MovieChat Forums > The Offence (1973) Discussion > Best Film I've Ever Seen - Period

Best Film I've Ever Seen - Period


This film has mystified me for many years. As others have commented, I first saw it as a kid and knew subconsciously that it was good, but I didn't understand why. Now I've had the chance to catch up with it and I often put it on if I'm in the mood to go to a dark place. I find if I am, that this sort of film is much more exciting than a general thriller.
What The Offence does so well is to make you uneasy as you realise how easy it could be to become a Johnson. To find yourself in an unimaginable emotional place and not realise how or why you got there. I find it a very sad film, rather than just 'grim' as I've heard it described.
I don't think I've ever seen another film that captures so well the mood of the seventies, right down to the weather and the buildings. Everything seems so carefully chosen, that I was surprised the film was directed by a young American. But perhaps that is why he captured it so well - because he was an outsider looking in?
I also really like the clever structure of The Offence. The breaking up of the key interrogation, so that only in the final run (after Howard has left), do you get the truth.
Johnson plays with Howard's character in their meeting. At times he relents and shows the true state of his mind, while at the same time jumping back to deny things and try a last attempt to save his skin. It's all very realistic.
Other reviewers here have commented on architecture. The Police station in particular is shown with wires exposed and walls peeled back. For me this is metaphorical, as we are peeling back the layers of Johnson's mind, seeing what lies behind the eyes.
Although some would decide the character of Johnson is as bad as the suspects he pursues, for me Lumet still gets the viewer to relate to the man. You feel his isolation and the treatment he receives from his former colleagues is probably accurate of how teams work. Johnson was once the star but is revealed to be the devil - and all the people who have thus far tolerated his abrasive style seem to jump at the chance of looking down on him. In the end he is so wrapped up in the chaos of his own mind that he misses his wife's last offer of kindness.

My favourite bit? It has to be the lonely journey home. The rain and the dark, the look on his face and the totally absorbing flashbacks which could only have been shot in the early seventies. Within this scene there is one superb detail that I noticed - when Johnson drives out of the Police Station he drags the back wheel of his car on the curb - come on that's proper acting. That little bit is what always comes into my mind when I think of the film. His character must have driven out of that garage thousands of times, but that night he hits his wheel because his mind is elsewhere. Even if it was unintentional of Connery, it was a great director who left it in.

I could go on and on about this film, it is simply brilliant. It is a great injustice that it continues to be so readily ignored. I never even seem to hear critics give it more than a passing nod. Don't get me wrong, Get Carter is wonderful for many of the same reasons, but surely The Offence is in another league? I don't even like Sean Connery that much as an actor, but if I'm honest I can't imagine anyone else in the role or doing a better job.

Can it be that it is just the subject matter that puts everyone off? Are we the only people who love it's grim realism? This film is like looking at a car crash - one of those particularly nasty ones they used to show us in school in the seventies and eighties. We might as well admit it, if even only to ourselves - secretly we all want to look...

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Not the best film I've ever seen, but a solid 7.

One things that stands out to me is the scene where Connery finds the missing girl in the woods. The way he tries to console her seems somehow sinister, almost how you'd imagine her attack might have been. Of course that makes sense in the end, but at that moment I already knew something was wrong with the man (beyond what we already knew from the opening).


BTW - when you say Howard, I think you are referring to Baxter (Ian Bannen) character.



You saw Dingleberries?

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Well it certainly showed that there was a hell of a lot more to Connery than James Bond. So yes this film is a British classic.

http://www.myspace.com/taffy1967

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agreed,
i couldn't tell if it was from being so far removed from a film shot 45 years ago or not, but his consoling of the girl would be depicted as almost another assault if it were shown in a film in 2020

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Lumet also directed Connery & Bannen, in 1965's The Hill, another excellent film.


Carpe Noctem!

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Best film you have ever seen? Hmm... How many films have you seen?!

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It's not even the best Sean Connery film directed by Sidney Lumet.

