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The Killer Elite

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The Killer Elite

Mike Locken is one of the principal members of a group of freelance spies. A significant portion of their work is for the CIA, and while on a case for them one of his friends turns on him and shoots him in the elbow and knee. His assignment, to protect someone, goes down in flames. He is nearly crippled, but with braces is able to again become mobile. For revenge as much as anything else, Mike goes after his ex-friend.

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Release : 1975
Rating : 6
Studio : United Artists,  Persky-Bright Productions,  Baum/Dantine Productions, 
Crew : Production Design,  Set Decoration, 
Cast : James Caan Robert Duvall Arthur Hill Bo Hopkins Mako
Genre : Action Thriller Crime

Cast List

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Reviews

Kailansorac
2018/08/30

Clever, believable, and super fun to watch. It totally has replay value.

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CrawlerChunky
2018/08/30

In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.

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Bea Swanson
2018/08/30

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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Juana
2018/08/30

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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bayardhiler
2014/08/31

As someone who is a big fan of Peckinpah's films like "The Wild Bunch" or "Convoy", I was very excited when I read the plot for 1975's "The Killer Elite". However, although it was not the worst film I ever saw, it became clear that it was not the greatest one either. The film stars James Caan and Robert Duvall as CIA contractors Mike Locken and George Hansen respectively, who take on the jobs the government doesn't want you to know about. The two are the best of friends until George betrays Mike by killing a man they were supposed to protect and shooting Mike in the knee. Broken, both physically and mentally, Mike soon sets his sights on revenge by going at it in physical rehab and martial arts. Soon he gets his chance when the people he works for learn that George is back in town to assassinate a client they've been hired to protect. Naturally, there's only one man who can do it and won't pass it up.The film works better in the first half, where George betrays Mike and Mike does everything in his power to get well and in the process shacks up with a pretty nurse. And it's also fun when we meet Mike's two helpers for the job, expert but cowboy killer Jerome Miller (Bo Hopkins) and street smart but world weary operative Mac (Burt Young). However when we get to the second half of the film, all of suddenly high stunt Kung Fu is introduced when it's learned that the man Mike and his team are supposed to protect is Oriental politician Yuen Chung (Mako) and his entourage that includes his daughter, Tiana (Tiana Alexandra). This might sound cool and it would have been if .........SPOILER....... Robert Duvall's character didn't die too early in the film. The sole purpose for Mike to take this job is of course his desire for revenge on George. The movie's plot made it look like the whole movie was going to be a cat and mouse game between Caan and Duvall. Once Duvall dies though, there's very little reason for the movie to continue. Yet it does for another forty-five minutes and as a result, it feels a little too long. END OF SPOILER........Now the martial arts that follows is done very well and impressive to watch; however, it just doesn't feel like Peckinpah's heart is in it. Case in point, at the final fight scene between Yuen and the head ninja occurs, Mike and his comrades seem content to watch, and rather dispassionately I might add. The film also suffers from disjointed editing, particularly the scene with the two heads of the company going over papers while one of them is bidding his time to make an important phone call (if you watch the film, you'll know it when you see it). "The Killer Elite" just doesn't seem to have the feeling of Peckinpah's other work. With that said, the film is not all bad. All the actors give great performances, be it the underrated James Caan as Mike, Robert Duvall as the treacherous George, Burt Young as Mac (who curiously, does a good job fighting ninjas), and Bo Hopkins as Jerome Miller. There's even a little bit of rare comedy from Peckinpah here concerning a cop and a bomb. And of course the idea of the CIA hiring unofficial heavies to do their dirty is by no means far-fetched. Plus, one has to keep in mind that there may very well have been studio tampering involved here, something that Peckinpah had to constantly deal with in his career. Who knows, perhaps he had a very different story in mind and it was shot down. For what it is though, if you are a big Peckinpah fan, "The Killer Elite" would not be a bad way to spend your time. After all, as someone else on this site said, watered down Peckinpah is still Peckinpah.

