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Unman, Wittering and Zigo

  • 1971
  • GP
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
867
YOUR RATING
Unman, Wittering and Zigo (1971)
DramaThriller

A new school teacher learns that the previous teacher was killed by his pupils, and he fears the same will happen to him.A new school teacher learns that the previous teacher was killed by his pupils, and he fears the same will happen to him.A new school teacher learns that the previous teacher was killed by his pupils, and he fears the same will happen to him.

  • Director
    • John Mackenzie
  • Writers
    • Simon Raven
    • Giles Cooper
  • Stars
    • David Hemmings
    • Carolyn Seymour
    • Douglas Wilmer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    867
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Mackenzie
    • Writers
      • Simon Raven
      • Giles Cooper
    • Stars
      • David Hemmings
      • Carolyn Seymour
      • Douglas Wilmer
    • 19User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos100

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    Top Cast25

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    David Hemmings
    David Hemmings
    • John Ebony
    Carolyn Seymour
    Carolyn Seymour
    • Silvia Ebony
    Douglas Wilmer
    Douglas Wilmer
    • Headmaster
    Tony Haygarth
    Tony Haygarth
    • Cary Farthingale
    • (as Anthony Haygarth)
    Hamilton Dyce
    • Mr. Winstanley
    Barbara Lott
    • Mrs. Winstanley
    Donald Gee
    • Stretton
    David Jackson
    • Clackworth
    Hubert Rees
    • Blisterine
    David Auker
    David Auker
    • Aggeridge
    Tom Morris
    • Ankerton
    Richard Gill
    • Borby
    Michael Kitchen
    Michael Kitchen
    • Bungabine
    Nicholas Hoye
    • Cloistermouth
    Tom Owen
    Tom Owen
    • Cuthbun
    Toby Simpson
    • Hogg
    James Wardroper
    • Lipstrob
    Clive Gray
    • Muffett
    • Director
      • John Mackenzie
    • Writers
      • Simon Raven
      • Giles Cooper
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    7.0867
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    Featured reviews

    8Coventry

    And that's why we killed him, Sir.

    "Unman, Wittering and Zigo" is a thoroughly peculiar and strangely uncanny gem from the early 70's Brit-movie industry; an era where lots of long-lost forgotten movie classics are still waiting to be re- discovered by cult fanatics. The film lacks explicit bloodshed or exciting actions stunts, but it thrives on ominous atmosphere, a solid and complex screenplay and impeccable acting performances. David Hemmings, perhaps the most shamefully underrated actor/director to come out of Great Britain, stars as a young and still ambitious teacher who enrolls in a strictly catholic male boarding school in the remote British countryside. He takes over class Lower 5-B since their previous teacher died in a most unfortunate accident when he fell off a cliff. When trying to bring some order and discipline amongst the rebellious young men and threatening to give them Saturday afternoon detention, one of his pupils suddenly states: "our previous teacher also wanted to that … and that's why we killed him, Sir". From that moment onwards, the students are provide more and accurate proof that they, in fact, did kill their previous teacher and scare Mr. Ebony into believing that the same might overcome him or his lovely wife Sylvia. Obviously no one believes him – not even his wife – and the pupils continue to push further their blackmail and menacing. "Unman, Wittering and Zigo" (the title refers to the last three names on the alphabetic list that Mr. Ebony runs through to see who's present in class) is a slow-brooding chiller with an immense claustrophobic power. By this I mean that director John MacKenzie manages to make it so obvious that nobody in John Ebony's immediate surrounding even suspects the pupils of anything, whereas he finds himself trapped in a isolated situation of fear from which he cannot escape. To everyone else, the pupils of class Lower 5-B are sophisticated and well-mannered young men and only their teacher knows that they're actually deeply disturbed and nihilistic psychopaths. There are a handful of truly powerful and perturbing sequences, including near the end with John's wife trapped in the school's gym, as well as a terrific use of the contemporary British life-styles and the remote setting. Unfortunately, the film also contains a few defaults, like a largely unsatisfying climax and some dead-end plot lines, but overall I would definitely say this is a gem well worth seeking out and treasuring.
    10jukkaOkai

    Psychological pressure 70's style

    Ok, it's not a big picture, but for me it was a once in a five years kind of thing. Air loaded with anxiety without the the ease of deeply understanding the motives or reasons of the characters. These psychological thrillers of 70's and early 80's are all about the feel - the poetical anxiety of not being safe or being able to find reasons for evil behavior. For me this genre is pure gold and nowadays rarely approached. Unman... is a nice find for a friend of this shivering era.
    8robertconnor

    Chilly and Disturbing

    When a school teacher dies in an accident, his replacement quickly begins to suspect his students of murder.

    Using its theatrical origins to claustrophobic effect, Unman, Wittering and Zigo very cleverly builds up layer upon layer of tension and menace, as Hemming's naive and idealistic Mr. Ebony is quickly and easily outclassed by his pupils, seemingly at every turn. Dismissed by his headmaster, and humoured by both his wife and a fellow teacher, Ebony is slowly ground into submission by the boys as they repeatedly claim to have killed his predecessor. However, when the boys attempt an assault on his wife as a way of further controlling Ebony, the web they have spun begins to unravel until eventually another tragedy forces out the truth.

