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Get Carter

  • 2000
  • R
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
39K
YOUR RATING
Promo Poster
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer2:32
1 Video
99+ Photos
GangsterOne-Person Army ActionActionCrimeDramaThriller

A Las Vegas mob enforcer travels back to his hometown to investigate his brother's mysterious death.A Las Vegas mob enforcer travels back to his hometown to investigate his brother's mysterious death.A Las Vegas mob enforcer travels back to his hometown to investigate his brother's mysterious death.

  • Director
    • Stephen Kay
  • Writers
    • Ted Lewis
    • David McKenna
  • Stars
    • Sylvester Stallone
    • Rachael Leigh Cook
    • Miranda Richardson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    39K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stephen Kay
    • Writers
      • Ted Lewis
      • David McKenna
    • Stars
      • Sylvester Stallone
      • Rachael Leigh Cook
      • Miranda Richardson
    • 321User reviews
    • 102Critic reviews
    • 24Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Get Carter
    Trailer 2:32
    Get Carter

    Photos118

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    + 112
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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Sylvester Stallone
    Sylvester Stallone
    • Jack Carter
    Rachael Leigh Cook
    Rachael Leigh Cook
    • Doreen
    Miranda Richardson
    Miranda Richardson
    • Gloria
    Rhona Mitra
    Rhona Mitra
    • Geraldine
    Johnny Strong
    Johnny Strong
    • Eddie
    John C. McGinley
    John C. McGinley
    • Con McCarty
    Alan Cumming
    Alan Cumming
    • Jeremy Kinnear
    Michael Caine
    Michael Caine
    • Cliff Brumby
    John Cassini
    John Cassini
    • Thorpey
    Mickey Rourke
    Mickey Rourke
    • Cyrus Paice
    Mark Boone Junior
    Mark Boone Junior
    • Jim Davis
    • (as Mark Boone Jr.)
    Garwin Sanford
    Garwin Sanford
    • Les Fletcher
    Darryl Scheelar
    Darryl Scheelar
    • Security Guard
    Yan-Kay Crystal Lowe
    Yan-Kay Crystal Lowe
    • Girl #1
    • (as Crystal Lowe)
    Lauren Lee Smith
    Lauren Lee Smith
    • Girl #2
    • (as Lauren Smith)
    John Moore
    • Priest
    Tyler Labine
    Tyler Labine
    • Bud #1
    Mike Cook
    • Richard Carter
    • (as Michel Cook)
    • Director
      • Stephen Kay
    • Writers
      • Ted Lewis
      • David McKenna
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews321

    5.238.5K
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    Featured reviews

    pirasite

    A simple story very well told

    I can't believe the critics this movie gets here. I hated Stallone as Rambo, as Rocky and I love him in this role. And even if you have seen the 1971 original, not everyone can remember all the details - at least I couldn't. (I think there is just about two or three movies about Jesus, and nobody cares about the remakes). Stallone is out to take vengance on the murderers of his brother, a decent barman working to support his family. The story takes place in seattle, and as you can imagine, there are a couple of shootings, car chases and so on. But that's not the movie. The movie is the fight from a bad guy against the bad guys to get justice for someone who didn't do anything wrong. The movie has an extraordinary visual quality, the titles and the music are worth seeing and hearing this movie. And one very seldom quality at the end: This movie is not to long. Get Carter! 7 of 10!
    wellthatswhatithinkanyway

    Actually probably Stallone's best in a long while

    STAR RATING:*****Unmissable****Very Good***Okay**You Could Go Out For A Meal Instead*Avoid At All Costs

    Stallone's remake of the 1971 classic of the same title finally arrives over on British shores.Only it arrives straight to video.This probably isn't very surprising anyway.The Michael Caine (who also appears here,albeit not in the title role again!) original is seen as an untouchable classic by our movie-going public,and an American re-make would probably be interpreted as the ultimate kick-in-the-teeth.

