This wasn't something I had heard of before but strangely enough ended up finding out about it after doing some digging on the lead's ex wife. Apparently some people rate this highly and I enjoy watching 1970's movies. I will admit to being a bit disappointed with this one however.
The story is quite straightforward, the main character is an assassin who is hired to bump off someone, however a mistake is made and instead of being told to abort the mission, another set of assassins are sent after him.
The main problem with this character study movie is there is no real character to study. Its unlikely he mutters 50 words in the entire movie and he just sort of exists and broods for the camera. We have little idea of who he is and what he is all about so you do not really care about him. Nor any other character for that matter. Its all a bit flat and boring. Even the scenes around the assassins target are boring, people seem to be perpetually drunk or hungover.
It is a well shot film and it does hook you into the end with a few twists but its actually fairly vacuous. Compared to either of The Sweeney movies this is a bore fest. Apparently the lead actors career tanked due to his alcohol problems. Little wonder.
Plot summary
When the British government orders the assassination of an Air Ministry official suspected of leaking top secret intel, their top assassin assigned to the job discovers there may be more to the hit than meets the eye.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
May 31, 2022 at 01:18 PM
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Watchable If A Bit Flat UK 70's Crime Flick
Get Hendry
With wide-angle lenses eerily framing massive buildings within a nearly vacant metropolis harboring phantom warehouses and hangars... along with sparsely furnished government offices befitting only the most uncompromising of heartless decision-making... much of the b-crime/neo-noir ASSASSIN seems equally futuristic science-fiction...
Starring GET CARTER villain Ian Hendry as the titular hired gunman, patiently awaiting his hit while really only sharing genuine dialogue and contact with Verna Harvey, so young, beautiful and easy there must be a backstabbing fatale twist under her sleeve: but ASSASSIN isn't espionage, playing thoroughly straight and efficiently offbeat as far as Hendry's gun-preparing, waiting-around-in-purgatory meantime goes...
Unfortunately there's a distracting and visually contrasting b-story involving his primary human target: a government worker who supposedly stole files harmful to mission-dispatching Control Chief Edward Judd, overall playing-out like a modern-1970's TV-episode (with TV-director Peter Crane at the helm): so there's almost equal time at a drunken convention leading to a mundane wedding party...
Overall making ASSASSIN a deliberately obscure cult-curio where Ian Hendry's central mission (that also includes two junior assassins prepping to possibly take HIM out) doesn't get enough of that intriguingly cold and meticulous, rogue and monotone anti-hero attention -- that both the title and title-character had initially promised.
Gritty British thriller, one of the best seventies efforts
I have to say I was pleasantly surprised by this gritty thriller from 1973 starring the ever dependable Ian Hendry. He is the Assassin of the film, but he's haunted about his last case which didn't go well. Hendry is excellent as the loner assassin (they usually are) given the case of murdering a Government official who is suspected of passing on national secrets.
The film is set in a grey seventies type Britain, just like Get Carter from 71, and their's a kind of sadness about Hendry's character. You suspect this will not end happily for him.
British viewers will spot a few familiar faces in this enjoyable thriller, from Ray Brooks, Caroline John and Frank Windsor to Celia Imrie (probably most famous for UK comedy Dinnerladies made many years later).