Dead Man's Cards: what the critics have to say...

Joanna

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Well, I've noticed today that there are a few Dead Man's Cards reviews about in the various film mags newly out. So, for those interested ;) :p .......

Empire (review by Kim Newman, p56)

THIS LOW-BUDGET LIVERPOOL thug movie has a tang of grimy authenticity missing fron all those London gangster films made by public schoolboys and rates as the best bouncer movie since the classic Road House. Wash-out boxer Tom (James McMartin) takes a job alongside ex-army hardman Paul (Paul Barber) on the door of a Liverpudlian drinking hole. Paul resists the overtures of organised crime, but Tom isn't so sure about turning away drugs money. Meanwhile, simmering feuds get out of hand, with ultra-violence clearly on the menu. McMartin isn't quite up to the surprisingly complicated central role, but Barber, familiar from The Full Monty, deserves the Mitchum-level iconic status the film gives him. [Kim Newman gives the film 3 out of 5 stars]

Film review (review by James Mottram, p104)

The story

A group of Liverpudlian bouncers must band together to fight back against local gangsters

A DOWNBEAT THRILLER that owes as much of a debt to the Western as anything else, Dead Man's Cards makes for an impressive first feature from James Marquand. The son of the late director Richard (best known for helming Return of the Jedi), Marquand has teamed up with actor/co-writer James McMartin to conjure up a film that manages to breathe new life into the creaky crime drama. Set in Liverpool - though any shots of the city's landmarks are kept well and truly hidden - it's the perfect example of how to write a script on a low-budget, with its sparse use of locations, dialogue-driven story and careful characterization.

McMartin plays Tom Watts, a former middleweight boxer now working as a sparring partner in a seedy gym. Offered a job working as a bouncer at a dive called Billy's Bar - owned by Tom Well's Wild West-obsessed old timer - Watts takes on the gig, one that's hardly liable to help his ailing marriage to Kris ([samantha] Janus). Taken under the wing of fellow doorman Paul ([Paul] Barber), a hard-as-nails ex-British army soldier, he begins to learn all the right moves. "If you wanna do someone in, take 'em out the back - no cameras," Paul tells him. But when local gangster Chongi ([Mark] Russell) starts causing trouble on their doorstep, the boys are forced to take arms.

Rather like a Scouse Peckinpah movie, Dead Man's Cards is by no means perfect. Janus's part as the wife at the end of her tether is underwritten, perhaps because Watts winds up being seduced by the barmaid Mary ([Lisa] Parry), and former kick-boxing champion Russell needs a little more coaching as an actor before he steps in front of the camera again.

Still, the partnership between the low-key McMartin and the terrific Barber is what drives the film; returning to the turf of The Long Good Friday, where he started his career, Barber is particularly good as a man defined by his loyalty to Queen and country. And with Marquand doing much to ferment a moody feel to proceedings, it all makes Dead Man's Cards a very likeable experience.

Verdict

This well-written 'Scouse Western' makes an impressive debut for first-time director Marquands. [James Mottram gives DMC 4 out of 5 stars]

HOTDOG (review by Ali Gray, p59)

A late contender for the worst film of 2006, this insultingly awful Brit flick is beyond bad on every level. The plot - concerning doormen and rival gangs on the streets of Liverpool - is so paper-thin it might blow away, were it not for the leaden acting of a woeful bunch of knuckleheads, the most recognisable of whom is Denzel from Only Fools And Horses. The script reads like the scrawlings of a 16-year-old Guy Ritchie fan, a bastardised collection of tough-guy cliches and gun-toting macho horseplay. So terrible, being punched in the face repeatedly would actually be preferable. :eek: [Ali Gray gives the film a 'My Little Pony (Avoid)' 1 star out of 5. :( There is also a half-page DMC ad on p64]

TOTAL FILM (review by Jamie Russell, p39)

A chillingly apt title for a movie that's likely to be remembered as actor Tom Bell's last screen role. The Prime Suspect star plays Billy, an ageing Teddy Boy who runs a deadbeat club in Liverpool. On the door is washed-up boxer turned bouncer Tom (James McMartin) and ex-squaddie Paul (Paul Barber), in deep with local gangsters after bitch-slapping a mouthy dealer.

