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Odd Man Out
 
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Odd Man Out (1947)

Starring: James Mason, Robert Newton Director: Carol Reed Rating: NR (Not Rated) Format: DVD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Actors: James Mason, Robert Newton, Cyril Cusack, Kathleen Ryan, F.J. McCormick
  • Directors: Carol Reed
  • Writers: F.L. Green, R.C. Sherriff
  • Producers: Carol Reed, Herbert Smith, Phil C. Samuel
  • Format: Black & White, Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
  • Region: All Regions
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Studio: Image Entertainment
  • DVD Release Date: January 12, 1999
  • Run Time: 116 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: 6305186693
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #92,837 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)
  • For more information about "Odd Man Out" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Film noir is a term usually associated with American films of the 1940s and 1950s, but this British classic from 1947 fits the definition in almost every respect. It's one of the milestone films of its era, highlighted by what is arguably the best performance in the illustrious career of James Mason, here playing the leader of an underground Irish rebel organization who is seriously wounded when a payroll heist goes sour. Left for dead by his accomplices on the streets of Belfast, he's forced to hide wherever he can find shelter and refuge, and as his gunshot wound gradually drains his life away, his lover (Kathleen Ryan) struggles to locate him before it's too late. Although the IRA and Belfast are never mentioned by name, this film was a daring and morally complex examination of Northern Ireland's "troubles," and its compelling tragedy hasn't lost any of its impact. A study of conscience in crisis and the bitter aftermath of terrorism, this was one of the first films to address IRA activities on intimately human terms. Political potency is there for those who seek it, but the film is equally invigorating as a riveting story of a tragic figure on the run from the law, forced to confront the wrath of his own beliefs in the last hours of his life. It was this brilliant, unforgettable film that established the directorial prowess of Carol Reed, whose next two films (The Fallen Idol and The Third Man) were equally extraordinary. --Jeff Shannon


Product Description

Hailed for its sensitive treatment of a difficult subject, "Odd Man Out" is a tale of ordinary people trapped in the web of Northern Ireland's troubles. Irish rebel Johnny McQueen (James Mason), maimed and bleeding, weaves an escape route through Belfast's seedy underground while each of his comrades falls prey to bounty hunters and police in director Carol Reed's (The Third Man) classic film noir.

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25 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best & Most Heartbreaking Film of All Movies I've Ever Seen, April 9, 1999
By Thomas R. Dean (Morristown, New Jersey USA) - See all my reviews
This is the greatest film I've ever seen. No one I know (of the dozens I've urged to see it) has ever disliked it, and it has become for others, their favorite movie too. It is really a story of all people: in their struggles on earth, their increasingly less purposeful attempts to survive, their deaths, the things they love, their religious faith transcending their deaths. It is also the story of the varied reactions of people toward one such person, a wounded, dying I.R.A. gunman on the run on the streets of Belfast or Londonderry in the late 1940s. The cinematography, the breadth of social classes (and ages) shown, the symbols, the suspense, the tenderness and callousness, are fascinating. The religious insights of the gunman, and of the grandmother of the girl who has a crush on him (and goes out into the Irish alleys to search for him) and of the police chief searching for him, are extraordinarily deep for a movie that is also edge-of-seat suspense. I've read that this is James Mason's favorite among the movies he did. The director Carol Reed's better known movie, "The Third Man" with Orson Welles, was not quite as broad or as deep as this. I note that every single person reviewing this movie has given it the highest rating this system allows; (how many other movies are AVERAGING 5 stars?) I would submit that it is the greatest movie ever made.
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Carol Reed's Masterpiece, Mason's Career Surge, March 16, 2002
By William Hare (Seattle, Washington) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Belfast is a city of two faces. One city consists of bustling streets and energetic people with ready smiles. The other was that presented in this gripping film, that which the world media has focused on with increasing attention with the passage of time, the city of conflict where tensions accelerate to the boiling point and explode into violence.

"Odd Man Out" is a 1947 release which represents Carol Reed's first of three successively acclaimed international masterpieces. It was followed by "The Fallen Idol" with Ralph Richardson and Michelle Morgan and "The Third Man" with Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli and the moving appearance in the last thirty minutes by Orson Welles. James Mason was also greatly assisted career-wise in his sensitive role as a young Nationalist underground leader living the last day of his life in a state of excruciating pain. Mason had earlier come to prominence in the 1945 release "The Seventh Veil" with Ann Todd. This role completed his momentum swing into the top ranks of international cinema stardom.

"Odd Man Out" and "The Third Man" have been selected as representative of British film noir at its finest. Reed uses shadows to compelling effect, while Robert Krasker, who would win an Oscar for Cinematography in "The Third Man," handled the camera with equally consummate skill in "Odd Man Out." The Reed-Krasker team present compelling silhouettes of characters who cross the path of Mason, whose face reveals the requisite painful sensitivity as underground gang leader Johnny McQueen.

The film begins with the clock in the main square striking noon and ends at the ring of midnight. Mason, despite the urgings of his faithful girlfriend Kathleen Ryan and members of his gang, decides to participate in the holdup of a mill, from which the underground group hopes to obtain funds to live and continue pursuing political objectives.

Ryan knows Mason's condition well. Since his escape from prison he has been confined to the same residence for six months, prompting her to intercede in an effort to let subordinates carry out the job without him, but Mason remains stubbornly in charge. The robbery is a directive from the very top of the organization and he intends to personally direct it, he emphatically tells a subordinate.

On the ride to the mill a haziness is visible, a clever camera ploy indicating that Mason is subject to blurred vision and potential fainting spells. The robbery is staged in silence, after which, on the way out, Mason becomes groggy. While his subordinates wait in the car for him, Mason's delay costs him as a guard surfaces from the street. In the ensuing confrontation Mason kills his adversary, but is shot in the arm in turn by the dying guard.

