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{{Short description|1973 British film by Sidney Lumet}}
{{Infobox Film | name = The Offence
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2014}}
| image =Poster of the movie The Offence.jpg ‎
{{Use British English|date=July 2014}}
| caption =
{{Infobox film
| director = [[Sidney Lumet]]
| name = The Offence
| producer = [[Denis O'Dell]]
| image =Poster of the movie The Offence.jpg
| writer = [[John Hopkins (writer)|John Hopkins]]
| caption =Theatrical release poster
| starring =[[Sean Connery]]<br>[[Trevor Howard]]<br>[[Vivien Merchant]]<br>[[Ian Bannen]]<br>[[Peter Bowles]]<br>[[Derek Newark]]<br>[[Ronald Radd]]
| music =[[Harrison Birtwistle]]
| director = [[Sidney Lumet]]
| cinematography = [[Gerry Fisher]]
| producer = [[Denis O'Dell]]
| editing = [[John Victor-Smith]]
| screenplay = [[John Hopkins (screenwriter)|John Hopkins]]
| starring = {{Plainlist|
| country = [[UK]]/[[USA]]
* [[Sean Connery]]
| distributor = [[United Artists]] (theatrical release)<br> [[MGM Home Entertainment]] (UK) ([[DVD]] release) (2004)<br>[[Optimum Releasing]] (UK) (DVD re-release) (2008)
* [[Trevor Howard]]
| released = May 11, [[1972 in film|1972]] (UK)<br>May 11, [[1973 in film|1973]] (USA)<br> September 12, [[2007 in film|2007]] ([[France]])<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070468/releaseinfo Release dates for ''The Offence'' at IMDb]</ref>
* [[Vivien Merchant]]
| runtime = 112 min.
* [[Ian Bannen]]}}
| language = English
| music =[[Harrison Birtwistle]]
| budget = $1,000,000
| cinematography = [[Gerry Fisher]]
}}
| editing = John Victor-Smith
| studio = Tantallon
| distributor = [[United Artists]]
| released = {{film date|1973|1|11|df=y}}
| runtime = 112 minutes
| country = United Kingdom
| language = English
| budget = $900,000<ref name="bray">{{cite book|first=Christopher|last=Bray|title=Sean Connery: The Measure of a Man|publisher=[[Faber and Faber]]|location=London, England|date=2010|isbn=9780-571-23807-1|pages=174–180}}</ref>
}}


'''''The Offence''''' is a 1973 British [[crime film|crime]] [[neo noir]] [[drama film]] directed by [[Sidney Lumet]] and starring [[Sean Connery]], [[Ian Bannen]], [[Trevor Howard]] and [[Vivien Merchant]].<ref name="BFIsearch">{{Cite web |title=The Offence |url=https://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceFilmWorks/150036446 |access-date=13 June 2024 |website=British Film Institute Collections Search}}</ref> The screenplay was by [[John Hopkins (screenwriter)|John Hopkins]] based on his 1968 stage play ''This Story of Yours''.<ref name="bray" />
'''''The Offence''''' is a 1972 [[drama]] film, based upon the acclaimed 1968 stage play ''This Story of Yours'' by [[John Hopkins (writer)|John Hopkins]], directed by [[Sidney Lumet]] under the working title ''Something Like the Truth''. It stars [[Sean Connery]] as police [[detective]] Johnson who snaps and kills Kenneth Baxter ([[Ian Bannen]]), a suspected [[child molestation|child molester]]. The film explores Johnson's varied, often aggressive attempts at rationalizing towards a number of people what he did for what he thought Baxter to be, also using his gruesome job as a police officer as an excuse. It is not until the end of the film that Baxter's death is seen in a prolonged flashback, revealing Johnson's true motives for killing him. The tagline is "After 20 years what Detective-Sergeant Johnson has seen and done is destroying him." It is the only film that Sir [[Harrison Birtwistle]] has written music for.