A knuckleduster of a thriller, its modern day Western trappings (High Noon meets Brookside) are less compelling than its vicious violence as bar brawls give way to no-holds-barred street fighting. It knows its nocturnal world well, blow jobs in grotty bathrooms and hard-men prone to ear-biting giving it real edge. Okay, so the brooding atmosphere doesn't quite disguise the script's flaws, but be forgiving and you'll find the grittiest British thriller since The Firm. [Jamie Russell gives DMC 4 out of 5 stars. There is also a half-page DMC ad on p151]

what's on (Midlands edition, review by James Cameron-Wilson, p11)

In the twilight world of Liverpool, former boxing champ Tom Watts (McMartin) is forced to take a job as a bouncer to make ends meet. There, he learns the ropes from 'Chalky Mandela' (Barber), a gentle giant who promises to make him "bullet-proof"...

The Good: The stark photography of Liverpool and the strong central performance of Paul Barber (of Full Monty fame).

The Bad: The story is a bit of a non-starter.

The Verdict: If former bouncer Vin Diesel were English, this is the film he would've made. Yet even as Dead Man's Cards - co-scripted by its leading man, James McMartin - exudes a gritty authenticity, it fails to pull the viewer in. Neither credible enough as a character study nor exciting enough as a shoot-'em up thriller, the film floats like a butterfly when it should sting like a bee. [James Cameron-Wilson gives DMC 2 out of 5 stars]

So it seems there's a Midlands screening of this after all, then...perhaps! :p

An online review from someone who saw DMC at the Edinburgh Film Festival.....

Eye for Film (review by Chris Docker)

Thought that nightclubs were run by nice charming businessmen who wouldn't hurt a fly? Although Dead Man's Cards is one of the grittiest crime thrillers in British cinema since the gold standard of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, it should be enough to at least make you wonder if nightclubs aren't really controlled by the long arm of nasty criminal types, whether in knuckle dusters or smart suits.

I started watching this movie not expecting to like it, and there being more f-words in the first few minutes than my mother could have endured without fainting, felt my expectations were going to be fully realised, but it wasn't long before I had to admit I'd got it wrong. Dead Man's Cards breathes life into a genre that too often sags under the weight of its own excesses, and comes up with a hand of aces.

Ex-boxer Tom gets a job as a bouncer at a dive, much his wife's disgust, and is soon initiated into the refined way of doing things. "If you wanna do someone in, take 'em out the back - no cameras," advises fellow doorman Paul. This being an age of political correctness, they undergo one of the legally required courses in non-violent restraint, which provides more opportunities for grim humour as Paul shows the instructor how to get out of his judo holds. Club manager Billy (Tom Bell) dresses as a cowboy, lives in fantasy land, and likes to think he's in charge until there's some argument about the going rate for security, at which point he hastily backtracks. Tom's wife wants to "do something like a normal couple" and whisks hubby off to communion, but he's still recovering from the night before and has to rush outside the church to vomit. He and Paul try to maintain their decency by brute force in the face of pressure from bigger club owners, but there's a limit to everything, including how many conflicting loyalties you can juggle especially with drug-fuelled hangovers and a slutty gun-toting barmaid determined to take advantage.

Many British gangster movies since Lock, Stock... (with the notable exception of Sexy Beast) foundered on too much comedy, complex and unrealistic plots, unconvincing characterisation or simply lack of talent. Dead Man's Cards cleverly succeeds where others have failed. Its only fault is that it may be too violent for some viewers, but if the subject matter offends, you've been warned! There's no overriding message that I could discern, no lingering Oscar-worthy close-ups where we are invited to admire some unspoken subtext, just thumpingly honest entertainment that doesn't pull its punches. Director James Marquand has scored a hit with first feature film, and we can only hope that, rather than be tempted to make Dead Man's Cards II, he goes on to make more equally original and incisive work.

I'll keep a look out for more! ;)

So what does everybody make of that little lot, then?

xx Joanna xx
 

Cop

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Well, I've not seen it, and think it's rubbish! :)
 

Joanna

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Well, I've not seen it and....well, that's it....I've just not seen it :eek: .....yet! ;) :):p

xx Joanna xx
 

Booth

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Kim Newman's review is bound to be the most spot-on, his reviews always are.
 

angel clare

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I cannot type it up but the Sight and Sound review is an absolute rave. Looks like anybosy involkved in this movie has got something seriously excellent on their CV. Can't wait to see it now. :)

Kevin
 

Joanna

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Thanks, Kev. I'll give it a lil type up when I can get hold of a copy!

xx Joanna xx
 

Sparky

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Reviews are stacking in favour!! Hope it gets wide recognition during its theatre run! Another Dead Man’s movie (Shoes in this case) was a relatively unheard of flick on DVD release! It was a memorable launch for me as demand grew and grew over a short space of time for this under-advertised film, mainly all word of mouth and we (never before during my time working) ordered more rental copies to stock the shelves. I like to engage peoples thoughts on renting movies and DMS got the thumbs up from every viewer! I’m hoping for a good DVD release especially with the positive reports. I suppose this is the bigger market for UK releases.
 

