Sitting Target

Sitting Target is a 1972 movie directed by Douglas Hickox.

WHAT HAPPENS?

An inmate escapes from prison after learning his wife has left him.

ONE LINE REVIEW

Sitting Target is a raw crime movie that features a brilliant, intense Oliver Reed performance.

THE ACTORS

Oliver Reed inhabits Harry Lomart, a prisoner who seethes with rage after his wife declares she’s both pregnant and leaving him. Reed’s passion is endearing but he exhibits a dangerous rage. The initial scene with Jill St. John’s Pat is a frightening display as Reed’s Harry busts through a glass pane to choke her. Reed’s character maintains his intensity throughout but also shows a tender side. After their escape, he splashes like a kid in a bubble bath. The moment is fleeting as he is viciously tracking his ex-wife.

Ian McShane is fun as the sardonic Birdy, who breaks out with Harry. Birdy’s attitude alternates between carefree and a voice of conscious. The tone shifts darker as Harry secures a machine gun – an event that moves the plot into a deadlier place. Jill St. John is a scene stealer as Pat. Her ulterior motives reveal a character who is entangled with all sides of an emerging plot. As the movie progresses, she becomes the most intriguing character.

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Villain

Villain is a 1972 movie directed by Michael Tuchner.

WHAT HAPPENS?

A vicious mob boss runs afoul of Scotland Yard after he blackmails a member of Parliament.

ONE LINE REVIEW

Villain is an unsentimental British crime movie that features a brilliantly quirky Richard Burton performance.

THE ACTORS

Richard Burton chews up the screen as the menacing Vic Dakin, a mobster that is equal parts vicious and hopelessly devoted to his aging mother. Burton’s Dakin is surrounded by colorful thugs but owns every scene. He’s witty and stylish but commanding – his great one-liners are often followed by tone-changing, frightening glares. His loving relationship with his mother and complicated sexual encounters with Ian McShane’s Wolfe complete a truly unique gangster character.

Ian McShane leads a fun group of supporting actors. His Wolfe is a coy, debonair pseudo high class pimp entangled in a sexual relationship with Burton’s Dakin. He maintains a power over his girlfriends, loaning them out to snare politicians into manipulative traps. Yet Dakin pummels him after an episode in the bedroom. Nigel Davenport is the sophisticated Inspector Mathews who engages in a cat and mouse chase with Dakin. Numerous thugs round out the cast, including Joss Ackland’s ever-suffering Edgar.

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