Pendulum

1969

Crime / Drama / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Jean Seberg Photo
Jean Seberg as Adele Matthews
George Peppard Photo
George Peppard as Capt. Frank Matthews
Marj Dusay Photo
Marj Dusay as Liz Tennant
Madeleine Sherwood Photo
Madeleine Sherwood as Mrs. Eileen Sanderson
720p.BLU
934.93 MB
1280*688
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 41 min
P/S 1 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by herbqedi9 / 10

Top-notch detective yarn improves with age

Peppard is ideally cast as inflexibly hard-nosed cop who gets sucked through the looking-glass when indicted for his cheating wife's murder. Charles McGraw and Richard Kiley are both magnificent in the key supporting roles. Dana Elcar and Isabel Sanford also add poignantly amusing support. Director George Schaeffer's pacing and choice of score is perfect for the genre. And, many of the key ironies are even more appropriate today than when the film was made. Very highly recommended.

Reviewed by MartinHafer9 / 10

A heck of a good cop film...definitely underrated.

I had never heard of "Pendulum" before and as shocked how good the movie was. It's definitely among the best films of the 1960s even though it's a rather obscure movie.

George Peppard stars as Captain Matthews...a decorated cop who recently arrested a murderous psychopath. However, two things happen that will become important. First, Matthews' wife is cheating on him and he is beginning to suspect the truth. Second, due to a technicality, the psychopath has been released even though everyone knows he is guilty. How do these two things work together to REALLY impact on the Captain? See the film.

George Peppard is really good here. The other actor who was a major standout is Robert Lyons as the psychotic murderer and rapist. He's quite smug and chilling! Now one part of the film MIGHT seem like a cliche that isn't is when the Captain escapes from custody after he's arrested (yes, he ends up being arrested for a double murder). Normally, this is a bad plot element...the notion of an innocent man escaping in order to prove he's not guilty. Here it's handled well...as it's obvious that for political reasons the Captain is assumed to be guilty and the cops aren't even considering other options. In a case like this, you can understand Matthews' actions.

Overall, a very exciting, taut and suspenseful film...well worth seeing because it is so intelligently made from start to finish. So good, I nearly gave this one a 10....and I almost never do that!

Reviewed by mark.waltz5 / 10

Lack of legal process swings the pendulum against society.

Even though a conviction for the death penalty for an obvious guilty murderer and rapist seems justified, it is overturned because the defendant was held without being read his rights and other standard procedures that can make or break a case. Police lieutenant George Peppard is aghast by this, knowing that his release will mean more rapes, more murders. The murders that occur deeply touch Peppard whose wife and lover are shot to death in cold blood the very night Robert F. Lyons is freed. Not only does Peppard have to deal with the murder of his wife and revelation that she was unfaithful but suspicions that he was the killer and demands for his resignation.

Among the supporting cast are Richard Kiley as Lyon's defense attorney, Marj Dusay as Kiley's secretary, Isabel Sanford as Peppard's cleaning lady, Madeline Sherwood as Lyon's hard drinking loose living mother and Logan Ramsey as another officer. The scene where Lyons caresses Dusay's hair is disturbing, and the character is visibly uncomfortable but doesn't say anything. Kiley wants to send him to a psychiatrist but it's obvious that he has no interest in being cured, making him one of the most disgusting villains in film history. Sherwood is particularly effective as the truly sad mother who through her eyes reveals to the audience that she knows she gave birth to a monster. Poor Jean Seberg is wasted as Peppard 's wife (even though she gets second billing),and no real reason for her infidelity is given.

Early in the film, Peppard is attacked by anti-death penalty activists which is ironic considering the crimes committed by Lyon's character. Realizing that his case requires strong legal defense, Peppard decides to hire Kiley which could end up killing two birds with one stone. The Washington D.C. setting means both great location footage and political ramifications in regards to both cases, and that sends the pendulum moving quickly and dangerously where the innocent is obviously fighting tirelessly to get out of the pit. The benefit of the doubt does take over with certain details perplexing enough to make you wonder who is the guilty party and if Lyons is innocent, how will the guilt of his other crimes be dealt with? This is a film with a moral that will make you think, that is if you are not perplexed to the unanswered questions that the film leaves.

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