Fran

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The local news on Granada just had an item on about DMC's - "The latest British Film to win critical aclaim" - and they showed a little bit more of Chris's scene (where he gets bitten:confused: ) for those viewers who haven't heard of it! Plus some small bits from other scenes. A couple of interviews with the writer/director etc.. and it ended by saying it's already won an award at (I think) the Harlem Movie Fesitval! Great! Especially if other programmes choose Chris's scene as an example when they start to talk about it, :) which it seems like they might do, people appear to be very interested in it. :) :) (S'cuse the gabble...I got all excited. :eek: )
 

Booth

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I found out today from Chris that DMC director James Marquand has been on the site and taken a look at this thread. So Coppack be afraid, the cast of DMC are onto you sunshine, for your spiteful remarks.

If you don't watch out they'll cut your other one off...
 

Joanna

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Michael said:
I found out today from Chris that DMC director James Marquand has been on the site and taken a look at this thread.
How wonderful! :) *waves* Hello, James! I so can't wait to see your film!

Michael said:
So Coppack be afraid, the cast of DMC are onto you sunshine, for your spiteful remarksIf you don't watch out they'll cut your other one off...
You've forgotten, haven't you, Mike?! ;) :eek:

Fran - Ooh, that's all rather nice to hear...thanks! And with Chris featuring in the trailer and now also in TV news items about the film, I can't see that harming his career prospects in the slightest....quite the reverse, in fact. :) And Harlem Movie Festival you say.....*ahem*.....

+ Harlem Film Festival site (DMC heads the winners list on the homepage....it won 'Best International Film' :) ....and from the homepage, if you click into the gallery of pics from the festival, there are DMC cast and crew members there to be found....including a pic of DMC cast/crew posing with what looks like their award.)

+ There's talk of DMC on THIS forum thread.

+ On The Reeler, there is a passing mention of DMC getting its US premiere at the Harlem Film Festival.

--------

And on the Sight and Sound review that Kev mentioned, well, I've read it now and I'd actually say it wasn't a 'rave' review but a pretty mixed one. It's a rather interesting review, and, where it is critical, it does, to be fair to the reviewer here, back up the points that it makes - whether you agree with them or not.

The review is accompanied by a spoiler-filled synopsis...I won't bother typing this up too, though :):p......

Sight and Sound (review by Samuel Wigley, p53-54)

For anyone who has been refused entry to, or forcibly rejected from, their evening venue of choice by a club bouncer, Dead Man's Cards offers an entertaining glimpse at the view from the other side of the threshold. Set around the mean streets of Liverpool, though largely interior, James Marquand's gritty debut features inhabits a familiar underworld milieu but aspires to the mythology of the Western, picturing the tough-guy doorman as Wild West layman, a mediator of criminal and public spheres, and the one firm hand against a seething nocturnal life.

Retired heavyweight boxer Tom (James McMartin) takes a job on the door at a tawdry nightclub run by Billy the Cowboy (a delightful performance by the late :eek: Tom Bell), an ageing teddy boy with an immaculately greased quiff, combed eyebrows and a fixation on Wild Bill Hickok. Tom is taken under the wing of Paul (Paul Barber), a stocky, reptile-skinned man who teaches him the finer points of 'meeting and greeting', including where to take troublemakers for rough treatment away from the gaze of security cameras. A former soldier who refuses to join forces with coke-dealing gangland boss Chongi (Russell Mark), Paul is a man of scruples and dedication, but his taut, pulsating cranium warns of fierce volatility and a temper he is powerless to contain.

Next to this commanding presence, McMartin's Tom risks looking barred from his own party. Abandoned by his frustrated wife after being diagnosed as being impotent, and saddled with a could-of-been-a-contender failed-champion backstory, Tom is a hapless hired hand whose brutish effectiveness is repeatedly undermined by his lack of guile. Whether being fed pills and dreams of riches boy Chongi's men or being doped with Viagra and involuntarily fellated by the club's amorous barmaid, Tom is too often the ursine bumbler to provide a dynamic centre to the narrative. His rocky marriage is sketchily drawn and provides little ballast, petering out in a couple of superficial shouting scenes.

