Get
Carter (Original) Movie Review:
The
title Get Carter may be recognizable for being the title
of the most recent big-budget disaster of Sylvester Stallone’s
career, but it is also the title for the original film,
made in 1971, starring Michael Caine. While I cannot say
with absolute certainty that the Stallone version was terrible
(as I haven’t seen it!), I feel safe in believing that the
modern version avoids much of what makes the original such
a grim and nasty experience.... and that is not a compliment
to Stallone. At least there is some grim fascination to
be had in the Caine version.
The
story as done by Mike Hodges in 1971 is about as cold and
devoid of emotion as such crime flicks come. Caine plays
Jack Carter, who travels to his home town of Newcastle,
England, to investigate the death of his brother. The official
story is that the brother died while driving drunk and tossing
his car off the bridge, but Carter knows that is not the
real story, and sets out to find the killer, or killers.
We discover along with Carter the complex criminal web which
resulted in the death of the brother, and are then treated,
if that’s the proper word, to Carter’s subsequent revenge.
That
is all there is to the story; he investigates, he kills,
that’s the story. Hodges does not even try to clutter the
storyline with lots of detail. I, for one, did not really
know for sure what sort of profession Carter is in. Yes,
he hangs out with other criminal types, and exhibits similar
personality traits, but he does not do anything else in
this film except avenge his brother’s death. So what sort
of criminal is he? At the beginning of the film, he and
the rest of the gang watch an underground porn film, and
one of the characters is the kingpin of the sex ring, but
Caine himself does not seem obviously fascinated by that
sort of seedy activity. I bet the Stallone version packs
in the details, so as not to confuse the audience.
Stallone
himself probably also does not play Carter as Caine did
--- as a cold, ruthless man, with virtually no redeeming
qualities. This early role proves that Michael Caine can
play with menace and brutality. He kills four or five people,
including one instance where he kills a woman in such a
way as to make it appear as if it is a sex slaying (and
frame the sex ring kingpin). He treats women like sexual
objects, and has his way with two of them. And he seems
to have no true concern for any human being. He is basically
one gruesome bastard.
Certain
viewers, then, may not enjoy this film. The main character
is a sick individual, everyone around him is sick, and the
story is not fleshed out enough. And yet...... there is
a hidden depth which a film packed with detail and sympathetic
characters could never introduce. In narrowing the film
to its basic elements of violence and revenge, Hodges makes
us think as to why Carter behaves the way he does. We may
not know all the facts, but we can discover a truth about
such a person. I think the key to understanding his personality
lies in one very important scene, in which, after he sleeps
with one of the criminal’s girlfriends, he watches one of
the porn movies, and sees with horror that one of the players
is his own sister. There is no dialogue in this long scene,
only the incredible close-up of Carter and his eyes, red
from the pain of seeing the exploitation of his sister.
It is only after this point where the worst violence occurs.
Of
course, a man like this would behave the way he does after
seeing such a scene! This is your typical hypocritical macho
bullshit.... in which a man will treat women like meat,
basically see them as inferior, but when he sees other men
treating his own sister like a sexual object, he rages,
because how dare they treat his little angel like that.
Just as this kind of man treats women solely as objects,
he also treats female relatives as objects of a different
kind, as prized possessions which are constantly threatened
by those who are not himself. His actions exhibit the most
extreme form of possessiveness.
Get
Carter is a cool movie to watch, because it evokes a style
which no longer exists in this age of more slick, more expensive
films. The film looks seedy and lurid, surely because of
the low budget and the loose direction, but also because
we are not seeing some studio back lot, but the reality
of the dark, dank surroundings in and around Newcastle.
The film also benefits from Michael Caine’s cold performance
and a story which has a lot more shades to it than what
one would normally expect in a film like this. Overall,
this movie is a very interesting example of 1970's British
filmmaking.
David
Macdonald
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