A police officer suffers a breakdown and kills a suspect.
The film was one of two feature films starring Connery after his debut as [[James Bond]] that had not seen a [[North America]]n release on [[DVD]] by 2008, the other being ''[[Woman of Straw]]'' (1964).<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000125 Sean Connery] at the Internet Movie Database</ref> In 2008, an online petition was set up to bring the film to North American DVD and [[Blu-ray Disc]].<ref>[http://forums.highdefdigest.com/film-forum/87431-fans-sean-connery-sidney-lumet-great-films-please-read-about-offence.html Information on the online petition to grant ''The Offence'' a North American DVD and Blu-ray release]</ref> By that time, the film was available on the [[iTunes Store]] in several countries, including the United States, and also the [[Amazon.com]] video on demand service, [[Amazon Unbox]]. [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer|MGM]] and [[20th Century Fox Home Entertainment]] eventually gave ''The Offence'' a manufactured-on-demand [[DVD-R]] release in North America in April 2010.


==Plot summary==
==Plot ==
Detective-Sergeant Johnson (Connery) has been a police officer for 20 years, and is deeply affected by the [[murder]]s, [[rape]]s, and other violent crimes he has investigated.
Detective Sergeant Johnson has been a police officer for 20 years and is deeply affected by the murders, rapes, and other violent crimes he has investigated. He is plagued by images of violence, and he appears to be losing his mind under the strain.


His anger surfaces while interrogating a man named Baxter (Bannen), whom he suspects of raping a young girl; by the end of the interrogation, Johnson has beaten him to death. Johnson is suspended and returns home for the night, and gets into a violent argument with his wife, Maureen ([[Vivien Merchant]]). The following day, Johnson is interrogated by Detective Superintendent Cartwright ([[Trevor Howard]]), and during the long interrogation [[flashback (literary technique)|flashbacks]] show the events during the night when Johnson killed Baxter. During the interrogation, Baxter &mdash; whose guilt or innocence is left ambiguous &mdash; had begun taunting Johnson, insinuating that Johnson secretly wanted to commit the sort of [[sex crime]]s he investigated. Johnson at first flew into a rage and struck Baxter, but he eventually admitted that he did indeed harbor obsessive fantasies of murder and rape, and that he was losing his mind under the strain. He then tearfully begged Baxter to help him; when Baxter recoiled from him in disgust, Jonhson snapped and killed him. The film ends with another flashback, this time of Johnson attacking the police officers who pulled him off of Baxter, and muttering, "God...my God..." as he realizes what he has done.
His anger surfaces while interrogating Kenneth Baxter, who is suspected of raping a young girl. By the end of the interrogation, Johnson has severely beaten Baxter, who is then taken to the hospital where he later dies.
Johnson is suspended for the beating and returns home for the night, getting into a violent argument with his wife Maureen. Two of Johnson's colleagues come to inform him of Baxter's death and they take him to the police station for questioning.
The following day, Johnson is interviewed by Detective Superintendent Cartwright. During their long confrontation, [[flashback (literary technique)|flashbacks]] show the events of the previous night, when Johnson beat Baxter.
The flashbacks portray Baxter whose guilt or innocence is left ambiguous taunting Johnson, insinuating that Johnson secretly wants to commit the sort of [[sex crime]]s that he investigates. Johnson at first flies into a rage and strikes Baxter, but he eventually admits that he does indeed harbour obsessive fantasies of murder and rape. He then tearfully begs Baxter to help him. When Baxter recoils from him in disgust, Johnson brutally beats him while Baxter continues to taunt and laugh at him.
The film ends with another flashback, this time of Johnson attacking the police officers who pulled him off Baxter, and muttering "God...my God..." as he realises what he has done.


