Callan

1974 "Callan... doesn't make friends - and all his enemies are dead!"
6.8| 1h46m| en
Details

David Callan, secret agent, is called back to the service after his retirement, to handle the assasination of a german businessman, but Callan refuses to co-operate until he finds out why this man is marked for death.

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Reviews

Stevecorp Don't listen to the negative reviews
InformationRap This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
FirstWitch A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
Bea Swanson This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
charlesrothwell The spy genre saw a (British-led) backlash in the mid-/late-1960s against the 'James Bond-led' type of upper class, super-human, perfect being spies and attention being paid in literature ("The spy who came in from the cold") and film (the Harry Palmer films) to a much more realistic portrayal of who spies were and what they actually did (often grubby little men working in atrocious conditions and for minimal recompense). In addition to literature and film, I can recall seeing the original "Callan" series on TV and of being very impressed by it. As portrayed by Woodward, Callan really was a working class thug (ex-army/ex-offender/borderline alcoholic and capable of great viciousness) doing the most unglamorous kinds of things in order to "take care" (with threats, blackmail, entrapment and, ultimately, 'termination') of people his superiors ordered him to. At the same time, Woodward gave the character a real human side who often displayed pity and empathy for his victims and who refused to turn into just the simple killing machine his masters wanted. I thought this film (which I had never seen before and found on some TV network being broadcast between 1.00 and 3.00 AM!) caught all of this very well. It was made at a time of great violence/almost seeming social melt-down (IRA bombing campaigns in Britain, the never-ending "Troubles" in Ireland, terrorism across much of Europe, the PLO terrorist attacks across the world. the Vietnam War staggering towards its bloody (and probably inevitable) end) and there are a number of places in the film where issues of direct relevance for today are also addressed (where to draw the line between 'enhanced interrogation' and outright torture, what are the limits of surveillance, how far can people 'follow orders' and still stay human?) An exciting film to watch but also one with a lot more to offer as well.
georgewilliamnoble Based on what i believe was the original pilot for the late seventies TV series. I just remember the TV show but not to clearly, however i saw this movie version as the supporting feature to something around the late seventies at a historic cinema that alas is no longer with us. However this very dark, cold sinister thriller where the bad guy is very likable while the hero may be challenged but he is cruel violent and very efficient in a most sinister way, this hero is quiet repellent. The direction story and writing are remarkably good with a splendid cast in very fine form, for me this movie contains a car chase so good, that only Bullit and The French Connection can compare, it really is that good. I had not seen this movie for a very long time but if anything it was even better than my memory supposed. Vertually unknown and all but forgotten this is a secret gem, so if you go went for Michael Caine in Get Carter or as Harry Palmer in the Ipcress File you will definitely go for Edward Woodford who was a very fine actor indeed as David Callan secret government enforcer. For PC do look elsewhere.
glenn-aylett Callan made Edward Woodward into a star. He plays a sort of James Bond as anti hero, a reluctant and downbeat assassin who wants to retire as he is being damaged by his work, but is blackmailed by the SIS into carrying out one last job, which is never his last.Basically the 1973 film version of Callan was a remake of a classic episode A Magnum for Schneider, where Callan is ordered to kill a German businessman who has links to the Stasi and who is involved in some dodgy arms deals with a liking for Magnum revolvers. ( Interestingly the little known Japanese version of the pistol is mentioned in the film).While I haven't seen this film for a while, it seems to have disappeared from the late night television schedules, Callan is quite a good and brutal film. Callan in this is shown to be a karate expert, he uses it to extract some information from his associate Lonely in his squalid bedsit and then dispenses with two arms dealers in the most brutal karate display this side of a Bruce Lee film. Also of note are a car chase which involves Callan driving a Range Rover through an orchard and a Jaguar being bounced across a level crossing by an Inter City train. Schneider, who is killed off by Callan, also has a penchant for collecting toy soldiers and re enacting classic battles.Another interesting fact about the film is Clifford Rose makes an appearance as a consultant physician, later he was to make his name as the sinister SS officer Kessler in Secret Army.Not a great film, but a good way to pass an afternoon and Russell Hunter in particular is excellent as Lonely, the smelly, loyal informant for Callan who deserves a medal for the way Callan treats him throughout the film( usually knocking him about).
BJJManchester An acceptable expansion of the pilot episode of the celebrated TV spy series,CALLAN benefits from Edward Woodward's memorable characterisation of an unglamourous,seedy and brutish secret agent David Callan,helped and hindered by his even seedier sidekick,smelly petty crook Lonely,superbly played by Russell Hunter.Although not quite as good as the TV series,this film version is still very watchable and efficiently directed by Don Sharp,with a few interesting frisson's added,most notably Callan's ferocious disposal of a gangster's hit-man(played by Dave Prowse,later to become Darth Vader's physical form.As with Star Wars,Prowse's Bristol accent is dubbed over here as well)and the gangster's subsequent use for virtual human experimentation,which Callan observes to his disgust and horror.The series was always interesting for Callan's frequent clashes with his superiors,made more strident because of his working-class background;his colleagues were invariably upper middle-class,public schoolboys,as typified by the vindictive bully Toby Meres,played here by Peter Egan.Egan is adequate in the role but lacks the extra toughness,wit and humour provided by Anthony Valentine in the TV series(Peter Bowles played Meres in the pilot),and his boss 'Hunter',played in this film version by Eric Porter; the best 'Hunter' of all in the TV series was probably William Squire.Many UK TV shows had film versions produced in the 1970's,mostly sitcoms like ON THE BUSES,LOVE THY NEIGHBOUR,MAN ABOUT THE HOUSE,etc. These and others were mostly dismal but CALLAN works far better despite having to add more footage from the original TV pilot,and works as a taut,terse and respectable film version of an excellent TV original.RATING:6 and a half out of 10.

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