The group is able to pull Mason back into their car, but as it negotiates a rapid turn at a nearby corner he falls out. From that point, to the end of the film, Mason is reduced to wandering. He walks in rain and snow. His future is subject to potential barter by local dealmaker Cyril Cusack, who tries to obtain money from the poor parish priest, Father Tom, played by W.G. Fay, in exchange with providing information on Mason's whereabouts.

At one point Mason is taken inside a residence and ministered to by two women. When the husband of one of the women comes home and learns that they have Mason, then wanted for murder, in their midst, he demands that he be put out into the street. When he sees the emaciated Mason with his sensitive expression, however, he weakens to the point of giving him a generous shot of whiskey before the dying man staggers back onto the street.

One of the dramatic high points of the film is the stirring performance rendered by Robert Newton, who plays a crazed painter. When a badly weakened Mason arrives at the local pub the proprietor uses Newton to dispose of the underground political leader wanted for murder. He knows that if word gets around that he threw Mason back onto the street that he is in for trouble from Mason's loyal followers. Since the wild Newton had previously caused damage in the pub, the proprietor informs him that he will call the police if he will not get rid of the dying man. Newton takes him to his flat, where he delightfully begins painting him, longing to create an enduring work of a man in the final throes of death.

Before the film ends the loving Ryan, who does not want to continue her existence on earth without Mason, figures out a way to end his misery and hers at the same time. When the police, with the omnipresent Cusack and the local priest trailing along, finally reach Mason, Ryan fires a shot, provoking the police to fire back. Ryan and Mason are both killed instantly.

This is a film that presents struggle and conflict in a city plagued by religious strife through the prism of one man and his last painful day on earth as he interacts with those around him. These are the shadowy sketches of people reacting to conflict in their quest to endure. The novel by F.L. Green was brought to the screen with full force fidelity by the novelist and R.C. Sherriff. It is a film whose message has only broadened with the passage of time and the ongoing efforts to achieve peace in Northern Ireland. The suffering of Belfastians in their strife was vividly presented with laudable good taste, with the minimum of violence, and the maximum of stirring passion. It represents a jewel from one of the cinema's true geniuses, Carol Reed, operating at the top of his form.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars an unlikely fantasy, October 6, 2003
By A. C. Walter "awalter" (Lynnwood, WA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
ODD MAN OUT portrays life in an unnamed city in Northern Ireland via the unlikely narrative structure of the episodic fantasy--that is, in the tradition of ALICE IN WONDERLAND and THE WIZARD OF OZ; it is quite possible, in fact, that it influenced the Jim Jarmusch film DEAD MAN. James Mason plays Johnny McQueen, an Irish freedom fighter who is seriously wounded early in the film. As he wanders about the city in delirium, Johnny becomes a sort of talisman sought after by several eccentric characters for their own purposes, and he is reduced (or is it, elevated?) to the status of fatalistic symbol. The film presents us with an unlikely, outrageous, and irresistible portrait of an Ulster community, filmed by Carol Reed with delicious visual style. Every frame bursts with some brilliant image--the contrast of light and shadow, stunning camera angles, ingenious special effects, and snow in the night. In my opinion, the film rates slightly above Reeds THE THIRD MAN and slightly below his underappreciated THE FALLEN IDOL.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Criterion release
Don't spend your money on an overpriced used copy of this masterpiece film. Sources say that the Criterion Collection will be releasing this film in the near future, to be... Read more
Published 11 months ago by bdlion

3.0 out of 5 stars Great looking film starts of well but goes astray about half way through
Beautifully photographed and strikingly directed film about an IRA robbery gone wrong starts well. About halfway through, however, the wounded protagonist meets a priest, a crazy... Read more
Published 13 months ago by Peter Hoogenboom

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the great classics of film
This is one of the finest films of its period and, in fact, in the whole history of film. Carol Reed is best known for The Third Man, but in my view this is his masterpiece. Read more
Published 18 months ago by William Linsley

5.0 out of 5 stars A great lost classic
For years, this tale of a wounded Irish revolutionary's clandestine journey through Belfast has haunted me. Read more
Published 22 months ago by A. Kass

5.0 out of 5 stars Withstands the Test of Time!
Recalling my fondness for James Mason as an actor, I recently bought a DVD of "The Desert Fox." Although Mason is as usual excellent in the title role, the film itself seems so... Read more
Published on January 9, 2007 by F. S. L'hoir

4.0 out of 5 stars A work of art with a flaw

It definitely reminds me of "The Third Man" -only this one in Dublin-, the other Carol Reed classic, this one with the valuable help of Orson Welles. Read more
Published on December 28, 2006 by Quilmiense

4.0 out of 5 stars Sinner's Progress
This film is described as Crime, Drama, Thriller, but it is really none of these. It is an allegory. Read more
Published on December 22, 2006 by blockhed

3.0 out of 5 stars Visually compelling, intellectually less so
If this gets 5 stars, what do people give a truly great film?

Viewers clearly see what they want to see in this film, and what they want to see is something I never... Read more
Published on June 30, 2006 by J. C Clark

3.0 out of 5 stars Very Impressed & Somewhat Disappointed
I acquired this out-of-print DVD in March of 2005 and was thrilled to do so since I had heard good things about it and I was familiar with director Carol Reed, who had directed... Read more
Published on April 19, 2006 by Craig Connell

5.0 out of 5 stars Poignant tale of an ongoing struggle
James Mason is extremely effective and sympathetic in his portrayal of Johnny McQueen, an Irish militant in Carol Reed's powerful "Odd Man Out", a film surrounding the still... Read more
Published on December 14, 2005 by Cory D. Slipman

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