Gumshoe

1971

Action / Comedy / Crime / Drama / Mystery

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 88% · 8 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 54% · 250 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.4/10 10 1846 1.8K

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Plot summary

A would be private eye gets mixed up in a smuggling case.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
October 13, 2018 at 02:08 PM

Director

Top cast

Albert Finney as Eddie Ginley
Maureen Lipman as Naomi
Carolyn Seymour as Alison
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
708.98 MB
1204*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 26 min
Seeds 1
1.35 GB
1792*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 26 min
Seeds 3

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by ib011f9545i 7 / 10

obscure,old but not a classic I think.

People will say this is a forgotten classic. I don't think it is forgotten since I have seen it on British tv over the years.

I was glad to buy the blu ray the other day and watched with great attention.

I confess I was a bit disappointed,as others reviewers say it is of historical interest but as a film I don't think it is that entertaining.

I find it hard to describe the tone of the film,it is a comedy drama I suppose but it is not that funny and not that dramatic. My dreamgirl Carolyn Seymour is wasted in this.. Films of this era more worth seeing would include Sort Target,Unman,Wittering and Zigo and the amazing The Reckoning.

Reviewed by Pedro_H 7 / 10

Strange cult movie that is not for everyone.

A Liverpool bingo caller of the 70's enlivens his dull life by taking on an old style private detective alter-ego. Complete with raincoat and accent!

This is one of my favourite cult movies and this might be a good chance to try and look inside my own mind and find out why. Leading with the negatives, this film has a few ideas, but not enough to make a full film out of them. If you feel that some of the scenes are padding (quite a lot actually) then you are right!

Finney fancies himself as a kind of Sam Spade let loose on a Liverpool of the 1970's (interesting to see it like it was in the 60's) and we enter the slightly seedy world of the working man's club. Something that those outside of the UK will find hard to grasp -- a kind of cheap private drinking hole meets low rent cabaret.

The real problem is that the thing is weakened by non of the parties (especially the lead) seeming to be taking the case seriously, which means that while he is in limited danger we are more yawning than sitting on the edge of our seats.

What makes it for me is the fast word play of Finney and the general irony of the script in going in to places that fashion says we shouldn't be going. It leads up to a giant feeling of so-what -- but I like to see movies that are a bit different and it always holds me in its strange faded and seedy grip. Maybe it has something to do with having been to these sorts of places myself.

Reviewed by LouE15 7 / 10

Charming and funny "period" piece – with some odd jarring moments

What a joy to watch this oddity from the great British director Stephen Frears' back catalogue on telly here recently. But because of certain parts in it, I can sort of see why it has largely stayed in 1971, a cult rather than a mainstream success. The story is a funny and modern take on a classic film noir. Being a Stephen Frears film, it's overflowing with observant details that make up a free-flowing, vivid picture of life in 1971 in the mind of a young man, Eddie Ginley (a young and handsome Albert Finney) who works nights as a bingo caller in a nightclub but dreams of a future as a stand-up comic. His overachieving brother has "run off with his best girl"; he's a dreamer, obsessed with crime fiction, and wants to be a detective, and he's about to get what he wants in spades.

(Intermittent spoilers from here on in.)

It's hard to tell now (or have I lost my sense of irony?) whether Eddie's cheesy stand-up routine and his casual racism are ironic character elements or for real. The 70s really were the dark ages, so nothing would surprise me now. I don't think I'm being oversensitive: his comments to the sole black character, Danny Azinge, are horribly racist and unsubtle and unfunny. Anyone who watched "Bless this House" or "The Black & White Minstrel Show" in the 70s, and any first and second generation Black Britons will tell you that it's all too likely to have been for real. Even Danny's terrific punch to Eddie's solar plexus – serves him right – doesn't wholly compensate for the nasty taste those lines left in my mouth.

But I love, love, love the witty and cheeky takes on 40s noir and Chandleresque dialogue and story structure. The sexual tension between Eddie and his ex, now sister in law, Ellen (a stately Billie Whitelaw), crackles along. The Cain & Abel backstory is nicely played out. Eddie's brother William is the perfect foil: enough of a "schmuck" to make Eddie appealing, but sensible enough to be plausible second choice for Ellen.

Some parts of the film now work best as social documentary; the 1971 era fire engine, the now sadly extinct open-backed red buses; Ellen's 'snazzy' car (sounds like a super-fast tractor); the comment on Liverpool "it's not a gun town, is it?". I think Frears understood the social significance of filming realistic scenes in a dismal unemployment office, and in the working men's club; you see it in the love he shows the building, the head honcho with his fake celebrity portraits; the reactions of the crowd.

The story's pretty engrossing, and the way it's played out has all the hallmarks of a good Frears film, but it's the central love story that I find appealing. You look at the two men in her life and you understand why Ellen made the decision she did. Charming and endearing as Eddie is, and as she certainly still finds him, she got tired of waiting for him to stop being a dreamy low-rent clown. Their sad, simple kisses reflect that. He 'grows up' by the time the film reaches its conclusion, but by then it's all far too late. His life's romance is dead, but his life begins. Lovely stuff.

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