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The Disappearance

  • 1977
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
837
YOUR RATING
The Disappearance (1977)
DramaThriller

Contract killer Jay Mallory 's wife Celandine has disappeared from their apartment. When he is hired by members of an international organization to carry out a hit in England, he suspects th... Read allContract killer Jay Mallory 's wife Celandine has disappeared from their apartment. When he is hired by members of an international organization to carry out a hit in England, he suspects that they are connected with her disappearance.Contract killer Jay Mallory 's wife Celandine has disappeared from their apartment. When he is hired by members of an international organization to carry out a hit in England, he suspects that they are connected with her disappearance.

  • Director
    • Stuart Cooper
  • Writers
    • Paul Mayersberg
    • Derek Marlowe
  • Stars
    • Donald Sutherland
    • Francine Racette
    • David Hemmings
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    837
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stuart Cooper
    • Writers
      • Paul Mayersberg
      • Derek Marlowe
    • Stars
      • Donald Sutherland
      • Francine Racette
      • David Hemmings
    • 20User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos60

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    Top cast18

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    Donald Sutherland
    Donald Sutherland
    • Jay Mallory
    Francine Racette
    Francine Racette
    • Celandine
    David Hemmings
    David Hemmings
    • Edward
    John Hurt
    John Hurt
    • Atkinson
    David Warner
    David Warner
    • Burbank
    Peter Bowles
    Peter Bowles
    • Jefferies
    Virginia McKenna
    Virginia McKenna
    • Catherine
    Christopher Plummer
    Christopher Plummer
    • Deverell
    Michèle Magny
    Michèle Magny
    • Melanie
    • (as Michele Magny)
    Dan Howard
    • James
    • (as Duane Howard)
    Robin Sachs
    Robin Sachs
    • Young Man
    Christina Greatrex
    Christina Greatrex
    • Secretary
    Robert Korne
    • Dominic
    Michael Eric Kramer
    Michael Eric Kramer
    • Peter
    • (as Michael Kramer)
    Maureen Beck
    • Maid
    Patricia Hodge
    Patricia Hodge
    • Young Wife
    Norman Eshley
    Norman Eshley
    • Young Husband
    Mark Cogan
    • Child
    • Director
      • Stuart Cooper
    • Writers
      • Paul Mayersberg
      • Derek Marlowe
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    5.7837
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    Featured reviews

    7udar55

    Cold and stylish thriller

    Cold blooded hitman Jay Mallory (Donald Sutherland) experiences uncharted emotions when his wife (Francine Racette, Sutherland's partner and future wife) suddenly disappears. It makes him nervous about his next job (which the hitmen call "the shy"), a high profile hit in England, but he ultimately accepts the risks. Based on the novel "Echoes of Celandine" by Derek Marlowe, this is a tiny and engaging thriller put together by David Hemmings (he also has a small role). According to the L. A. Times, Hemmings raised around $2 million to make it (Sutherland also invested his own $200,000). The team must have called in a lot of favors as also onscreen in small roles are David Warner, John Hurt, Virginia McKenna, and Christopher Plummer. Director Stuart Cooper handles it all well and makes the film extremely "cold" on screen. By that I mean you can almost feel the chilliness in the Canadian and England locations. Mallory's home is also a cool site/sight as they shot at Habitat 67, a futuristic looking apartment block built for the World's Fair in 1967. All of this is captured beautifully by cinematographer John Alcott, who had just done Barry Lyndon(1975) and would soon do The Shining (1980) for Kubrick. In the end, it had a rough go in terms of release. World Northal picked it up for the U. S. and eventually put it out in 1981. By that time, Sutherland had already made 10 more films.
    9mim-8

    Canadian "Night Moves"

    This film, done as a joint effort from the stellar cast and crew (script, cinematography, costumes, set design), is one of the best mystery, thriller-dramas, of the seventies. Ranking right along Arthur Penn's "Night Moves", "The Disappearance", in it's 91 minute, or better yet 101 minute director's cut, version is stylish neo-noir that glides perfectly through the story of alienation and betrayal, love and loss, mistaken emotions and gloomy memories, spanning between almost futuristic backdrop of Montreal, and rustic mansions and countrysides of Suffolk. Director's cut adds only a few nice linchpins to the story, explaining minor details, that are somewhat important to the plot, and without which, few things are left to our imagination.

    Never really seen in it's real glory, as intended by the director Stuart Cooper, until the 2013 blu-ray release, that comprises both director's cut and 91 minute "third version" of the film,released in the UK, assembled by unknown author, as close to original as possible, retaining the feel, flashbacks essential to the film's structure and original score, director's cut and a "hatchet job" US version, "The Disappearance" is the best example of how a really good film can be mutilated beyond recognition, by an inept studio hacks. Making a linear plot out of non-linear story which is essential to the depth of the plot, is a true crime, and the rating that this movie holds on IMDb is the rating of the so called "US theatrical cut" which made this gem bomb at the box office after a single showing, and jettisoned into obscurity for over 30 years. The example of this, is also contained on the blue-ray in a horrid 15 minute long excerpt from the re-edited and re-scored U.S. release version of the film.

