Moustroll
Good movie but grossly overrated
Baseshment
I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.
BelSports
This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Fleur
Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.
bkoganbing
The film Pendulum came out when use of the Miranda decision was fairly new and
police departments all over the nation were still grumbling about it as convictions
were being overturned. Such a conviction overturned was that of rapist Robert
F. Lyons and that really bothers the arresting officer George Peppard.Still Peppard is ready for a career change. He's been appointed to the staff of the
crime committee of US Senator Paul McGrath. By the way McGrath is one
smooth politician and definitely not one to be in a foxhole with.Peppard is going to need all the friends he can get because he is accused of
murdering his wife Jean Seberg and her boyfriend Harry Lewis while catching
them in the act. I've always found it amazing that some of the biggest law
and order types when they get in a jackpot always want to make sure those
rights are available.Still of all the lawyers he could have picked Peppard chooses civil libertarian
Richard Kiley, the same man who got Lyons's conviction reversed. That has
all his cop buddies raising their eyebrows like Charles McGraw, Frank Marth,
and Dana Elcar. Pendulum concentrates on its ironical message to the extent that it really
forgets to put in a good mystery. No doubt who is the doer of this deed from
the gitgo.A lot of familiar faces are in Pendulum, but possibly the best performance in
the film is from Madeline Sherwood. As Lyons's much put upon mother she
has an aura of quiet desperation in her role and her scenes with Lyons and
Peppard really count.Nice picture with a message that is still relevant today.
Johnboy1221
This movie is incredibly underrated. The performances are all top notch, from Peppard and Seberg down to the smallest role, though Seberg's part is short. In my opinion, Madeleine Sherwood and Robert F. Lyons deserved Oscar nominations for their performances. They were flawless and mesmerizing as the white trash woman and her psycho son. I couldn't take my eyes off them when they were on screen. I so wish the movie was available on DVD! This film should have made a star of Robert F. Lyons. I have no idea why it didn't. It's well-written and believable, nicely directed. Someone please put this out on DVD! I want to watch this again and again.
weeds526
Check out the top of the Pendulum IMDb page, and you'll see a guy by the name of Stanley Niss, who wrote and produced this movie. He was my father's mother's brother, or great uncle. I recently learned more about my Great Uncle, and I was finally able to dig up my grandma's VHS copy of Pendulum in her condo. Just the fact that they were able to get a movie centered around a rapist rated only PG is enough of an accomplishment, but seeing George Peppard star surprised me even more.So, I popped it in my 18 inch VHS TV and watched. Well, it's the 60's alright, the music, the sets, the wardrobes, the chain smoking, there's no denying that. But all in all, I liked it as a standard courtroom drama, the actors did well with their roles, and though I'm biased, I liked it well enough, and it kept me excited throughout.Afterwards, I looked online and searched for some movie reviews, and saw that Roger Ebert himself reviewed upon its release, though he panned it. Gave it one and a half stars, and called my Great Uncle Stanley's script "written ineptly." Oh well. I had a good time, and I have a small piece of my family history in my hands now.
herbqedi
Peppard is ideally cast as inflexibly hard-nosed cop who gets sucked through the looking-glass when indicted for his cheating wife's murder. Charles McGraw and Richard Kiley are both magnificent in the key supporting roles. Dana Elcar and Isabel Sanford also add poignantly amusing support. Director George Schaeffer's pacing and choice of score is perfect for the genre. And, many of the key ironies are even more appropriate today than when the film was made. Very highly recommended.