==Cast==
==Cast==
{{castlist|
*[[Sean Connery]] as Detective Sergeant Johnson
*[[Sean Connery]] as Jason Johnson
*[[Trevor Howard]] as Lieutenant Cartwright, Detective Superintendent
*[[Vivien Merchant]] as Maureen Johnson
*[[Trevor Howard]] as Cartwright
*[[Ian Bannen]] as Kenneth Baxter
*[[Vivien Merchant]] as Maureen
*[[Peter Bowles]] as Detective Inspector Cameron
*[[Ian Bannen]] as Baxter
*[[Derek Newark]] as Frank Jessard
*[[Peter Bowles]] as Cameron
*[[Derek Newark]] as Jessard
*[[Ronald Radd]] as Lawson
*[[Ronald Radd]] as Lawson
*[[John Hallam]] as Panton
*[[John Hallam]] as Panton
*[[Richard Moore]] as Garrett
*[[Richard Moore (actor)|Richard Moore]] as Garrett
*[[Anthony Sagar]] as Hill
*[[Anthony Sagar]] as Hill
*[[Maxine Gordon]] as Janie Edmonds, The Raped Girl
*[[Maxine Gordon]] as Janie
*[[Hilda Fenemore]] as Woman on the common
*[[Hilda Fenemore]] as woman on common
*[[Rhoda Lewis]] as Woman at the school
*Rhoda Lewis as woman at school
*[[Cynthia Lund]] as Child at the school
*Cynthia Lund as child at school
*[[Howard Goorney]] as Lambert
*[[Howard Goorney]] as Lambert
}}


==Background==
==Production==
When Connery agreed to return as [[James Bond]] in ''[[Diamonds Are Forever (film)|Diamonds Are Forever]]'', [[United Artists]] pledged to back two of Connery's film projects of his own free choosing, including free choice for his own role, provided they would be costing $2m or less. ''The Offence'', made under the working title of ''Something Like the Truth'' due to Connery's choice of Hopkins' script, was completed in one month with a budget of $1 million. The action sequences of the physical interaction between Connery and Bannen were designed by an uncredited [[Bob Simmons (stunt man)|Bob Simmons]], who had designed similar action scenes for the Bond films.<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070468/fullcredits#cast The Offence (1972) - Full cast and crew<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
When Connery agreed to return as [[James Bond]] in ''[[Diamonds Are Forever (film)|Diamonds Are Forever]]'', [[David V. Picker]], CEO of [[United Artists]], pledged to back two of Connery's own film projects, provided they cost $2 million or less, in association with Connery's own production company, Tantallon Films.<ref>{{cite book|first1=Alan |last1=Barnes |first2=Marcus |last2=Hearn |title=Kiss Kiss Bang Bang: The Unofficial James Bond Film Companion |publisher=BT Batsford Ltd |location=London |year=1997 |page=99 |isbn=978-0713486452}}</ref> ''The Offence'', made under the working title ''Something Like the Truth'' (a line that appears in [[John Hopkins (screenwriter)|John Hopkins]]' original play), was the first. Connery was keen to shake off the image of James Bond and expand his range as an actor.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/film/2015/jun/14/the-offence-sidney-lumet-dvd-review-sean-connery|title=The Offence review Connery and Lumet's starkly naturalistic police drama|website=[[The Guardian]]|date=14 June 2015}}</ref>


Connery had previously worked with Hopkins when the writer had co-scripted ''[[Thunderball (film)|Thunderball]]'' and had seen the play during its original run in London in 1968. Seeing potential in the story, Connery bought the option on the film rights and asked Hopkins to adapt the script for the big screen.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.londonpubtheatres.com/this-story-of-yours/4594169452 |title=THIS STORY OF YOURS – londonpubtheatres.com |website=www.londonpubtheatres.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180620101218/http://www.londonpubtheatres.com/this-story-of-yours/4594169452 |archive-date=2018-06-20}}</ref>
''The Offence'' was a commercial failure and did not yield a profit for nine years, even going unreleased in several markets, including [[France]], where it did not premiere until 2007. United Artists pulled out of the deal and the next project, a film version of ''[[Macbeth]]'' that Connery was to direct, was scotched by [[Roman Polanski]]'s [[Macbeth (1971 film)|adaptation]].


