IMAGES

  1. Classic Review: Point Blank (1967)

    movie review point blank 1967

  2. Point Blank ***** (1967, Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, Keenan Wynn

    movie review point blank 1967

  3. Point Blank

    movie review point blank 1967

  4. Point Blank (1967)

    movie review point blank 1967

  5. Point Blank [1967] Review

    movie review point blank 1967

  6. Point Blank (1967)

    movie review point blank 1967

VIDEO

  1. Point Blank (1967)

  2. Point Break (1991) Retro Movie Review

  3. TCM Comments on Point Blank (1967)

  4. 16. Chris Scores (Point Blank soundtrack, 1967, Johnny Mandel)

  5. Point Blank (1967) review

  6. Point Blank (1967) Review

COMMENTS

  1. Point Blank movie review & film summary (1967)

    But if they'd forked over, there wouldn't have been a movie, and as suspense thrillers go "Point Blank" is pretty good. It gets back into the groove of Hollywood thrillers, after the recent glut of spies, counterspies, funny spies, anti-hero spies and spy-spier spies. Marvin is just a plain, simple tough guy who wants to have the same justice ...

  2. Point Blank

    93% Tomatometer 40 Reviews 84% Audience Score 5,000+ Ratings A ruthless crook, Walker (Lee Marvin), is betrayed by his partner, Mal Reese (John Vernon), who leaves him for dead on Alcatraz Island.

  3. Point Blank (1967 film)

    Point Blank is a 1967 American crime film directed by John Boorman, starring Lee Marvin, co-starring Angie Dickinson, Keenan Wynn and Carroll O'Connor, and adapted from the 1963 crime noir pulp novel The Hunter by Donald E. Westlake, writing as Richard Stark. Boorman directed the film at Marvin's request and Marvin played a central role in the film's development.

  4. Point Blank [1967] Review

    UK-born film-maker John Boorman's American debut Point Blank (1967) is one of my most favorite noir cinema made long after the official end of the film-noir era. In fact, Point Blank exemplifies the dawn of the new American cinema, alongside the subversive works like Bonnie and Clyde and The Graduate (released in the same year). Dubbed as 'Europeanized' American cinema, these provocative ...

  5. Point Blank (1967)

    When he's shot at in an underground garage, he calmly takes a couple of steps back behind a pillar, and allows the police to take care of the shooter. He's so direct and menacing in making it clear he's going to be paid, or he's going to kill you. He's a terrific tough guy, and turns in an excellent performance.

  6. POINT BLANK: Dissecting A Forgotten Classic

    As soon as Justus D. Barnes fired point-blank at the audience in Edwin S. Porter's influential The Great Train Robbery, the idea of violence to control an audience was introduced. The ricochet of that powerful shot has rung throughout the history of film, with violence becoming an extremely integral part of narrative storytelling.

  7. Point Blank (1967)

    Point Blank: Directed by John Boorman. With Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, Keenan Wynn, Carroll O'Connor. After being double-crossed and left for dead, a mysterious man named Walker single-mindedly tries to retrieve the money that was stolen from him.

  8. Movie Review

    Point Blank, 1967. Directed by John Boorman.Starring Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, Keenan Wynn, Carroll O'Connor, Lloyd Bochner, Michael Strong and John Vernon. SYNOPSIS: After being double ...

  9. Review: Point Blank

    Review: Point Blank. Though Point Blank is rife with existential malaise, it is also one of the most ferociously sexy crime movies ever made. One of Lee Marvin's initial claims to fame was disfiguring Gloria Grahame's face with a pot of scalding coffee in Fritz Lang's The Big Heat, but even for cinema's quintessential thug, there was ...

  10. Point Blank

    Point Blank catches the feel of the late '60s and the sunshot, edgy atmosphere of Los Angeles then (the go-go clubs, the used-car lots, the penthouses and the storm drain tunnels) like few movies since. ... [19 Oct 1967, p.31] Read More By Andrew Sarris See All 15 Critic Reviews ... We recap the just-concluded festival with a list of award ...

  11. Review

    Midway between Philip Marlowe and John Wick, Walker, the hero of 1967's Point Blank is a stylish hero in a film so stylish and influential that its original impact can now only be guessed at, so relentlessly has it been plundered in the ensuing decades. Soderbergh is a fan, as is Tarantino, and so, of course, is Chad Stahelski (of John Wick fame). ). Mel Gibson and director Brian Helgeland ...

