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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Exciting modern version of 'the boy who cried wolf' story., June 13, 2002
By 
Film Fanatic (Cincinnati, Ohio) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
Ziggy(the extraordinarily talented Mark Lester of "Oliver!") is an eleven-year-old boy living on the island of Malta with his sister and grandfather. Like most boys of his age, Ziggy has a tendency to stretch the truth. His sister and grandfather are very much aware of this fact, and that's what makes it so difficult for them to believe Ziggy when he tells them that he actually did witness a murder. Ziggy is in a particularly dangerous situation because the murderers saw him and are out to make the boy their next victim. Will Ziggy be able to convince anyone that he is telling the truth before it is too late? This is an exciting and thoroughly engrossing new version of the boy who cried wolf story. Mark Lester is excellent as the boy who has told one tale too many, and Susan George("Straw Dogs") and Lionel Jeffries("The Quatermass Experiment") also do very fine work as Mark's concerned sister and grandfather. This one will put you on the edge of your seat from the very beginning and keep you there until the very end! The DVD from Anchor Bay is especially nice. It looks absolutely amazing! I honestly don't see how this movie could look any better. It looks as though it were made today instead of the early 1970's. Special features on the DVD include the film's original UK and US theatrical trailers, and very interesting audio commentary by director John Hough and writer(uncredited)/executive producer Bryan Forbes moderated by journalist Jonathan Sothcott.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars For some boys... playtime can be MURDER!, October 24, 2004
This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
I think most children have a penchant for lying time to time...probably due to their active imaginations. Speaking for myself, I know I've told a few fibs in my youth, although they mostly revolved around how a particular item in my parent's house got broken, to which my standard reply would be "I don't know". The boy in this film, on the other hand, seems to deal not in fibs, but in what I would refer to as whoppers, or great fat lies, ones so absurd they just can't be true, and now his fondness of falsification has come back to bite him in the bum, figuratively speaking.

Eyewitness (1970) aka Sudden Terror was directed by John Hough (his mainstream film debut), who also directed such films like Hammer's Twins of Evil (1971), which, sadly, isn't available on DVD yet, along with the very scary 1973 film The Legend of Hell House, 1974's Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry (a film that boasts one of the more spectacular endings in movie history and also stars Susan George, an actress appearing in this film), along with various Disney films including Escape to Witch Mountain (1975), Return from Witch Mountain (1978), and 1980 film The Watcher in the Woods (due to some disagreements between Hough and executives with regards to editing choices and such, this was the last film for Disney). Appearing in the film is Mark Lester, who previously appeared in the lead role of Oliver! (1968), accomplished and prolific English actor Lionel Jeffries (he played the kooky inventor Cavor in 1964's The First Men in the Moon), Susan George, who appeared in the completely crummy Jaws rip-off Tintorera (1977) but was a bit better in Sam Peckinpah's Straw Dogs (1971), Australian actor Tony Bonner (The Man from Snowy River, and English character actor (he normally plays the role of villains, although not here) Jeremy Kemp, whom I most remember as the German pilot in the WWII epic The Blue Max (1966).

The film, a basic re-telling of the boy who cried wolf, is centered on Ziggy (Lester), a boy with a mop hair, big eyes, a vivid imagination and a predilection for fabrication "I'm having tea with the president". After a visiting dignitary is shot and killed JFK Dallas motorcade style, Ziggy actually sees who did it, and vice versa. Now the killer, who turns out to be a policeman (this is given away early, so I'm not spoiling anything), is after Ziggy, and no one believes what they think is just another one of his tall tales. That is until more and more bodies start turning up, along with clues that seem to corroborate Ziggy's story. Soon enough Ziggy's family is involved, and the assassin seems willing to stop at nothing to eliminate anything that will link him back to the murder. Will Ziggy and his secret survive long enough to find someone willing to believe him? Perhaps...but time is running out, and the odds are against him...