    Chilly and chilling, Mackenzie is well-served by his actors, both adult and juvenile. Hemmings captures just the right note of bewilderment and impotence, whilst Seymour turns the potentially thankless role of Mrs. Ebony into a striking portrait of independence, determination and naturalism - her performance during the attempted assault by the boys is quite brilliant. Standout amongst the boys are Hoye, Owen and Cashman, all conveying stonewall confidence collectively, whilst allowing just the faint trace of fear and uncertainty when separated from their classmates. Unsettling allusions to Ebony's ambivalence and a vaguely sexual response to his ordeal add to the mix, and only a slightly dissatisfying and unbelievable conclusion mar what is otherwise a deeply disturbing, grown up story. Highly recommended, if you can track it down.
    6allyjack

    Entertaining, although not very ambitious or distinctive

    It's a very peculiar movie, which perhaps could only have been fully explained in semi-supernatural terms, although it never takes that step. The later sequences where murder seems entirely possible (particularly as they terrorize Seymour) are very unsettling. The movie is also a pretty effective exploding of the public school upper-crust ethos, depicting the boys as determined to get good university scholarships (perceived by them as the next thing to a divine right) while doing as little work as possible. That aside, it's not very ambitious or enormously distinctive - the portrayal of the school beyond the class itself is pretty vague and Hemmings' specific strategy - focusing on finding the ringleader - is fairly indistinctly plotted. Leonard Maltin's review refers to the actual killer's identity being revealed after closing credits but that wasn't the case in the print seen here (quite a let down, actually). The movie should surely have reached further into metaphor or broader meaning or SOMETHING. But even so, it kept me watching until 3.15 am one morning.
    simon-118

    Chilling Hitchcockian thriller

    A forgotten gem, this is one of the earliest films John Mackenzie directed after a few years working in television, before he returned to television in time to shoot some of the finest Play For Todays of the 1970s. And along with The Long Good Friday and Ruby this is Mackenzie finest achievement in the cinema. A stunning thriller, this is an assured, efficient filming of a chilly concept. David Hemmings is excellently vulnerable in the lead, the perfect Hitchcockian hero, believed by nobody apart from the viewer. The class of boys includes a young Michael Kitchen, and there's Tony haygarth as a world weary colleague whose lack of joie de vivre begins to corrupt Hemmings as much as his class do.

    The most frightening sequence is the shocking persecution of the wife in the squash courts, a superbly staged scene that is quite a jaw-dropper considering the age of the film. In fact it is more the quaint English setting that adds the real shyock to the scene. It is interesting to compare this film with two other public school movies of the era, inevitably Lindsay Anderson's If....but more significantly the brilliant Walk A Crooked Path

    which similarly portrays the public school boys as corrupt, ruthless and cold blooded, brilliantly adept at money making, no matter how immorally, and trained to view the world with a haughty authority.

    Unman Wittering And Zigo is a truly gripping thriller, and proves Mackenzie is a great thriller maker as he illustrated in pieces like Dennis Potter's Double Dare and The Long Good Friday even more vividly.

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    Related interests

    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      David Hemmings had clearly forgotten the climax to this film because in his autobiography he describes a totally different ending to the film. (This book is very clearly ghost-written and did not appear until Hemmings had been dead for a year - it seems likely that the actor himself had very little actual input into it).
    • Quotes

      [John Ebony's first day teaching. The students are taking turns reading from a history book]

      Wittering: [faintly] hypotenuse... hypotenuse... hypotenuse

      John Ebony: Who's that muttering?

      Wittering: Me, sir.

      Lipstrob: He can't help it, sir.

      Cuthbun: He says 'hypotenuse' all the time, sir.

      Ankerton: He likes the word.

      Aggeridge: Mr. Pelham said he was 'hypotenus-ed' by it, sir!

      [general laughter]

      John Ebony: Stop it! Very well, you've had ample warning. This form will kept in on Saturday afternoon from 2:30.

      Cloistermouth: It's not a good idea, sir.

      John Ebony: Why is that, Cloistermouth?

      Cloistermouth: Mr. Pelham tried it once, sir.

      Terhew: The week before last.

      Cloistermouth: And that's why we killed him, sir.

      [long silence]

    • Crazy credits
      In the closing credits, when the names of actors playing the schoolboys appear they are listed in alphabetical order according to the character's surname. This is so as to resemble the class's register. The character of 'Zigo' appears at the very end but as he never appears in the film, instead of an actor being credited, it merely says "Zigo....Absent".
    • Connections
      Referenced in F (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Angel Voices Ever Singing
      (uncredited)

      Music by Edwin Monk

      Words by Francis Pott

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 23, 1971 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Die Satansbrut
    • Filming locations
      • Berkshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Hemmings
      • Mediarts
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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