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mark.waltz
2012/01/09

There seems to be no point to the story of this fictional division of the CIA, supposedly meant to crack open plots against the United States and other allies. The film starts off promising with two of the agents (James Caan and Robert Duvall) going about their daily routines until Duvall begins to tease Caan about his latest sexual conquest over the fact that she might be diseased. Then, when they go on duty, Duvall suddenly kills the man they are guarding (veteran actor Helmut Dantine) and shoots Caan violently simply to "retire" him. The film then has an interesting sequence showing Caan's recovery, but goes down hill from there as Caan gets involved with a Japanese version of the same agency while he tracks Duvall down for revenge. Predictably, there are traitors among his colleagues, and after lots of violence and encounters with the most unpleasant characters, the film reaches its wimpy conclusion. Caan and Duvall, both hot after "The Godfather", seemed logical choices for re-teaming, but the gratuitous violence and ugliness of the story makes this a weak follow-up. The power of "The Godfather" was its romantic, almost operatic like tragedy, but this is simply nothing but a disturbing view of how films had turned to sordidness by the mid 1970's. Director Sam Peckinpah, whose films are over-run with violence, needed a script with more story and less nastiness.

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seppo kaasinen
2010/11/28

A great film with a beautiful scenery of San Francisco. It may not be the greatest hour of Sam Peckinpah,but it's still one of the best films of the 70's.Of course there is films like the godfather and the taxi-driver,but who cares,man. The killer elite is such a different movie.It's got all the elements you need for a martial arts/gunfight movie.It's all there in one package. Not to mention perfect actors,story and the location.Every time i watch it,it takes me back to the great movie-making. The killer elite is a serious movie,which doesn't take itself too seriously.Action with Sam Peckinpah slow motion scenes.All the characters are great.Mike Locken as a bit of a slow,but all the time thinking the next step.Jerome Miller as a gun expert. Mac as a every guy.George Hansen as cold blooded killer. There's not much women,but they're still existing.San Francisco at it's best.Great pictures of Mike Locken getting to a better shape around the City streets,all the hills and the bay area. Sausalitos wooden homes and of course,the suisun bay with the mothball fleet.I'll never get tired to watch those locations.As a matter of fact,i'll never get tired to watch this film over and over again.There is not even one bad element in this film.

