly nondescript authority structure extends to God himself.

    role made for the original 60s action man
    Author: compsecure from sydney australia
    23 April 2004

    This was a movie made for Marvin. Whether by design or by accident it matters not, this was the perfect vehicle for probably the only authentic believable actor as well qualified to play this type of screen role. Marvin looked like your average definition of a gangster, thug,slick operator, tough guy call it what you will and had the physique, persona, acting skills etc to carry the role and excel in it. Marvin acted above himself in this movie as he did in The Killers several years prior & reunited with Dickinson in the process something that added a special thread throughout the movie.There was sadly not enough of these types of roles to enable Marvin to display his obvious talent in portraying these types of screen characters but there was just enough to wet our apetite for more.

    Point Blank was probably the pick of them before Marvins career sidetracked to other areas which to my mind while it may have added to his body of work did not amply display to us the full talents of this contemporary one off actor the like of which I sadly fear we will never be fortunate enough to see again. That being said the movie was also notable for many other brilliant performances principally Lloyd Bochner, Carol O,connor & John Vernon who also possessed some of the qualities attributed to Marvin although not on the same scale or intensity.All In all a movie worth watching for a number of reasons. Lee we miss you. Heaven must be a gass with you & cassavetes steve Mcqueen etc.  








    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANK de John Boorman (1967) p4

    23/01/2012 16:44

    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANK de John Boorman (1967) p4


    Sharon Acker

     

     

     

    *

    External reviews(liste partielle)
    Lien vers la liste complete
    Showing all 81 external reviews





    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANK de John Boorman (1967) p5

    23/01/2012 16:57

    ©-DR- Lee Marvin- POINT BLANK de John Boorman (1967)   p5


    Ca c'est vraiment une scène d'anthologie...Angie Dickinson qui pique une crise de nerfs,
    et frappe jusqu'à total épuisement un Lee Marvin impassible

     

    *

    Lien vers la fiche complete(pour les références diverses)

    Lien vers la fiche complete IMDb

    *

    Trivia

    Showing all 8 items
    Jump to: Spoilers (1)
    *
    During a rehearsal taking place in the home of Lee Marvin, he hit John Vernon so hard that it made Vernon cry.
    *
    Lee Marvin faked the recoil from the .44 Magnum when he shoots in Lynne's bed. These were in fact blanks, but afterward when shooting in Alcatraz they tried with real bullets and there was no recoil at all. Marvin said to director John Boorman, "Fiction overtakes reality". Marvin's revolver was a Smith & Wesson Model 19. It's a .38/.357 Magnum, not a .44 Magnum.
     
    This was the first major picture to film on location at Alcatraz Island after the closure of the federal prison in 1963.
    *
    This movie and Payback (1999), with Mel Gibson, are both based on the book "Hunter" by Donald E. Westlake (as Richard Stark).
    *
    When Walker, in Chris' company, switches on the TV at Brewster's house, the music you hear is the overture to Richard Wagner's "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg"
    *
    The house where Walker (Lee Marvin) meets Brewster (Carroll O'Connor) was an actual house in the Hollywood Hills that was rented as a filming location. The Beatles once stayed in this house while visiting L.A. It was the basis for their song "Blue Jay Way", which is the name of the street on which the house sits.
     
    The only time Walker (Lee Marvin) smiles in the film is in the flashback scenes.
    *

    Spoilers 

    The trivia item below may give away important plot points.

    Body Count: 8





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