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Tag Archives: The Man With the Getaway Face
Parker on the screen #3: The Outfit (1973)
The third instalment of my series on Parker on the screen is the 1973 film, The Outfit, written and directed by John Flynn, based on the 1963 Donald Westlake novel of the same name (one of three Parker novels Westlake wrote under the Richard Stark pseudonym that year, the others being The Man with the Getaway Face and The Mourner).
The book opens with a botched hit on Parker while he is enjoying one of his post-job trysts. It forces the professional thief to come to the conclusion that he needs to settle his ongoing feud with the shadowy crime organisation known as the Outfit once and for all. He puts word out through his various criminal networks that the unofficial underworld truce with the Outfit is over and it is now fair game. What follows is a series of independently run operations as various freelance criminal groups start hitting the organisation’s money-making activities while Parker goes after its leader, a man named Bronson. It has been a while since I read The Outfit, but I remember thinking it was definitely one of the better Parker novels.
The film starts with a hit on a man working on a remote farm. Next we see Earl Macklin (Robert Duvall) getting out of jail where he has been doing a stint for carrying a concealed firearm (a scene very reminiscent of Steve McQueen’s release from jail in Sam Peckinpah’s The Getaway a year earlier).… Read more
Posted in 1970s American crime films, Crime film, Donald Westlake aka Richard Stark, Heist films, Jim Thompson, Karen Black, Neo Noir, Parker, Robert Ryan, Sam Peckinpah
Tagged Best Seller (1987), Donald Westlake aka Richard Stark, Elisha Cook Jr, Henry Jones, Jane Greer, Joanne Cassidy, Joe Don Baker, John Flynn, Karen Black, Point Blank (1967), Richard Jaeckel, Robert Duvall, Robert Ryan, Rolling Thunder (1977), The Godfather (1972), The Man With the Getaway Face, The Mourner, The Outfit (1973), Timothy Carey
Pulp Friday: Parker
Today’s Pulp Friday is a selection of books by one of my favourite authors, Richard Stark AKA the late Donald Westlake.
Regular readers of Pulp Curry will know that my love of Westlake and his creation, the professional thief Parker, particularly his pre-1974 incarnation, knows no bounds.
I’ve been keen for a while now to share some of my collection of Parker covers. The impetus for finally getting my act together is two fold.
First, I recently picked up a cheap copy of the very rare 1977 Coronet Books edition of Butcher’s Moon and I wanted it show it off. It’s got a great early seventies feel.
Second, I’ve been re-reading one of the earlier Parker books, The Black Ice Score. The cover of the 1986 Allison and Busby edition is among those below “Stealing the Africans’ diamonds back appeals to the arch pro in Parker. But the opposition’s clumsy double cross activates the mean machine”.
Actually, re-reading is not quite accurate. I started it years ago but never finished. The story didn’t particularly appeal to me at the time and I’ve since talked to many people who believe it is one of Westlake’s lessor Parker efforts.
But I’m enjoying it this time around. Parker gets involved in a diamond heist being staged by a group of Africans who want to use the proceeds to overthrow their country’s corrupt ruler.… Read more
Posted in Coronet Books, Crime fiction, Donald Westlake aka Richard Stark, Fawcett Gold Medal Books, Noir fiction, Parker, Pulp fiction in the 70s and 80s, Pulp Friday
Tagged Butcher's Moon, Deadly Edge, Donald Westlake aka Richard Stark, Richard Stark, Slay-Ground, The Black Ice Score, The Jugger, The Man With the Getaway Face, The Outfit, The Split