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Conduct Unbecoming

1975

Action / Crime / Drama / Mystery

6
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Fresh67%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled39%
IMDb Rating6.510861

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Christopher Plummer Photo
Christopher Plummer as Maj. Alastair Wimbourne
Richard Attenborough Photo
Richard Attenborough as Maj. Lionel E. Roach
Stacy Keach Photo
Stacy Keach as Capt. Harper
Michael York Photo
Michael York as 2nd Lt. Arthur Drake
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
984.12 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 47 min
P/S ...
1.78 GB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 47 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by ulicknormanowen7 / 10

A woman's honor?

Based on play ,and it shows, a little talky, the movie can boast the creme de la creme of British actors: Attenborough, Howard, Plummer,both York et al and this is the main reason you should watch this overlooked work.

The scene in which the widow of a captain who would have been killed in action is awarded a medal is pivotal : the keywords to the movie are pride and honor.

When this widow is attacked by a rookie (a naive young man who thinks that his only punishment would be to be expelled from the army , a thing he ardently hopes -the very first scene is revealing- ) one attends a travesty of a trial ,where the court martial's purpose is less the search for truth (which might be really unbecoming) than to preserve the military values, to keep up appearances .A rotten microcosm where things better left unsaid happen .

Reviewed by CinemaSerf6 / 10

Court-room melodrama that should have stayed on a stage.

Despite the pretty stellar cast list, I struggled a bit with this rather dreary story. It centres around James Faulkner's "Lt. Millington" who is being court-martialled in British India for a serious assault on the widow of a fallen colleague - "Mrs. Scarlett" (Susannah York). He is to be defended by the inexperienced "Drake" (Michael York) before a committee chaired by the openly hostile "Capt. Harper" (Stacey Keach). On the face of it, he is doomed - but some tenacious investigative work from his counsel gradually gets to the bottom of what happened. The ending is more of a sort of guess which of the other famous actors - Trevor Howard, Richard Attenborough or perhaps Christopher Plummer might have done it given we are pretty safe to assume that poor old "Millington" is being stitched up. Sadly, this moves at a glacial pace with none of the characters offering much by way of depth or interest. Colourful? Yes, that's true - and the costumes and settings all look great, but like so many of these latter-day tales of Empire, it is all faintly ridiculous and swings clumsily at the supposed honour of the "regiment" at all costs in quite a shallow fashion. I found the direction was much more suitable for a theatrical delivery, too. Disappointing.

Reviewed by malcolmgsw4 / 10

Stage play filmed without frills

This film is flat lifeless and dull.It t staged in one main set and it gives the feeling of having been filmed in the theatre.It is not so much a whodunit as a whocareswhodunnit.When the actual assailant is revealed the only feeling is of relief that this film is coming to a conclusion.Terence Rattigan was apparently paid £250000 for an unused screenplay.That was probably more than the test of the films budget.

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