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I also think that Bracknell in the early 70's lent itself well to this film. The bleak modern boxes and flats and brutalist architecture, unfinished estates and muddy fields leading nowhere. And it's still like that! (Well only a bit)

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It was also the setting of 'I Start Counting' another pretty dark film about sex crimes in 1969. It seems to have been THE place to do those kinds of films, not exactly a great thing for the tourist board!

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i like your write up very much. for a piece entitled "best film ever -period" it's very objective, balanced and well observed. i totally agree, that to call the film merely "grim" is to dismiss it. somehow the film isn't quite as ugly as the subject matter would suggest and i'm at a loss to explain why. perhaps it's leavened by connery's awareness that he is not much different from ian bannen's probable molester. the film refuses to take the easy route by allowing us to hate any of the characters outright.
i like your observation about the car bumping the kerb. if it was a deliberate indication of connery's preoccupation on the part of the filmmakers it was very understated. as was the part where he gets home and tries to get in the wrong flat. an object lesson in how to tell a whole story without saying very much.

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Couldn't agree with you more, dmorris13. This is a superb film, and, like you, I saw it as a kid - I must have been 13 or 14. The core sequence that I found devastating (well, the whole story of his breakdown is deeply moving) were his description of the murders he's had to deal with and the montage of each incident, told through pragmatic murder scene images; the blood dripping off the child's fingers; the cops climbing the ladder to get onto the railway; the body hanging from the tree; the cop running through the streets to get help. These images burned into my mind then and, watching the DVD recently, these images have lost none of their power. We see exactly what Connery has seen, there is no need to articulate the dehumanising effects this has on him, and indeed, on all police officers who have to investigate the dreadful results of the nadir of the human condition.

I've got it on DVD and have introduced a few friends who are Connery fans but know nothing about this film. It's such a shame because Connery's performance is, in my opinion, a career best. He got the chance to make this because he agreed to do another Bond, and wanted a two-film contract - films of his choice - included into the bargain. The choice of Sydney Lumet was his request as well. Unfortunately, the other film he wanted to make was MacBeth, but the financiers pulled out of that one because Polanski's version had just been made. Now that project would have been interesting.



"Do you want to go to the toilet, Albert?"

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I think Connery would make an excellent King Lear. Perhaps Polanski could direct him in that.

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lastpictureshow,some of us have film going experience that goes beyond citizen kane and casablanca,okay?

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Although this film came out in a very creatively fertile period for mainstream films it suffered from a number of issues that we would dismiss today with incredulity.

1) The very desire on Connery's part to break out of the iron maiden image of James Bond met with great opposition at the box office. Films like this and The Molly Maguires, another fine though not at all as intense non-Bond film, tanked badly.

2) The subject matter intentionally challenged the deepest, most feelings in setting an act of police brutality against the crime of pedophilia, though the film pointedly does not confirm that Ian Bannen's character actually did it. Similar but not so deeply cutting to films now weighing torture against safety from terror attacks. It simply was too dark and off-putting for its time.

3) On a much more minor scale, when I first saw it in a New York theater that purports to be a diverse crowd, there was a lot of murmuring during the first 20 minutes or so of the film about not being able to understand the non-posh/regional British accents. This was the important setup of the film.

4) There was a convergence of challenging, breakthrough aspects such as the white outs, the use of slow motion depicting brutal actions, the flashback structure and the avant-garde score by the 20th Century classical composer, Harrison Birtwistle.

5) And last there was the sustained dark mood and downbeat cast to Sean Connery's character's life such as a beautifully framed scene with his wife played by the great Vivien Merchant where he appears so huge as to being so tightly, so uncomfortably boxed in by the room at his home.

I do not in any way take issued with your assessment. Great art and this is a punch in the solar plexus variety should always be able to challenge your worst fear and prejudices, to take on the consensuses that frequently strangle us and prevent us from trying to figure out the moral quandries of our time.

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