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zardoz-13
2009/08/22

"The Wild Bunch" director Sam Peckinpah's urban espionage shoot'em up "The Killer Elite" qualifies as his most autobiographical as well as metaphorical thriller. Like the duck show that the two COMTEG agents refer to near the beginning, "The Killer Elite" is good Peckinpah, but not great Peckinpah. Several things separate "The Killer Elite" from Peckinpah's best movies, such as "Ride the High Country," "The Wild Bunch," "The Getaway," "Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia," "Cross of Iron" and "Straw Dogs," are these are the cynicism, the subject matter, and the oddball humor. Peckinpah admirers probably have a softer spot for "The Killer Elite" than non-Peckinpah admirers. The Marc Norman & Stirling Silliphant screenplay doesn't amount to anything memorable. This is your standard issue revenge melodrama about two friends who turn on each other and everybody else who gets caught in the middle. Ostensibly, "The Killer Elite" is a Cold War era thriller without a reference to the Soviets. Peckinpah makes this affair worth looking watching because he alludes to his best films and some of the Norman & Silliphant dialogue stand out. Nevertheless, Peckinpah seemed to know what he was up against when he made this thriller. Like its redoubtable hero, "The Killer Elite" is handicapped from the start. You know a Peckinpah movie is unusual when the violence is as muted as it is in "The Killer Elite" and the most interesting sequence occurs in the middle when our protagonist rehabs himself."The Killer Elite" opens with this disclaimer: This film is a work of fiction. There is no company called Communication Integrity NOR Comteg and the thought the C.I.A. might employ such an organization for any purpose is, of course, preposterous. The cynicism evident here and later shows a world weary Peckinpah who rarely rises to the occasion. Everything in "The Killer Elite" is rather matter of fact as if Peckinpah were going through the motions. After a terrific opening sequence with George Hansen (Robert Duvall of "The Godfather") betraying his old buddy Mike Locken (James Caan of "The Godfather") and killing the defector that they were charged with guarding, the film settles into an extended rehabilitation plot. Surprisingly, the emergency room scene, with the dispassionate doctors talking over the surgery of our hero, surpasses the sterile violence in "The Killer Elite." Later, Peckinpah sends in a believable, plain Jane therapist to supervise Locken's recovery. As inspired as these scenes are, they all but halt the forward momentum of the movie. The news that Hansen sold out to the opposition drives Locken to rebuild himself that starts the fuse burning. The restaurant scene where Locken crashes ignominiously into the floor and has to be helped up makes our hero look like an alter-ego for Peckinpah. Like Locken, Peckinpah was betrayed by film producers (remember "Major Dundee") and he had to pull himself up by the bootstraps.The most obvious example of cynicism in "The Killer Elite" is the violence. Peckinpah soft-pedals the violence. Hansen's murder of the defector is as bloody as this thriller gets and the bloody explosion is momentary. Afterward, fusillades may erupt, but blood rarely materializes in puddles. Indeed, United Artists may have toned this down to acquire at mild PG-rating, but die-hard Peckinpah will point to this as the missing link in "The Killer Elite." Peckinpah glosses over many issues. Cap Collis (Arthur Hill of "Harper") is Lawrence Weyburn's right-hand man, but he is also a traitor. The revelation that Collis is undermining Comteg comes as no surprise. Peckinpah shuns any kind of mystery and just show Collis in a strip bar with Hansen planning their next move. There is no nobility (except between Hansen and Locken) in the spy business. Collis and Weyburn are bureaucrats and Weyburn is prepared to replace Collis with Locken without skipping a beat. Ultimately, "The Killer Elite" has no fire in its bowels. Peckinpah denies Locken that moment of catharsis to exact his vengeance on Hansen. Instead, Jerome knocks Hansen off and Locken decks Jerome with a John Wayne haymaker. Furthermore, Hansen's death comes between acts three and five and seems to belittle him. Ostensibly, "The Killer Elite" is like the mothballed navy fleet where the film concludes with a kung-fu showdown straight out of the mythical western.Despite the cynicism and the idiotic humor (the guy at the airport who flashes the cop and the imbecilic cop with the bomb), "The Killer Elite" has some vintage Peckinpah touches that make it rewarding to Peckinpah admirers. The broken relationship between the two principals is traditional Peckinpah material hearkening back to "Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid," "The Wild Bunch," and "Ride the High Country." The anti-climax to the relationship between Locken and Hansen is more surprising. Peckinpah does an excellent job of encapsulating their friendship in a handful of scenes before Hansen retires him from service. The scene in front of the building in Chinatown when Locken spirits Yuen Chung (Mako of "Never So Few") out to the cab while Hansen and his sidekick lay down a barrage of machine gun fire from a rooftop across the street is straight out of the opening scene in "The Wild Bunch." Jerome (Bo Hopkins) is basically Crazy Lee, but he lives longer. Peckinpah was the only director who could recycle his own material and make it work in any situation. Earlier, the scene where trigger-happy Jerome shoots the cop on the stairs is a replay of the moment Billy the Kid shot Bell in "Pat Garrett." Peckinpah shows nothing but contempt for the kung fu scenes, but his editors and he do an exemplary job cross-cutting when the airport incident and the C.I.A. briefing about Yuen Chung.The performances are all top-notch. Caan excels as the handicapped hero and Hill is unruffled until the end as the villain. Duvall is good as the treacherous Hansen. The San Francisco locale is scenic. Altogether, "The Killer Elite" is a misfire, but nobody makes a misfire like Peckinpah.

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