646f9e108c Greg Callan&#39;s cousin, David Callan top agent/assassin for the S.I.S., was forced to retire because he had lost his nerve. Now, Callan is called back into service to handle the assassination of Schneider, a German businessman. His former boss promises Callan that he&#39;ll be returned to active status if he follows orders, butalways Callan refuses to act until he knows why Schneider has been marked for death. The spy genre saw a (British-led) backlash in the mid-/late-1960s against the &#39;James Bond-led&#39; type of upper class, super-human, perfect being spies and attention being paid in literature (&quot;The spy who came in from the cold&quot;) and film (the Harry Palmer films) to a much more realistic portrayal of who spies were and what they actually did (often grubby little men working in atrocious conditions and for minimal recompense). In addition to literature and film, I can recall seeing the original &quot;Callan&quot; series on TV and of being very impressed by it. As portrayed by Woodward, Callan really was a working class thug (ex-army/ex-offender/borderline alcoholic and capable of great viciousness) doing the most unglamorous kinds of things in order to &quot;take care&quot; (with threats, blackmail, entrapment and, ultimately, &#39;termination&#39;) of people his superiors ordered him to. At the same time, Woodward gave the character a real human side who often displayed pity and empathy for his victims and who refused to turn into just the simple killing machine his masters wanted. I thought this film (which I had never seen before and found on some TV network being broadcast between 1.00 and 3.00 AM!) caught all of this very well. It was made at a time of great violence/almost seeming social melt-down (IRA bombing campaigns in Britain, the never-ending &quot;Troubles&quot; in Ireland, terrorism across much of Europe, the PLO terrorist attacks across the world. the Vietnam War staggering towards its bloody (and probably inevitable) end) and there are a number of places in the film where issues of direct relevance for today are also addressed (where to draw the line between &#39;enhanced interrogation&#39; and outright torture, what are the limits of surveillance, how far can people &#39;follow orders&#39; and still stay human?) An exciting film to watch but also one with a lot more to offerwell. This is a tight, intelligent thriller closely based on the fine novel Red File For Callan, from which the great 1960s-1970s Thames TV series developed. David Callan is a solitary, mentally unstable killer, who is given one last chance to return to &quot;The Section&quot;, a shadowy British government security department. Callan hates to kill, but is qualified for little else, and has been forced by his old masters into a dull, mundane office job with a harassing boss. His test is to murder someone - a man whom it turns out he knows, an apparently harmless businessman with whom he shares an interest in military history and battle games. The film boasts a first-class performance from Edward WoodwardCallan, reprising his TV role with confidence. Russell Hunter is also extremely goodLonely, a smelly petty crook who Callan employs to get him a gun. Sadly the film was made with little style, and the military band score is disappointingly out of kilter with Jack Trombey&#39;s fine, moody Callan TV theme.<br/><br/>The Callan character was an icon in British television history, and was extremely popular with viewers. This story got its first outingA Magnum for Schneider (the book&#39;s original title) in a 50 minute slot on Armchair Theatre, a famous British TV drama anthology. (This unofficial pilot can now be seen on a very good DVD compilation of what early episodes are still unwiped, called &quot;Callan: The Monochrome Years&quot; (Network DVD, 2010).) Callan was seen, like The Ipcress File,an antidote to the invulnerable 007. Why there were no other Callan films made, since the creator James Mitchell wrote several filmable novels about the character, is a mystery.<br/><br/>Callan boasts one technical distinction: according to the Guinness Book of Movie Facts and Feats, this was the first film to be released with a Dolby encoded mono soundtrack. (A Clockwork Orange used Dolby noise reduction in its making some years before but used a conventional soundtrack on its release prints.) When I saw Callan on its release at a local cinema, I remember thinking the sound was uncommonly clear and the dialogue for once actually audible.
Thoughdiscrocon Admin replied
327 weeks ago