But Dead Man's Cards' biggest strength is its vibrantly scuzzy backdrop, which centres on Billy's club and the penumbral alley where intoxicated hordes queue for admission. Up to its rafters in grubby glamour, Billy's draws crowds whose behaviour is dictated by the skills of the club's various DJs, and Tom soon learns what kind of disorder and drug use to expect on any given night. Through it all strides the anachronistic proprietor, filtering out the repetitive beats with a private stream of country music on his headphones.

Billy imagines the club as a Western-style saloon, and it begins to assume that mythic character when Chongi zeroes in on the establishment to get at Paul: a Rio Bravo situation percolates. But while John Wayne enjoyed the benefit of a motley posse to help protect the jailhouse in Howard Hawks' Western, the tension in Dead Man's Cards is dissipated because Paul seems more than capable of keeping Chongi at bay single-handed. For all their big-business bluster, Chongi and his men lack genuine menace; when a psyched-up Paul asks Tom rhetorically "Do I look worried?", the viewer doesn't doubt that he isn't.

Every Rio Bravo needs its Walter Brennan and Marquand's film has two, with a local vagrant named Irish (Andrew Schofield) rivalling Billy in the doddery old-timer stakes. Dead Man's Cards bares an unexpectedly soft centre when Tom finds a task for Irish, interrupting his addled reveries to ask him to delvier a provocative parcel to Chongi. Irish is first encountered in a semi-fantasy sequence, fending off casual assailants with a length of metal piping magically transformed into a peashooter. Similarly, a fleeting, quasi-celestial vision, as a groggy Tom watches three girls sashaying down the street in hen-night angel wings, gestures at divinity. Though the redemption that seems promised for Tom fails to materialise, such moments reveal a film with half an eye on the stars, for all its wallowing in the gutter.

There is a detailed 'credits' list at the end of the review. I love this! It gives credit to those cast ;)/crew/production members that wouldn't normally receive it through these kinds of public channels. I would imagine it is pretty good promo for the people/companies mentioned, too. And as for Chris...well, there is a comprehensive cast listing here and so he does get a 'Teddy Bear' (bless!) mention. What is even better, though, is that Chris's name heads the second 'cast' column, right at the top of the page...so that means, in my opinion, that his name stands out the most in this list...so, even more so than Paul Barber! :eek: :) Consequently, because of where his name is placed on the page, your eye sort of gets very easily drawn to it! Can't see this as being a bad thing at all! :D

And this credits section even has a list of songs from the soundtrack, which I thought was a nice touch.

And another piece of rather nice promo for the film comes on the back cover of the magazine....it's a full page ad for the film! :D :)

xx Joanna xx
 

Booth

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Sight & Sound have always shown all the credits and it even shows how long the actual film reel is.
 

Joanna

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They have indeed! Great, isn't it?! :)

xx Joanna xx

PS: 8261 ft + 15 frames! :D
 

Booth

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What do they do with digital prints though, say how big the combined audio and video streams are in kilobytes?
 

Chris Finch

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Hi guys,

He He He! I was just searching the web for DMC stuff and came across this and it made me smile.

http://www.ugccinemas.co.uk/cinematheque/Prochainement.jgi?FILM=27463&FILMPART=5980

The Cineworld in Bolton is my local flick house. I used to work there when it was a UGC selling tickets, hotdogs and popcorn! Now my dreams are starting to come true as it looks like they will be showing it! Whilst working there I always fantasised that one day I would see myself up there on the big screen! Not sure why name made it on this cast list though over actors that have far more prominant roles than me. I like it though!

I hope in the not too distant future that I will be looking at a film listing where my name is at the top of the credit list - make me a star Mike!!!!!

:D
 

Fran

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That's brilliant Chris, great that your dreams are starting to come true and I'm sure this is just the beginning! We've all got loads to look forward to I think. :)
 

Joanna

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Lol, Chris! Well, whatever the reason, I like it too!

Chris Finch said:
make me a star Mike!!!!!
Now how can he make you a star when you are one of those already? :D ;) :)

xx Joanna xx
 

Joanna

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Hee hee, this thread is a little quiet too, Fran..... ;) :):p

Variety (review by Derek Elley)

Grit and noir hang heavily over Liverpool-set gangster item "Dead Man's Cards", but not much involving human drama emerges from the foggy script. First feature by James Marquand (son of late helmer Richard) benefits from umbrous widescreen lensing, but its key character, a boxer-turned-bouncer with emotional problems, is almost a supporting player in his own movie. Theatrical chances look murky.