I found Eyewitness to be a pretty enjoyable film. Shot on location on the island of Malta, the use of exteriors is really wonderful and beautiful as we are taken all over and shown many different and unique areas and also adds a claustrophobic sense to the story of being trapped on an island with a killer. Mark Lester did well as Ziggy, although on more than one occasion I found him to be a little annoying. Susan George, who played Ziggy's older sister Pippa, just kinda creeped me out (especially her emotional scene where Ziggy was lost, off witnessing the assassin at work, and then later he's found). I've never really understood the appeal of Ms. George, as I don't think she all that great of an actress (she tends to go a bit overboard here at times). My favorite role here was that of the eccentric grandfather who runs a lighthouse, played by Lionel Jeffries. His character brought just the right amount of levity to offset the very serious nature as the plot unfolded, and he was more than just a static character, as he really got involved in the action near the end. I also liked Jeremy Kemp as Inspector Galleria as he presented a smart, intelligent, astute, no nonsense character that's able to take the various clues, piece them together, fill in the missing parts, and relate a startling revelation that affects the story in an unexpected way. I thought the direction by Hough was really good and showed of someone who knew his vision and was able to translate it to the screen. Various scenes that don't really seem to involve the main plot may put some off, but I didn't think they hurt the film any. Also, with the unexpected killing of a few characters, it puts forth the sense of real, mortal danger for Ziggy, the very real possibility that he may be killed, unlike other films involving children, say Home Alone, where you know nothing seriously harmful will befall the main character. There was one scene I thought very odd in that the assassin lures an accomplice to a remote clearing near a cliff, knocks him out, and then uses a bulldozer to pick up the unconscious man and dump him off the cliff. Why not just drag the unconscious man to the cliff and push him off? I guess it just seemed like overkill to me (pardon the pun)...oh yeah, one more thing...if you like car chase scenes, there's a really good one in this movie.

The wide screen picture provided on this DVD release from Anchor Bay looks sharp, vibrant, and beautiful. Also, the audio is very crisp and clear. Special features include two theatrical trailers (one U.S. and one for the U.K.), and a commentary track featuring the director, the executive producer (Bryan Forbes), moderated by journalist Jonathan Sothcott. Also included is a reproduction of an original poster on the insert card within the DVD.

Cookieman108


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent "boy who cried wolf" thriller!, January 22, 2007
By 
Mr. Db Rayner "David Rayner" (STOKE-ON-TRENT, STAFFORDSHIRE United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
Superbly crafted; very well acted and edited action thriller directed by John Hough; filmed in the summer of 1969 on the picturesque Mediterranean island of Malta and released in 1970. The then 11 years old Mark Lester plays a little boy called Ziggy who lives in a lighthouse with his grandfather (Lionel Jeffries) and older sister (Susan George) and who is frequently prone to telling tall tales and living in his own world of imagination. Naturally, no one, including his family, believes him when he tells them that not only did he witness a visiting President being assassinated, but that he saw the man who did it...a policeman...and the policeman saw him, too! No one, in fact, believes him except the assassins, who are out to kill him at all costs! However, it soon becomes apparent...and very nearly too late for him and his family...that for once, he is actually telling the truth!

This is an excellent, fast-paced thriller that will have you on the edge of your seat with excitement. The last ten minutes are particularly well done. Mark Lester looks radiantly beautiful all of the time and scared to death most of the time. He also does very well in a tense scene where he genuinely cries and sobs...a difficult thing to do unless you are a really good actor and Mark was a far better child actor than many gave him credit for. If only he could have stayed 11 years old indefinitely.

This is also an unusually brutal film for its period and especially for one made as a vehicle for such a famous and very popular child star as Mark Lester. The villains will stop at nothing to get Ziggy, even stooping so low as to kill a ten years old girl (a schoolfriend of Ziggy's) in whom Ziggy confides (and who therefore knows too much to be left alive by the villains) and killing a priest in cold blood before the altar as Ziggy seeks sanctuary in a church.