Having made two films with Sidney Lumet, ''[[The Hill (1965 film)|The Hill]]'' (1965) and ''[[The Anderson Tapes]]'' (1971), Connery offered him the job of directing. Lumet accepted. Ian Bannen, who had also appeared in ''The Hill,'' was hired as co-star.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://screenanarchy.com/2015/05/learning-from-the-masters-of-cinema-sidney-lumets-the-offence.html|title=Learning from the Masters of Cinema: Sidney Lumet's THE OFFENCE|date=4 May 2015}}</ref>
The film was shot mainly on location in [[Bracknell]], [[Berkshire]].


The film was shot on a small budget of £385,000 in March and April 1972 in and around [[Bracknell]], [[Berkshire]], notably the [[Wildridings]] Mill Pond area and [[Easthampstead]]'s Point Royal. Interior sets were filmed at [[Twickenham Studios]].<ref name="bray" /> A collection of location stills and corresponding contemporary photographs is hosted at reelstreets.com.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Offence, The |url=https://www.reelstreets.com/films/offence-the/ |access-date=5 March 2022 |website=ReelStreets}}</ref>
==DVD releases==
In 2004, [[MGM]] [[UK]] released a [[DVD]] of the film which contained no extras or trailers. Simultaneous releases from MGM were made in other [[PAL]] format countries, such as [[Germany]] and [[Australia]]. On October 20, 2008, the film was again released on DVD in the UK by [[Optimum Releasing]], again without extras or trailers. As of 2009, the film has not been released on DVD in [[North America]], one of the few films of either [[Sean Connery]] or [[Sidney Lumet]] not to do so. In April 2010, MGM finally put the film out on a U.S. DVD-R. It is available as an exclusive from Amazon.com. This DVD-R is widescreen and contains no extras. A [[Region 2]] DVD (with no extras) became available in 2011.


The fight sequences between Connery and Bannen were choreographed, uncredited, by [[Bob Simmons (stunt man)|Bob Simmons]], who had designed similar action scenes for the Bond films. The film was Sir [[Harrison Birtwistle]]'s only film score.<ref>{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=T83Z0vkHWBcC&q=tantallon+films&pg=PA125 |title = The Films of Sean Connery|isbn = 9780806522234|last1 = Pfeiffer|first1 = Lee|last2 = Lisa|first2 = Philip|year = 2001| publisher=Citadel Press }}</ref>
==Critics==
{{blockquote|"A fascinating look at the human [[Psyche (psychology)|psyche]] based on ''[[Z Cars]]'' scriptwriter John Hopkins acclaimed stage play ''This Story of Yours'', ''The Offence'' is an expertly crafted study of [[evil]] and human weakness that demands to be watched in its entirety. ''[...]'' it still packs quite a punch and features compelling performances from both Sean Connery and Ian Bannen."|Britmovie}}


United Artists released ''The Offence'' early in 1973. It was a critical success but a commercial failure and did not yield a profit for nine years,<ref name="bray" /> even going unreleased in several markets, including [[France]], where it did not premiere until 2007. Due to the commercial failure of the film, United Artists opted out of the two-film financing deal they made with Connery and his production company.
{{blockquote|"Less well-known than his other British pictures (''[[The Hill (film)|The Hill]]'', ''[[The Deadly Affair]]'', ''[[Murder on the Orient Express]]''), this unrelentingly somber policier inaugurates a newfound force in Lumet’s work. The story, adapted by John Hopkins from his play, abounds in stylistic tics (recurring visual [[Motif (visual arts)|motif]]s, various events replayed several times, [[color coding]]), but the flashiness that pockmarked much of the director’s earlier work has been pruned to hushed, concentrated intensity. Likewise, the movie looks ahead to the bathed-in-gray themes of Lumet’s later studies of law & order ambivalence -- Connery’s pressure-cooker copper, plagued with lurid images palpitating inside his brain, is the template for the protagonists of ''[[Serpico]]'', ''[[Prince of the City]]'' and ''[[Q&A (film)|Q & A]]''. Connery pinpoints some fantastic shadings of bullying, dissatisfaction and self-disgust, matched by Bannen’s peerless razzing &mdash; the culminating pounding is less liberating purgation than guilt transference, christened by Bannen’s bloodied leer."|Fernando F. Croce, Cinepassion}}


