Photos and Videos
Cast verified as complete
Burt Lancaster | ... |
Cross
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Alain Delon | ... |
Jean Laurier
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Paul Scofield | ... |
Sergei Zharkov
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John Colicos | ... |
McLeod
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Gayle Hunnicutt | ... |
Susan
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J.D. Cannon | ... |
Arthur Filchock
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Joanne Linville | ... |
Sarah Cross
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Mel Stewart | ... |
Pick
(as Melvin Stewart)
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Vladek Sheybal | ... |
Andreyev Zemetkin
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Mary Maude | ... |
Anne Laurier
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Jack Colvin | ... |
Paul Milney
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James Sikking | ... |
Harris
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Burke Byrnes | ... |
Morrison
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William Smithers | ... |
Mitchell
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Shmuel Rodensky | ... |
Max Lang
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Howard Morton | ... |
Heck Thomas
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Celeste Yarnall | ... |
Helen Thomas
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Sandor Elès | ... |
Malkin
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Frederick Jaeger | ... |
Novins
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George Mikell | ... |
Dor
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Robert Emhardt | ... |
Man in Hotel
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Rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
Earl Cameron | ... |
Mensroom Attendant (uncredited)
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Woodrow Chambliss | ... |
(uncredited)
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Morgan Farley | ... |
(uncredited)
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Douglas Lambert | ... |
Party Guest (uncredited)
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Robert Le Ray | ... |
Jacques Casette (uncredited)
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Bill Nagy | ... |
Pet Shop Owner (uncredited)
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Harvey Parry | ... |
Miff Wilson (uncredited)
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Shane Rimmer | ... |
Cop in Hotel (uncredited)
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Richard Stapley | ... |
Agent Killed by Zharkov in Car (uncredited)
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Eric Vasberg | ... |
Emilio Rocco (uncredited)
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Directed by
Michael Winner |
Written by
David W. Rintels | ... | (screenplay) and |
Gerald Wilson | ... | (screenplay) |
David W. Rintels | ... | (story) |
Produced by
Walter Mirisch | ... | producer |
Music by
Jerry Fielding |
Cinematography by
Robert Paynter | ... | director of photography |
Editing by
Michael Winner | ... | (uncredited) |
Editorial Department
Frederick Wilson | ... | supervising editor |
Casting By
Lynn Stalmaster |
Art Direction by
Herbert Westbrook |
Makeup Department
Stephanie Kaye | ... | hair stylist |
Richard Mills | ... | makeup artist |
Production Management
James Crawford | ... | production manager |
David Silver | ... | production manager |
Laci von Ronay | ... | production manager |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Michael Dryhurst | ... | assistant director |
Joseph M. Ellis | ... | assistant director (as Joe Ellis) |
Wolfgang Glattes | ... | assistant director |
Malcolm Stamp | ... | assistant director |
Art Department
Tommy Bacon | ... | assistant standby props (uncredited) |
Leslie Dilley | ... | assistant art director (uncredited) |
Ray Traynor | ... | property master (uncredited) |
Barry Wilkinson | ... | stand-by props (uncredited) |
Sound Department
Russ Hill | ... | dialogue editor |
Brian Marshall | ... | sound recordist |
Terry Rawlings | ... | dubbing editor (as Terence Rawlings) |
Hugh Strain | ... | sound re-recordist |
Maurice Askew | ... | re-recording mixer (uncredited) |
Doug Smith | ... | sound maintenance (uncredited) |
Special Effects by
John Richardson | ... | special effects (uncredited) |
Stunts
Alan Gibbs | ... | stunt arranger |
Joe Dunne | ... | stunt double: Alain Delon (uncredited) |
Troy Melton | ... | stunts (uncredited) |
Harvey Parry | ... | stunts (uncredited) |
Camera and Electrical Department
Lou Barlia | ... | camera operator |
Norman Jones | ... | camera operator |
Peter Carmody | ... | clapper loader (uncredited) |
Dewi Humphreys | ... | focus puller (uncredited) |
Bob Jordan | ... | focus puller (uncredited) |
Casting Department
G.B. Walker | ... | casting: Europe |
Costume and Wardrobe Department
Philippe Pickford | ... | wardrobe master |
Location Management
Robert Simmonds | ... | location manager |
Music Department
Jerry Fielding | ... | conductor |
Dick Lewzey | ... | music engineer (uncredited) / music mixer (uncredited) |
Greig McRitchie | ... | orchestrator (uncredited) |
Lennie Niehaus | ... | orchestrator (uncredited) |
Script and Continuity Department
Pamela Carlton | ... | continuity |
Additional Crew
Stephen Cory | ... | assistant to director (as Steven Cory) |