The extras on this DVD include the original UK and US theatrical trailers, which are identical except for the change of title from the UK "Eyewitness" to the US "Sudden Terror." The image and sound quality on the DVD are of the highest quality and the film has obviously been carefully restored for this DVD release. Exquisitely filmed in Technicolor and Highly Recommended.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Suspenseful drama, September 17, 2003
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This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
Mark Lester, the androgynous waif of Oliver!, starred in five films in 1970-71, when he was just at the cusp of adolescence, young enough so that he was still bewildered by the adult world, but old enough to take an active role in its events. Here he plays Ziggy, an exuberant 12-year old prone to fanciful stories, who sees the assassination of a visiting African dignitary but can't get anyone to believe him -- even when the local police force, which is in on the plot, starts trying to kill him.

The story is subsidiary to the array of quirky characters, including Mark's Carnaby Street-mod older sister, the blond hippie Adonis she hooks up with (and who never treats her as anything but a friend), Mark's eccentric grandfather (who runs the local lighthouse), and the shrill, suspicious housekeeper who may or may not be Grandpa's lover.

Interest is heightened by setting the film on the island of Malta, so there are many shots of quaint cobbled streets and breathtaking cliffs, but no hint that anyone lives on Malta besides quirky Brits.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Eye Witness - English Review., May 12, 2007
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This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
I first saw "Eyewitness" at the cinema here in England back in 1970 when it was first released, and that was the last I saw of it! It has never been shown on TV here and never been released on video or DVD. The only reason can be is that it falls between two stools - that of a family adventure and a violent action thriller. A daydreaming boy witnesses a murder, is not believed and then is pursued by the assassins, simple story; but here it has the bonus of the island of Malta as it's colourful location, plenty of action and a stong cast. Among those featured are Mark Lester of "Oliver" fame, lovely Susan George (Straw Dogs), British character actor Lionel Jeffries and even an Australian TV star, Tony Bonner from "Skippy the Bush Kangaroo." An exciting British thriller, stylishly filmed and with a surprisingly high body count (I beleive I counted at least a dozen killings!)A forgotten gem that is well worth watching.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good stellar film., January 22, 2007
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This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
This film has shown up on some reviewers lists as either a misplaced slueth mystery to an English stab at the giallo style. Mark Lester stars as "Ziggy" an imaginitive young boy who crys wolf and tells tall tales a wee bit too much. The setting is the stark landscape of Malta. He witnesses a crime in the city and is branded a liar. Without letting cats out of any bags I will tell you the remainder of the film will hold you as only a well crafted film from the cusp of the 60's / 70's era will hold you. There is bloodshed and nastiness. The cover of this DVD will grab you as only exploitative poster art can. It is more than an excercise in the usual cat and mouse and should be viewed by anyone enjoying the likes of mystery, horror, or any autuers of European cinema from this time period. This was another well crafted John Hough creation prior to his stint at Disney with the "Witch Mountain" series. Do not judge him for those Disney creations. I beleive his better work was made for other studios.

pip-pip
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Eyewitness-A Must See Movie!, July 11, 2007
This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
Eyewitness is an engaging movie about a boy with an extremely active imagination, as well as a penchant for telling tall tales. When the boy, Ziggy,(Mark Lester) actually witnesses a political assassination (and the assassins) no one believes his claims. The movie is a thrilling story of pursuit and eventual vindication. Eyewitness is a tightly written story, beautifully photographed, with touches of humor sprinkled throughout. Thoroughly entertaining, Eyewitness is a very enjoyable viewing experience.
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5.0 out of 5 stars aw my Mark Lester, October 15, 2011
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This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
was in love with Mark Lester as a child and remember this movie very well, so had to order it and love it thanks for offering it Amazon
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5.0 out of 5 stars they dont make them like this anymore, February 13, 2006
By 
Nicholas F. Dandrea (bellmore ny 11710, new york United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Eyewitness (DVD)
i saw this movie back in 1970 in the drive-in. my parents took me and my sister. i love this movie so much i bought 2 of them on dvd.a very exciting english movie with a awesome finish. everytime i watch it i think of the drive-in back then. great memories.
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Eyewitness
Eyewitness by John Hough (DVD - 2002)
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