==Reception==
{{blockquote|"The notion of a 'good cop' becoming corrupted by the day to day horrors of his job is nothing new, but it plays out in a way that is completely engrossing, even edge-of-your-seat suspenseful. ''[...]'' Ultimately Lumet is less concerned with constructing a whodunit than he is in exploring the dynamic between these two seemingly disparate men, who become more and more alike as their interrogation plays out. ''[...]'' The end result is Connery's realization (''unspoken'') that he is, in fact, of the same '[[species]]' as the people he has so bitterly denounced throughout the film. ''[...]'' His moment of clarity is not a moment of 'redemption' so much as it is an acceptance of personal guilt.<br>The central performances are absolutely brilliant. Connery has never been better, even if he did win an [[Academy Award]] for ''[[The Untouchables (film)|The Untouchables]]'' (1987). ''[...]'' had this film been better received in 1972, his performance would have garnered him an [[Academy Award|Oscar]] nomination. Bannen takes a character that, on the printed page, may have seemed completely unsavory and makes him oddly likable. ''[...]'' Trevor Howard and Vivien Merchant also do superb work in their smaller roles ''[...]''.<br>An absolutely fantastic film, ''The Offence'' deserves to be far better known and revered. Few films have been as successful at being so ambiguous as well as so dialogue-heavy."|DVD Maniacs}}
''[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]]'' wrote: "The emphasis is on character – and particularly, of course, that of Johnson, vividly drawn as a man of limited sensibilities, trained to stifle emotion, brutalised by years of police work, and mentally battered into a sado-masochist frenzy... But there is little resolution beyond Johnson's climactic and inarticulate explosion of violence. &nbsp;...The dialogue is too dense and sustained at too high a pitch for cinematic comfort and – no matter how much the camera may sniff restlessly around looking for fresh angles – the static, confined settings add to the general oppressiveness. The acting, too, appears out of sorts, although the parts are meaty enough: Sean Connery's hard, reticent style suits Johnson the acerbic copper, but never suggests the brand of high-tension playing called for in the principal scenes; while both Vivien Merchant and Trevor Howard seem curiously subdued in their set-pieces. The exception&nbsp;... is Ian Bannen who, as Baxter, brings off a minor tour de force with his depiction of bewildered, tormented hysteria. The saddest disappointment, though, is Sidney Lumet's portentous and leaden direction. Had he been able to inject the pace, crispness and audacity of his last film (''[[The Anderson Tapes]]'') into his latest, some of the underlying substance of John Hopkins' script might perhaps have emerged."<ref>{{Cite journal |date=1 January 1973 |title=The Offence |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/1305834009 |journal=[[The Monthly Film Bulletin]] |volume=40 |issue=468 |pages=13 |id={{ProQuest|1305834009}} |via=ProQuest}}</ref>


''[[TV Guide]]'' wrote: "A powerful and complex performance by Connery is somewhat weakened by Lumet's typically stiff and stagey direction, which tends to sap the life out of the film."<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Offence |url=https://www.tvguide.com/movies/the-offence/review/2030346510/ |access-date=13 June 2024 |website=TV Guide}}</ref>
== References ==


==Accolades==
<references/>
Bannen was nominated for a 1974 [[BAFTA award]] for Supporting Actor.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Film, Supporting Actor in 1974 |url=https://awards.bafta.org/award/1974/film/supporting-actor |access-date=14 June 2024 |website=BAFTA}}</ref>