    Now available as envisioned, (plus a non Hollywood ending) "The Disappearance" deserves it's place among the "must see" films. More than recommended, a true classic.
    6imseeg

    Terrific actors acting well, but there are simply too many flashbacks that bogged down this movie's storyline.

    The good: excellent cast of actors. I mean these actors were the creme de la creme during the seventies and eighties and even beyond. And we get to see some excellent acting performances. This is an ACTOR'S movie!

    The photography is of high quality as well, with many still shots without any words, that reveal the hand of a master at work.

    Any bad? Unfortunately this movie is bogged down by ENDLESS flashbacks, that got on my nerves after half an hour. I get it, this story is like a puzzle and what better way of slowly revealing the plot than by using flashbacks. BUT there is a limit on how many flashbacks I can see, before I get annoyed by them.

    Still worth a watch for the Donald Sutherland fans, because he gives one of his best performances.
    5ma-cortes

    Passable movie about a hit man hired by a mysterious criminal organization

    A contracted hit-man (Donald Sutherland) working for a strange organization (his contact is David Warner) discovers a rare link between his new target and his missing spouse (Francine Racette, Sutherland's wife on real life ) while they're living in their Montreal apartment.

    This slow-moving film results to be a boring and confusing story that deals about assassin's preoccupation with the disappearance his wife . The picture is full with continuous flashbacks , suspense , twists and turns. Nice performance by Donald Sutherland as a cold and tough assassin . Good supporting actors formed by all-star-cast as David Warner, John Hurt , Virginia McKenna, Christopher Plummer, and David Hemmings, also producer . This unknown movie was a flop because of flaws , gaps and disjointed scenes . Colorful cinematography by John Alcott , Stanley Kubrick's usual , an splendid cameraman who photographed ¨2001¨, ¨Clockwork Orange¨ and ¨Barry Lyndon¨. Sad and melancholic soundtrack by piano music is composed by Robert Farnon. The motion picture was professionally directed by Stuart Cooper with pretentiously arty film-making . He initially directed cinema movies as¨¨ Little Malcom¨ and ¨Overlord¨ but went on making TV movies as ¨The hunted¨, ¨Fortunate pilgrim¨ , ¨A.D.¨, ¨Long Hot summer¨ and several others. Rating : Acceptable but tiring movie .
    8adrianovasconcelos

    Superior support cast, sexy Sutherland & Francine, splendid visuals

    Director Stuart Cooper, about whom I know nothing, gets his cinematography and editing teams to produce a sweeping visual job of Canadian snow-laden landscapes, Montreal buildings and river, lush English forests, and luscious Francine Racette, Sutherland's real life wife, that keeps you watching in earnest. Very good support cast includes John Hurt, David Hemmings, Peter Bowles, the ever beautiful and classy Virginia McKenna and, of course, Sutherland's fellow Canadian-born actor, Christopher Plummer.

    Sutherland's tall, slender figure, is emphasized throughout in stylish photography and lit background shots, and his chemistry with gorgeous Racette is palpable, adding believability to his situation as the husband missing his beloved wife, who has disappeared. Has she left him out of boredom? Has she found another love interest - after all, she leaves then hubby Hemmings at the party for sex with Sutherland? Or are there darker forces involved and she has been abducted? Or worse?

    Flashbacks explain it. For a tad patient viewer it can make for rewarding cinema and storytelling, even if why Sutherland became a hitman in the first place is not disclosed (I did get the impression, though, that he needed Francine in his life to keep the right mental attitude to killing, as signs of burnout and wanting to leave the profession begin to emerge).

    Such questionable moral and professional values aside, THE DISAPPEARANCE deserves attentive watching. 8/10.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Donald Sutherland had played supporting parts (mostly small) in Britain for nearly ten years before his roles in "The Dirty Dozen" and "Joanna" brought him to Hollywood's attention. When he began receiving American offers, he had a problem, which was that he simply didn't have the money to fly out to California and support himself and his family until deals were finalized. He turned to fellow-Canadian Christopher Plummer, with whom he had worked in both "Hamlet" for television and "Oedipus The King" for the cinema. Despite the fact that they knew each other only slightly at that time, Plummer advanced him $5000, and Sutherland's Hollywood career began.
    • Alternate versions
      There are three different versions of The Disappearance (1977).
      • Version 1: The original director's cut which runs at 101 minutes and is healthily non-linear, influenced by the temporal experiments of earlier films such as Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959), Don't Look Now (1973) and Point Blank (1967).
      • Version 2: An unauthorized, shortened, re-edited version by Fima Noveck that runs at 81 minutes and attempts to put the narrative into a more coherent order by reducing the complexity of the narrative by coding the instances of non-linearity as flashbacks; and reducing their frequency and length.
      • Version 3: A third version that runs at 91 minutes but maintains the jumbled time frame and comes across as a leaner and more abstract version of the original.
    • Connections
      Edited into Give Me Your Answer True (1987)
    • Soundtracks
      Piano Concerto in G
      By Maurice Ravel

      by arrangement with United Music Publishers Limited.

      Played by Leslie Pearson

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 20, 1978 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Canada
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Sein letzter Mord
    • Filming locations
      • Habitat 67, Montréal, Québec, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Trofar
      • Tiberius Film Productions
      • National Film Finance Corporation (NFFC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • CA$1,800,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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