DVD/Blu-ray: Pulp

A year after 'Get Carter', Mikes Hodges and Caine reunite in an absolute one-off

share this article

The Partisan (Amerigo Tot) gives Mickey King (Michael Caine) a clue

Get Carter’s imitators tried to recapture the laconic violence of a very local gangster film. Get Carter’s makers swapped Newcastle for Malta, and a sunny, absurdist farce which is among British cinema’s unclassifiable one-offs.

Writer-director Mike Hodges' intermittently brilliant career has taken several head-scratching turns (see also Flash Gordon). It’s to Michael Caine’s vanity-free credit that, having had the nerve to be unsympathetic hard man Jack Carter, he happily followed Hodges’ muse to become Pulp’s cynical hack writer Mickey King in the director's 1972 film.

Righteous anger sours a story which had seemed inconsequential

Nothing quite beats the bravura opening scene of a typing pool’s wide-eyed, lip-biting secretaries thunderously pounding out King’s lurid sex and violence. This bad writer’s film noir-style voiceover is also deliberately inept, but it’s a matter of taste if it was meant to be funnier. Pulp’s first third is in fact a disappointing curate’s egg, as Caine ambles through Malta (standing in for an Italy too full of real mobsters), after being offered riches to ghost-write the autobiography of a secret subject waiting at the end of a picaresque trail. George Martin’s score sets the gently bittersweet mood.

Mickey Rooney (pictured below) then hijacks the film’s heart as King’s employer Preston Gilbert, an ageing gangster star now in gilded exile on a private island. Hodges found Rooney “exhausting”, but his firecracker energy is the dynamo which gives a wandering film centrifugal force. You can see why Ava Gardner and the rest were drawn to, and dumped, such hustling, needy charisma.PulpCaine’s own comic touch is lightly understated, as he’s bemused and amused by events, speaking in softly refined counterpoint as Rooney roars himself hoarse, and so relaxed the part seems like a side of him. With a Lewis Carroll-quoting Dennis Price – Kind Hearts and Coronets’ silky comic lead by now a camply amusing ruin – film noir star Lizabeth Scott as a fascist’s wife, McCarthy blacklist victim Lionel Stander en route to his sinecure playing Hart to Hart’s Max as Rooney’s gravel-voiced gunsel, and Godfather heavy Al Lettieri as an academic assassin, the supporting cast is ripe. John Osborne was the villain in Get Carter, after all.

Extras include new interviews with editor John Glen (who recalls working between three-day-week power cuts), cinematographer Ousama Rawi, who supervised this release’s 2K digital restoration, and Hodges, who explains the film’s roots in his dismay at resurgent Italian fascism. As King is finally left fighting an Establishment conspiracy, such righteous anger sours a story which had seemed inconsequential. Like the film, it becomes curiouser and curiouser

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Name that you would like to appear as the author of the comment
Mickey Rooney's firecracker energy is the dynamo which gives a wandering film centrifugal force

rating

4

explore topics

share this article

Help secure the future of arts journalism

In this era of algorithmic recommendation, opaquely sponsored content and AI slop, theartsdesk’s mission to preserve real journalistic and critical values has never been more important.

If you like what you see here, please join us 
in this mission.

Subscribing to the site will help us in our coming 
redesign and expansion.


If you do this before the 31st August this will be at our guaranteed founder’s rate: 
your subs will never increase again.

Subscribe now for £5 per month. 
or yearly for just £40.

Or if you simply want to support us with a one-off donation, you can do so here.

more film

Matt Damon stars in Christopher Nolan's IMAX-sized recreation of Homer's epic poem
Dip your toes into these Homeric movies before Christopher Nolan’s 'The Odyssey' ties us to its mast
A Bellocchio classic is retooled as a stifllng rich-brats' revenge story
A potential camera in every hand: SMart celebrates smartphone directors
Hitchcockian black comedy from Luis Buñuel’s Mexican period
Olivia Wilde's snappy comedy on the perennial subject of reviving a failing marriage
Kiss kiss, bang bang in a moving Middle East documentary
David Vann's acclaimed novella transposed to the screen with mixed results
The most important 'how-to video' you are ever likely to see
Satyajit Ray's poignant, thoughtful drama, set in 1960s Calcutta
Superman's party girl cousin earns her stripes underwhelmingly
Convoluted drama takes on Fab Four delusions, brotherly trauma and ultraviolence