==Home media==
In 2004, MGM UK released a [[DVD]] of the film which contained no extras or trailers. Simultaneous releases from MGM were made in other [[PAL]]-format countries, such as [[Germany]] and [[Australia]]. On 20 October 2008, the film was again released on DVD in the UK by [[Optimum Releasing]], again without extras or trailers. A French [[DVD region code#2|Region 2]] DVD, preserving the film's original ratio of 1.66:1, became available in 2009. In April 2010, MGM put the film out on a US DVD-R "on demand" for the first time. It is available as an exclusive from [[Amazon.com]] and contains no extras.

In 2014 the film was released on [[Blu-ray]] in the US, and in 2015 it was released in the UK in the same format.

==''This Story of Yours''==
[[John Hopkins (screenwriter)|John Hopkins]]' original play, ''This Story of Yours'', takes the form of three dialogues between Johnson and, in Act One, Maureen, then Cartwright in Act Two and Baxter in Act Three. Directed by [[Christopher Morahan]], it opened at London's [[Royal Court Theatre]] on 11 December 1968. The cast was as follows:<ref>{{cite book|title=Who's Who in the Theatre |edition=15th |publisher=Pitman Publishing |location=London |year=1972 |page=155 |isbn=978-0273315285}}</ref>

*Johnson – [[Michael Bryant (actor)|Michael Bryant]]
*Maureen – [[Alethea Charlton]]
*Cartwright – [[John Phillips (actor)|John Phillips]]
*Baxter – [[Gordon Jackson (actor)|Gordon Jackson]]
*Policemen – Edward Clayton, Steven Barnes, Oliver Maguire, Colin Pinney

The first major revival of the play was directed by [[Jack Gold]] at London's [[Hampstead Theatre]], opening on 5 February 1987 with the following cast:<ref>{{cite web|title=This Story of Yours |url=https://theatricalia.com/play/akt/this-story-of-yours/production/1016 |website=Theatricalia.com |access-date=2024-10-07}}</ref>

*Johnson – [[David Suchet]]
*Maureen – Jane Wood
*Cartwright – [[Bryan Pringle]]
*Baxter – [[James Hazeldine]]
*Det Sgt Jessard – Richard Cubison
*Police Constables – Paul Fryer, Frederick Lane

== References ==
{{reflist|2}}


==External links==
==External links==

* {{imdb title|id=0070468|title=The Offence}}
{{wikiquote}}
* {{IMDb title|id=0070468|title=The Offence}}
* {{rotten-tomatoes|offence}}
* [http://www.ecranlarge.com/movie_video-view-4438-831.php Original theatrical trailer] for ''The Offence''
* [http://www.ecranlarge.com/movie_video-view-4438-831.php Original theatrical trailer] for ''The Offence''
* [[Review bomb|Review]] at [https://www.cinepassion.org/Reviews/o/Offence.html Cinepassion].


{{Sidney Lumet Films}}
{{Sidney Lumet}}
{{John Hopkins}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Offence, The}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Offence, The}}
[[Category:1972 films]]
[[Category:1973 films]]
[[Category:1973 crime drama films]]
[[Category:British police films]]
[[Category:British crime drama films]]
[[Category:1970s English-language films]]
[[Category:British films based on plays]]
[[Category:United Artists films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Sidney Lumet]]
[[Category:Films directed by Sidney Lumet]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:Films about child sexual abuse]]
[[Category:Films based on plays]]
[[Category:Films about rape in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:British drama films]]
[[Category:Films with screenplays by John Hopkins]]
[[Category:British crime films]]
[[Category:1970s British films]]
[[Category:1970s drama films]]
[[Category:Films about police brutality]]
[[Category:English-language crime drama films]]


[[ru:Оскорбление]]
[[ca:El delicte]]
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[[sv:Övergreppet (film, 1972)]]

