A young American and his English wife come to rural England and face increasingly vicious local harassment.A young American and his English wife come to rural England and face increasingly vicious local harassment.A young American and his English wife come to rural England and face increasingly vicious local harassment.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 win & 3 nominations total
Bob Keegan
- Harry Ware
- (as Robert Keegan)
June Brown
- Mrs. Hebden
- (uncredited)
Jimmy Charters
- Man in Pub
- (uncredited)
Chloe Franks
- Emma Hebden
- (uncredited)
Michael Mundell
- Bertie Hedden
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn the scene where David Sumner (Dustin Hoffman) first enters the local pub, director Sam Peckinpah was unhappy with the other actors' reaction to this stranger entering their world. Eventually, he decided to do one take where Hoffman entered the scene without his trousers on. He got his reaction, and these are the shots shown in the final film.
- GoofsWhen David is taken duck shooting, he fires his gun into the air at ducks flying overhead. Ducks can then be seen flying to the right and straightaway to the left, revealing that it is the same film reversed.
- Alternate versionsThe video version was twice rejected by the British Board of Film Classification in 1999 after the distributors refused to cut forcible stripping and any signs that Susan George was "enjoying" the rape. Video versions were available in Britain before the 1984 law which required all videos to be classified. There were two such releases, one of which was uncut, and one which lost some dialogue due to print damage. As of 1st July 2002, the full version of the film has been passed uncut for video and DVD release by the BBFC.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Kartal Yuvasi (1974)
Featured review
In the same year as Clockwork Orange, at the height of the Vietnam War, Peckinpah tried to bring his message into the present. Behind the thin veneer of civilization lies a monster worse than the barbarians of the hill country. By refusing to meet each challenge and take the consequences, the protagonist, like Western Civilization, allows the conflict to escalate to the point where extreme horror appears justified. The inevitable march to the macabre resolution, leaves lots of room for speculation about who the villains are and how much of the world around us is our own doing. This movie, like its Kubrick contemporary, was major ratings controversy because the sex and violence was "disturbing" - unlike the real thing which seems like so much fun on TV.
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $3,251,794 (estimated)
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