Scripter James McMartin plays Tom Watts, a former middleweight pugilist now working as a sparring partner in a seedy gym. His marriage to Kris (Samantha Janus) is rocky, and he's just heard he's infertile. Offered a job as a bouncer at a backstreets dive run by wannabe cowboy Billy (vet Tom Bell), he's taken under the wing of hard-knuckle colleague Paul (Paul Barber) and romanced by barmaid Mary (Lisa Parry). Trouble starts when local hood Chongi (Mark Russell) tries to get Tom and Paul to join his bouncer firm. Barber, who memorably played the big black guy in "The Full Monty", is terrific as pic's only fully drawn character; but Janus' role is underwritten, and McMartin himself is too low-key. At screening caught, dialogue was often indistinct, further hampering involvement.

Channel 4 Film review

Raging Bull relocates to Brookside, as washed-up boxer-turned-bouncer James McMartin patrols a Liverpool bar while placating his pain-in-the-Janus missus.

In an after-hours world of pug-faced scouse smack addicts and street fights, James McMartin and his mentor Paul Barber are privy to a doorman's-eye-view of a life most of us only glimpse. Bulldog hard but bullfrog smart, they occupy a no-man's land between the police and the perps that evokes the lawlessness of the Wild West.

With Mark Russell's organised crime syndicate eroding their (increasingly erroneous) loyalties to boss Tom Bell, it's clear the inability of these old dogs to learn new tricks will be their downfall. But this uneasy split between old-world values and the unmitigated rubbishness of modern life frequently drags the film down with it - although not without a fight.

There's certainly some compelling material in here: a behind-the-scenes story of barflies and broken jaws, of muscles gone to fat, of impotent men paid to fight violence with violence but unable to adapt to domestic situations. Unfortunately, the Western inflections of a so-so script (which references Cole Younger, Geronimo and Lee Marvin) hollow out an otherwise realistic milieu, and the viewer is left contemplating a soapy testosterone-fest that wants to be Rocky-meets-'Rawhide', but is more like Big Bob from Fight Club, bitch-tits and all.

Two moments flag up the film's flawed intentions. In the first, Bell's Steptoe-esque saloon owner listens to country 'n' western on a walkman while his punters gurn and grind to pounding drum 'n' bass. In the second, Lisa Parry's horny barmaid spikes McMartin's whiskey with "whizz and viagra", leading to predictably explosive results.

Clearly director James Marquand aspires towards a similar sort of hybrid, transposing creaky John Wayne-isms to a world better suited to Wayne Rooney, and mixing out-dated myths of machismo, embarrassing drug sequences and kitchen-sink slanging matches between McMartin and his shrieking trophy wife (Janus).

Despite nice touches such as the woozy credits - which bring to mind punch-drunk boxers swaying stonedly in the ring - a few kidney-crunching fights and some decent scouse deadpan, Dead Man's Cards is all mouth and no trousers. There aren't even many deaths - or card games for that matter.

What the film really lacks is the gravitas of someone like Bob Hoskins or Ray Winstone. McMartin is too slight a presence as the chief protagonist, a porn-'tached trainee prison officer perpetually out of his depth. Russell, meanwhile, a former kickboxer hoping to do a Vinnie Jones, has the charisma of a third-division football player and repeatedly sucks the life out of his scenes like one of Harry Potter's dementors.

Really, the film's closest relations aren't Get Carter or The Long Good Friday, but those faintly ridiculous fast-food campaigns which show real men stomping constipatedly towards the camera and fighting for their rights by eschewing quiche.

Verdict

Neither believable nor particularly engrossing, Dead Man's Cards is a rash, boozy boast of a film that will have to accept the fact that, in terms of the cannon of British crime cinema, its name's not down and it's not coming in.

xx Joanna xx
 

Cop

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Chris Finch said:
Hi guys,The Cineworld in Bolton is my local flick house. I used to work there when it was a UGC selling tickets, hotdogs and popcorn! Now my dreams are starting to come true as it looks like they will be showing it! Whilst working there I always fantasised that one day I would see myself up there on the big screen!

:D
I think you should go back. It would be interesting to see if anybody recognised you in the film, after you served them popcorn... :)
 
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