Latest revision as of 21:41, 5 December 2024

The Offence
Theatrical release poster
Directed bySidney Lumet
Screenplay byJohn Hopkins
Produced byDenis O'Dell
Starring
CinematographyGerry Fisher
Edited byJohn Victor-Smith
Music byHarrison Birtwistle
Production
company
Tantallon
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • 11 January 1973 (1973-01-11)
Running time
112 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$900,000[1]

The Offence is a 1973 British crime neo noir drama film directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Sean Connery, Ian Bannen, Trevor Howard and Vivien Merchant.[2] The screenplay was by John Hopkins based on his 1968 stage play This Story of Yours.[1]

A police officer suffers a breakdown and kills a suspect.

Plot

[edit]

Detective Sergeant Johnson has been a police officer for 20 years and is deeply affected by the murders, rapes, and other violent crimes he has investigated. He is plagued by images of violence, and he appears to be losing his mind under the strain.

His anger surfaces while interrogating Kenneth Baxter, who is suspected of raping a young girl. By the end of the interrogation, Johnson has severely beaten Baxter, who is then taken to the hospital where he later dies.

Johnson is suspended for the beating and returns home for the night, getting into a violent argument with his wife Maureen. Two of Johnson's colleagues come to inform him of Baxter's death and they take him to the police station for questioning.

The following day, Johnson is interviewed by Detective Superintendent Cartwright. During their long confrontation, flashbacks show the events of the previous night, when Johnson beat Baxter.

The flashbacks portray Baxter – whose guilt or innocence is left ambiguous – taunting Johnson, insinuating that Johnson secretly wants to commit the sort of sex crimes that he investigates. Johnson at first flies into a rage and strikes Baxter, but he eventually admits that he does indeed harbour obsessive fantasies of murder and rape. He then tearfully begs Baxter to help him. When Baxter recoils from him in disgust, Johnson brutally beats him while Baxter continues to taunt and laugh at him.

The film ends with another flashback, this time of Johnson attacking the police officers who pulled him off Baxter, and muttering "God...my God..." as he realises what he has done.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

When Connery agreed to return as James Bond in Diamonds Are Forever, David V. Picker, CEO of United Artists, pledged to back two of Connery's own film projects, provided they cost $2 million or less, in association with Connery's own production company, Tantallon Films.[3] The Offence, made under the working title Something Like the Truth (a line that appears in John Hopkins' original play), was the first. Connery was keen to shake off the image of James Bond and expand his range as an actor.[4]

Connery had previously worked with Hopkins when the writer had co-scripted Thunderball and had seen the play during its original run in London in 1968. Seeing potential in the story, Connery bought the option on the film rights and asked Hopkins to adapt the script for the big screen.[5]

Having made two films with Sidney Lumet, The Hill (1965) and The Anderson Tapes (1971), Connery offered him the job of directing. Lumet accepted. Ian Bannen, who had also appeared in The Hill, was hired as co-star.[6]

The film was shot on a small budget of £385,000 in March and April 1972 in and around Bracknell, Berkshire, notably the Wildridings Mill Pond area and Easthampstead's Point Royal. Interior sets were filmed at Twickenham Studios.[1] A collection of location stills and corresponding contemporary photographs is hosted at reelstreets.com.[7]

The fight sequences between Connery and Bannen were choreographed, uncredited, by Bob Simmons, who had designed similar action scenes for the Bond films. The film was Sir Harrison Birtwistle's only film score.[8]

United Artists released The Offence early in 1973. It was a critical success but a commercial failure and did not yield a profit for nine years,[1] even going unreleased in several markets, including France, where it did not premiere until 2007. Due to the commercial failure of the film, United Artists opted out of the two-film financing deal they made with Connery and his production company.