    But for those not bothered about cultural rivalry or who weren't alive when the original was released,this really isn't that bad a film.It has a really involving camera style and the mystery of Stallone's brothers death is intriguing.There are some interesting characters,with Caine as a mysterious promoter type,Mickey Rourke as an old rival of Stallone's and Miranda Richardson as his deceased brother's wife.

    This is sadly though,however,a real case of style over substance,all of these things are really well thought out but for some weird reason,they don't really blend that well together.

    Still,considering Stallone's recent turkeys,this is quite likely his best in a long while and really not a bad effort.***
    4JamesHitchcock

    Inferior Remake

    The central figure of this film, Jack Carter, is a Las Vegas gangster who returns to his roots in Seattle following the death of his brother. This was officially reported as an accident, but Jack suspects that his brother may have been murdered by members of the local criminal underworld. The film charts Jack's attempts to find out the truth and to take revenge.

    This is, of course, a good example of Hollywood's cannibalising of the British and European film industries in its endless search for a good story. It is a remake of Mike Hodges's classic from 1971, one of the few great British gangster films. That film was one that grew out of, and yet at the same time transcended, a particular place and time, the North-East of England in the early seventies. This was a time of rapid social change in Britain, marked by increasing social mobility, growing permissiveness and relative prosperity, elements all reflected in the film. Like many of the best British films, it had a strong sense of place. Its fidelity to a real time and place was not a weakness but a strength, helping to establish it firmly in the realm of reality and to convey its major theme, the sterility and futility of the criminal lifestyle. Its view of the underworld acted as a necessary antidote to the tendency, very prevalent in the late sixties and early seventies, to glamorise criminals ("The Thomas Crown Affair), sentimentalise them ("The Italian Job") or mythologise them ("The Godfather").

    Stephen Kay's film attempts to establish a similar sense of place to the original; the Seattle we see has a bleak, forbidding atmosphere, always shrouded in rain or mist. It has a much more star-studded cast than the original, with at least one reasonably good performance from a convincingly thuggish Mickey Rourke. Despite this, however, it is a far inferior film when compared with the original. The main reason is the way in which the character of Jack Carter has been changed. Michael Caine's Carter was, for all his sharp suits and fast cars, no more than a ruthless street thug, a poor boy made bad at a time when other poor boys were making good. Sylvester Stallone's character, by contrast, may have a rough exterior (Stallone plays him as outwardly impassive, with a gruff, emotionless voice) but beneath it he is one of the good guys. The plot has been rewritten to make Carter less brutal and ruthless and to allow him to survive at the end. The original was a morality play on (as another reviewer has pointed out) the theme of "those who live by the sword shall die by the sword". The remake is simply a revenge thriller with a hero whom the audience can root for.

    This illustrates one of the perils of the remake. Kay's film has kept the title, the bare outlines of the plot and even some of the names of the characters, but completely fails to capture the spirit of the original. Moreover, it is unable to replace that spirit with anything new. If the film-makers had wanted to make an exciting goodie-versus-baddies revenge thriller, they could have chosen a better starting-point than the plot of a film made some thirty years earlier with a very different aim in mind.

    It has become something of a tradition for remakes to feature cameo appearances by the stars of the original films. Martin Scorsese's "Cape Fear", for example, featured no fewer than three actors who had appeared in the earlier J. Lee Thompson version, Gregory Peck, Robert Mitchum and Martin Balsam. That, however, was a rare example of a remake that we as good as, or even better than, the original. Kay's "Get Carter", however, is not in the same class as Hodges's. It was, therefore, rather disappointing to see Michael Caine appearing in a remake that can only diminish one of his best films. 4/10
    4Erewhon

    Trendy, junky, phony remake

    Approximately 1/10th as good as the original, this version of GET CARTER doesn't even have the courage to use the original ending. And it is edited in today's hyper-trendy style using extremely brief shots edited together in a welter of images hoping to create an impression of kinetic action. Instead, it's just indecipherable chaos.