  12. Classic Review: Point Blank (1967)

    Even if Point Blank doesn't quite manage to convince as the Night and Fog of pulpy 1960s thrillers, it can still claim to be one of the most effortlessly stylish on-screen depictions of Los Angeles. Philip H. Lathrop paints the city as an underpopulated wasteland in which human beings are dwarfed by the infrastructure that surrounds them.

  13. Point Blank (1967): The Only Neo-Noir that Matters

    An adaptation of The Hunter —the 1st Parker novel from Donald E. Westlake (under the pen name Richard Stark), which currently has been adapted for film three times and once as a graphic novel—the film stars veteran tough-guy actor Lee Marvin as a career criminal named Walker. After performing a heist on Alcatraz with his partner Mal (John ...

  14. Point Blank (1967)

    Generally acknowledged by most film critics as director John Boorman's most influential film, Point Blank (1967) is a modern day film noir thriller that employs the techniques and thematic concerns of French New Wave filmmakers like Jean-Luc Godard and Alain Resnais to tell a story about basic human greed and retribution. As Walker, the central character in the film, Lee Marvin moves with the ...

  15. REVIEW: Point Blank (1967)

    REVIEW: Point Blank (1967) By John Matrix on August 31, 2016. Share. Tweet. Share. ... 'Payback' is a slightly better movie. Gibson's film is a better vehicle for the character's cold-bloodedness, especially in the Director's cut. Nevertheless, the best and most faithful version of Westlake's character, 'Parker' is in the ...

  16. The Classic Noir That's Either a Punishing Revenge Thriller, a ...

    Either way, Point Blank is undeniably a film that left a huge impact on crime film history, with future filmmakers stealing liberally from Boorman's and Marvin's conception of this type of story ...

  17. Point Blank 1967, directed by John Boorman

    British director John Boorman's 1967 Hollywood debut (he was hired off the back of Dave Clark Five vehicle 'Catch us if you Can', amazingly) is a slippery beast. The story - from Donald E ...

  18. Point Blank (1967)

    Description by Wikipedia. Point Blank is a 1967 American neo-noir crime film directed by John Boorman, starring Lee Marvin and featuring Angie Dickinson, adapted from the 1963 crime noir pulp novel The Hunter by Donald E. Westlake, writing as Richard Stark. Boorman directed the film at Marvin's request and Marvin played a central role in the ...

  19. Point Blank (1967 Ending Explained)

    Point Blank, released in 1967, is a neo-noir crime thriller directed by John Boorman. ... Point Blank initially received mixed reviews from critics, who were divided over its unconventional narrative structure and ambiguous ending. However, over time, the film gained recognition for its innovative style and thematic depth. ... Movies like Drive ...

  20. Point Blank (1967) is an underappreciated masterpiece : r/flicks

    Point Blank (1967) is an underappreciated masterpiece. Lee Marvin as 'Walker' in Point Blank occupies a unique position in the "character who is an unstoppable force sets out to achieve a goal" canon of films. Unlike the psychopathic brutality of Anton Chigurh, the relentless robotic destruction of The Terminator, or Oh Dae-su's ...

  21. Point Blank 1967: Cinematography critique. : r/FIlm

    Point Blank has a growing reputation with critics. It's a very solid movie. 1967 was a good year for movies. Pick one or two commercially successful films and use those as baselines. You can also bring in French New Wave films as I'm sure Boorman was influenced by Breathless when he made Point Blank. 2.

  22. Movie Review: Point Blank (1967)

    Movie Review: Point Blank (1967) From director John Boorman comes 'Point Blank,' a classic early neo noir that includes Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson, Keenan Wynn, and Carroll O'Connor. It is based on the book "The Hunter" by Richard Stark. Interestingly, the movie Payback (1999), starring Mel Gibson, is another adaptation of the book ...

  23. 1967 Point Blank : John Boorman : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming

    1967, Point Blank, Crime Films, Action Films, Feature Films, Lee Marvin. Language. English. Mal Reese is in a real bind--owing a good deal of money to his organized. crime bosses--and gets his friend Walker to join him in a heist. It. goes off without a hitch, but when Reese realizes the take isn't as. large as he had hoped, he kills Walker--or ...