Reception

[edit]

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The emphasis is on character – and particularly, of course, that of Johnson, vividly drawn as a man of limited sensibilities, trained to stifle emotion, brutalised by years of police work, and mentally battered into a sado-masochist frenzy... But there is little resolution beyond Johnson's climactic and inarticulate explosion of violence.  ...The dialogue is too dense and sustained at too high a pitch for cinematic comfort and – no matter how much the camera may sniff restlessly around looking for fresh angles – the static, confined settings add to the general oppressiveness. The acting, too, appears out of sorts, although the parts are meaty enough: Sean Connery's hard, reticent style suits Johnson the acerbic copper, but never suggests the brand of high-tension playing called for in the principal scenes; while both Vivien Merchant and Trevor Howard seem curiously subdued in their set-pieces. The exception ... is Ian Bannen who, as Baxter, brings off a minor tour de force with his depiction of bewildered, tormented hysteria. The saddest disappointment, though, is Sidney Lumet's portentous and leaden direction. Had he been able to inject the pace, crispness and audacity of his last film (The Anderson Tapes) into his latest, some of the underlying substance of John Hopkins' script might perhaps have emerged."[9]

TV Guide wrote: "A powerful and complex performance by Connery is somewhat weakened by Lumet's typically stiff and stagey direction, which tends to sap the life out of the film."[10]

Accolades

[edit]

Bannen was nominated for a 1974 BAFTA award for Supporting Actor.[11]

Home media

[edit]

In 2004, MGM UK released a DVD of the film which contained no extras or trailers. Simultaneous releases from MGM were made in other PAL-format countries, such as Germany and Australia. On 20 October 2008, the film was again released on DVD in the UK by Optimum Releasing, again without extras or trailers. A French Region 2 DVD, preserving the film's original ratio of 1.66:1, became available in 2009. In April 2010, MGM put the film out on a US DVD-R "on demand" for the first time. It is available as an exclusive from Amazon.com and contains no extras.

In 2014 the film was released on Blu-ray in the US, and in 2015 it was released in the UK in the same format.

This Story of Yours

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John Hopkins' original play, This Story of Yours, takes the form of three dialogues between Johnson and, in Act One, Maureen, then Cartwright in Act Two and Baxter in Act Three. Directed by Christopher Morahan, it opened at London's Royal Court Theatre on 11 December 1968. The cast was as follows:[12]

The first major revival of the play was directed by Jack Gold at London's Hampstead Theatre, opening on 5 February 1987 with the following cast:[13]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Bray, Christopher (2010). Sean Connery: The Measure of a Man. London, England: Faber and Faber. pp. 174–180. ISBN 9780-571-23807-1.
  2. ^ "The Offence". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  3. ^ Barnes, Alan; Hearn, Marcus (1997). Kiss Kiss Bang Bang: The Unofficial James Bond Film Companion. London: BT Batsford Ltd. p. 99. ISBN 978-0713486452.
  4. ^ "The Offence review – Connery and Lumet's starkly naturalistic police drama". The Guardian. 14 June 2015.
  5. ^ "THIS STORY OF YOURS – londonpubtheatres.com". www.londonpubtheatres.com. Archived from the original on 20 June 2018.
  6. ^ "Learning from the Masters of Cinema: Sidney Lumet's THE OFFENCE". 4 May 2015.
  7. ^ "Offence, The". ReelStreets. Retrieved 5 March 2022.
  8. ^ Pfeiffer, Lee; Lisa, Philip (2001). The Films of Sean Connery. Citadel Press. ISBN 9780806522234.
  9. ^ "The Offence". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 40 (468): 13. 1 January 1973. ProQuest 1305834009 – via ProQuest.
  10. ^ "The Offence". TV Guide. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
  11. ^ "Film, Supporting Actor in 1974". BAFTA. Retrieved 14 June 2024.
  12. ^ Who's Who in the Theatre (15th ed.). London: Pitman Publishing. 1972. p. 155. ISBN 978-0273315285.
  13. ^ "This Story of Yours". Theatricalia.com. Retrieved 7 October 2024.
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