The Internecine Project: Difference between revisions
m Removed 'espionage' from the initial description as there is no espionage element to this film, other than than the fact that Robert Elliot has worked in the past for an intelligence gathering organisation. |
No edit summary |
||
Line 56: | Line 56: | ||
[[Category:British films]] |
[[Category:British films]] |
||
[[Category:British independent films]] |
[[Category:British independent films]] |
||
[[Category:British spy films]] |
|||
[[Category:British thriller films]] |
[[Category:British thriller films]] |
||
[[Category:English-language films]] |
[[Category:English-language films]] |
Revision as of 21:48, 2 May 2020
This article needs additional citations for verification. (June 2019) |
The Internecine Project | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ken Hughes |
Written by | Mort W. Elkind Barry Levinson Jonathan Lynn |
Produced by | Barry Levinson Andrew Donally |
Starring | James Coburn Lee Grant Harry Andrews Ian Hendry Michael Jayston |
Cinematography | Geoffrey Unsworth |
Edited by | John Shirley |
Music by | Roy Budd |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Allied Artists (US) |
Release date | 1974 |
Running time | 89 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Internecine Project is a 1974 British thriller film written by Mort W. Elkind, Barry Levinson, and Jonathan Lynn, directed by Ken Hughes and starring James Coburn and Lee Grant. Set in London in the early 1970s, it tells the story of former secret agent Robert Elliot who is being promoted to a government advisor. To eliminate any ties to his past, Elliot devises and carries out a clever plan in which his four former associates will unwittingly kill each other on the same night.
Elliot's four associates are:
- Alex Hellman: A civil servant who has fed Elliot government information.
- Bert: A masseur who has also given Elliot information from his industrialist clients
- Christina: A high-class prostitute who has given Elliot information from her clients.
- David Baker: A research scientist who appears to have benefited from Elliot's fund in producing a weapon which uses sound to kill.
The intricate plot is broadly summarised as follows: Christina plants David Baker's own device in his home on a timer. When Baker returns, it goes off before he can stop it - apparently looking like an accident. Earlier in the evening, Baker had substituted Alex Hellman's insulin (Hellman being diabetic) with a lethal dose. Hellman, the last to die, has previously savagely murdered Bert with a hammer, this after Bert has strangled Christina in the shower after her return from Baker's home. With Bert, Christina and Baker all dead - Alex returns home in a state (having never murdered anyone before) and takes his lethal substituted medication. He dies slowly.
In the film's final scene, Elliot is leaving the country - having apparently cleared his dirty past clean away by disposing of his associates. Shortly before leaving his house, he has received a package through the mail. The package contains a notebook. The pages of the notebook contain a message written to Elliot from scientist David Baker. The message informs Elliott that Baker had never really trusted him - and that this package was only to be sent to Elliot in the event of Baker's death (which has just happened). The pages of the notebook have been saturated with a poison Baker had been working on. The poison is absorbed through the skin. The final scene shows Elliot's lifeless body slumped over.
Cast
- James Coburn as Robert Elliot
- Lee Grant as Jean Robertson
- Harry Andrews as Albert Parsons
- Ian Hendry as Alex Hellman
- Michael Jayston as David Baker
- Christiane Krüger as Christina Larsson
- Keenan Wynn as E.J. Farnsworth
- Terence Alexander as Business tycoon
- Philip Anthony as Eliott's secretary
- Julian Glover as Arnold Pryce-Jones
- Mary Larkin as Jean's secretary
External links
- 1974 films
- 1970s independent films
- 1970s thriller films
- British films
- British independent films
- British thriller films
- English-language films
- Films based on American novels
- Films based on thriller novels
- Films directed by Ken Hughes
- Films with screenplays by Jonathan Lynn
- Films scored by Roy Budd
- 1970s thriller film stubs