    Stallone tries his best, but his mustache and goatee have the odd effect of squeezing his lips together increasing his resemblance to a fish. He's also saddled with long, boring scenes with his niece (or maybe she's his daughter) that really don't lead anywhere. This has a different main villain than the original, but it's hardly a surprise since Mickey Rourke's character gives it away in his first scene. (But what happens to Mickey Rourke later? If he's dead, why wasn't there some kind of reaction from the numerous bystanders?) Stallone needs to forget about the audience liking him, and go for the realism of the character, but he never, never will show that kind of imagination and integrity.

    Showy, trendy junk.
    mattgenne

    slick editing can't hide the holes

    By far, the most entertaining moment on the DVD of "Get Carter" is the hilariously outdated 1971 theatrical preview for the original version of the film, which starred Michael Caine. (Caine does appear in this Stallone update.) Sadly, this update stinks. Sylvester Stallone's Jack Carter, a Las Vegas button man, skips town without his boss's permission and heads up to his old stomping grounds in Seattle to investigate the mysterious death of his brother, whom he hasn't seen in five years. That's the pitch.

    The action is surprisingly restrained and impressionistic. For example, when one of the minor bad guys gets killed, we see the result of a headlong plunge but not the actual slaying. But this kind of restraint doesn't dovetail with the promise of the previews: an ass-kicking Stallone in a Rat Pack suit. The director tries to gloss over the many plot holes with slick, faux-Fincher cuts and zooms, but he's just covering.

    Here's the tragedy. Action-thrillers don't require good acting, but they sure are enhanced by it. Most of the actors in "Get Carter" have the ability to far outshine this genre, much the way the actors in 1998's "Ronin" did-within the context of the plot, the cast of "Ronin" delivered their lines with utter conviction.

    Not necessarily so here. Those stars in "Get Carter" who have real talent weren't used enough, and those who don't have the strongest dramatic chops were given boatloads of screen time. Sly is wooden at times (as per usual), but has some fine moments.

    Miranda Richardson, as Carter's widowed sister-in-law, is solid, but underutilized. Mickey Rourke, as an internet porn purveyor, has obviously been working out some more, but it's still apparent that he peaked in "Diner." The big surprise was just how much actual characterization they allowed Rachael Leigh Cook--as Carter's bereaved niece--to show off. Any one of these actors, given enough on-screen opportunity, might have saved "Get Carter" from its ridiculous plot holes and incongruities. But they didn't. Do yourself a favor: avoid this film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      One of the reasons why Sir Michael Caine agreed to appear in this remake to one of his best movies as it afforded him the chance to work with his friend, Sylvester Stallone. The two had bonded when they made John Huston's Victory (1981).
    • Goofs
      The Volvo 240 makes the sound of an American muscle car with a V8 engine.
    • Quotes

      Jeremy Kinnear: [to Jack] You know why I like golf, Mr. Carter? 'Cause the ball just keeps going away. The only sport where you hit that little sucker and it doesn't come back at you. I've gotta want to go after it and get it and when I get to it... I just knock it away again. You see what I'm saying, Mr. Carter? Once I get rid of it, I never wanna see it again.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening quote: "That's all we expect of man, this side the grave: his good is - knowing he is bad." --Robert Browning
    • Alternate versions
      The DVD version of the film contains several scenes not in the theatrical rlease.
    • Connections
      Featured in Stranded (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Quick Temper
      Performed by Red Snapper

      Produced by Red Snapper

      Written by Richard Thair (as Thair), David Ayers (as Ayers), Ali Friend (as Friend)

      Published by Warp Music/EMI Music Publishing (ASCAP)

      Courtesy of Warp Records

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Get Carter?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 6, 2000 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Warner Bros.
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El Implacable
    • Filming locations
      • Seattle, Washington, USA
    • Production companies
      • Morgan Creek Entertainment
      • Franchise Pictures
      • The Canton Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $63,600,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $14,967,182
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $6,637,830
      • Oct 8, 2000
    • Gross worldwide
      • $19,412,993
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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