Ralph M. Leo | ... | production accountant (uncredited) |
Sue Wall | ... | assistant accountant (uncredited) |
Production Companies
- The Mirisch Corporation (presents)
- Scimitar Films
Distributors
- United Artists (1973) (United States) (theatrical)
- Kommunenes Filmcentral (KF) (1973) (Norway) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1973) (Sweden) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1973) (United Kingdom) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1973) (West Germany) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1973) (Japan) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1973) (Greece) (theatrical)
- United Artists (A-Asia) (1973) (Australia) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1973) (Italy) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1973) (France) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1973) (Argentina) (theatrical) (as Artistas Unidos)
- Nova Film (1973) (Netherlands) (theatrical)
- Les Artistes Associés (United Artists) (1973) (France) (theatrical)
- United Artists (1974) (Finland) (theatrical)
- National Broadcasting Company (NBC) (1975) (United States) (tv) (original airing)
- Warner Home Video (1983) (West Germany) (VHS)
- Audio Visual Enterprises (1985) (Greece) (VHS)
- Roadshow Home Video (1985) (Australia) (video)
- Warner Home Video (1988) (United Kingdom) (VHS)
- Scanvideo (1989) (Finland) (VHS)
- MGM/UA Home Entertainment (1993) (United States) (VHS)
- Svensk Filmindustri (SF) (2004) (Sweden) (DVD)
- MGM Home Entertainment (2000) (United States) (DVD)
- FS Film (2004) (Finland) (DVD)
- MGM Home Entertainment (2004) (Germany) (DVD)
- MGM Home Entertainment (2004) (United Kingdom) (DVD)
- Twilight Time (2015) (United States) (Blu-ray)
- Koch Media (2019) (Germany) (Blu-ray)
- Koch Media (2019) (Germany) (DVD)
- Tubi TV (United States) (video) (streaming)
Special Effects
Other Companies
- DeLuxe Laboratories (color)
- C.T.S. Studios (music mixed at)
- C.T.S. Studios (music recorded at)
- Intrada (score album: limited editio)
Storyline
Plot Summary |
Cross is a CIA field agent, most of his tasks as an assassin. He has just returned to Washington DC from working on a case in Paris, he accompanied by Jean Laurier, code name Scorpio, a Frenchman who has long been mentored by Cross and who works as a freelance assassin. Scorpio pulled the actual trigger on the target in the just completed Paris case, and because of the nature of their work, Cross and Scorpio part company at Dulles Airport, neither having ever seen the other if questioned. Scorpio currently also lives part-time in DC with his girlfriend Susan and his flight attendant sister Anne. Cross' superior McLeod is surprised to see both Cross and Scorpio return to DC as the agency, through McLeod, had unofficially contracted Scorpio to eliminate Cross in Paris as it is well known within the agency that Cross plans on quitting, the threat that he could sell out to the Communists with the amount of knowledge he has too great a risk for the agency to take. Scorpio was seemingly the best man for the job in knowing Cross better than anyone else professionally. Scorpio is able to absolve himself in not carrying out that Paris mission on Cross on a loophole, he further able to renegotiate the contract to meet his goals more fully, namely to take over Cross' position within the agency. Cross discovers not only about there being a contract hit on him, but also that Scorpio is the hired gun. With a wide, loyal and diverse network both domestically and internationally, Cross is at least able to make it out of the country, he using that network to set up somewhere undetected and hopefully to bring his wife Sarah by his side once his new life is established. In the process, Cross will discover just how loyal his network is to him, with some former adversaries in his work, such as now Vienna-based Sergei Zharkov a former Soviet Communist agent, or if some are not who they purport to be in having a separate agenda. If it gets to that point, another question is whether Cross or Scorpio can pull the trigger on the other, each who may see the other as a mirror image of himself. Written by Huggo |
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Taglines | The most incredible manhunt of them all! See more » |
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Parents Guide | View content advisory » |
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Box Office
Budget | $4,000,000 (estimated) |
Did You Know?
Trivia | It is rumored that Burt Lancaster had in his contract that his gymnastic equipment be shipped, set up and struck at each location so he could work out to keep in shape. See more » |
Goofs | Lancaster disarms two agents by putting his car into reverse and slamming into their car in a narrow alley. Then he pulls forward and does it again. But on his second pass, there's a shot of the back of his car completely undamaged before it makes the second hit. (In that final shot, the car is damaged as it should be.) See more » |
Movie Connections | Featured in Boulevard! A Hollywood Story (2021). See more » |
Soundtracks | Hannibal Brooks See more » |
Quotes |
Cross:
There's a room just down the hall from McLeod's office where grown men play a game. It's a bit like Monopoly, only more people get hurt. There's no good and no bad. The object is not to win, but not to lose - and the only rule is to stay in the game. See more » |