This post is part of the Robert Duvall Tribute Blogathon hosted by
Taking Up Room – Reviews. History. Life.
Writing as Richard Stark, Donald Westlake authored 24 novels about a career criminal named Parker (just Parker), who has been described as ruthless, amoral, cold, methodical, efficient, murderous and humorless.
They all fit.
Ranking the movies adapted from Parker novels, at least those I’ve seen, the less said about The Split (1967) with Jim Brown the better. Payback (1999) with Mel Gibson is Parker as superhero. The best is Point Blank (1967) with Lee Marvin and The Outfit (1973) with Robert Duvall.
In The Outfit, Parker is renamed Earl Macklin, who
learns upon his release from prison that there are contracts out on him, his
brother Eddie and their partner Cody (Joe Don Baker) as payback for a bank the
three robbed, not knowing it was a front for the Outfit crime syndicate.
Thugs kill Eddie and threaten Macklin’s girlfriend Bett
(Karen Black), leading Macklin to decide that the Outfit owes him $250,000 –
“to make things right” – and until he gets the money, he plans to rip them off of
whatever he can.
Macklin and Cody knock off a series of Outfit operations,
getting the attention of its boss Mailer (Robert Ryan), who agrees to the $250,000
payoff. An arranged meeting is an ambush that Macklin and Cody barely escape and
that, plus Bett’s death during a bogus police traffic stop, sets into motion a seemingly
suicidal plan to attack Mailer’s heavily guarded compound.
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| Robert Ryan and Robert Duvall |
And unlike Bonnie and Clyde, there’s nothing romantic
about Macklin and crew. They move around between crummy motel rooms, Macklin
and Cody living in a foxhole, wiling away the hours with trivial small talk,
sharing cigarettes and bottles of beer.
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| Robert Duvall as Macklin: "Cold and ammoral" |
Director/screenwriter John Flynn adds some terrific
hardboiled dialog. “I don’t talk to guys wearing aprons,” says Macklin to a
bartender blocking him from speaking to an Outfit goon. At one point an
exasperated Mailer barks, “I want (Macklin’s) ass wrapped in cellophane!”
Along with Ryan, the supporting cast includes film noir
veterans Elisha Cook Jr., the always scary Timothy Carey, Jane Greer and Marie
Windsor, plus familiar faces Richard Jaeckel, Sheree North, Joanna Cassidy and
Henry Jones. In a nod to The Maltese Falcon, Carey refers to Macklin as
a “gunsel,” Humphrey Bogart’s name for Elisha Cook.
The Outfit was one of Ryan’s
last movies. He died of lung cancer three months before the movie opened.
The grand finale siege of Mailer’s compound involves lots
of shooting and explosions courtesy of a bundle of dynamite sticks, complete
with timer and suction cup attached to the bottom of a table, right out of a
Roadrunner cartoon. Flynn ends the movie with a cheesy Starsky & Hutch freeze
frame of Duvall and Baker laughing, an adrenalin rush after beating the Outfit
(and which doesn’t quite fit the Parker image).
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| That's a wrap. Roll credits |











