Pendulum (film)
Pendulum is a 1969 American neo noir thriller film starring George Peppard, Jean Seberg and Richard Kiley.
Pendulum | |
---|---|
Directed by | George Schaefer |
Produced by | Stanley Niss |
Written by | Stanley Niss |
Starring | George Peppard Jean Seberg Richard Kiley |
Music by | Walter Scharf |
Cinematography | Lionel Lindon |
Edited by | Hugh S. Fowler |
Color process | Technicolor |
Production company | Pendulum Productions |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 102 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
It was the first feature directed by the TV veteran filmmaker George Schaefer.[1]
Plot
In Washington, D.C., police captain Frank Matthews's career is on the rise, having just been appointed consultant for a powerful U.S. senator. His domestic life, however, is questionable. He suspects his wife of having an affair with an old flame. One evening, after appearing at a political function in Baltimore, Matthews decides not to return home until the following morning. The next day, he is informed by authorities that his wife has been discovered shot to death while in bed with her lover, who was also killed. Soon, Matthews is made aware that his own colleagues, the police, have made him the prime suspect in the case.
Pendulum also features a side-plot involving a death-row inmate, Paul Sanderson, convicted of rape and murder, who is set free due to a legal technicality. Sanderson had been originally tracked down and arrested by Matthews, who views these circumstances as a grave injustice. Ironically, now that Captain Matthews is a suspected murderer, he hires Sanderson's lawyer, Woodrow Wilson King, to represent him. For the remainder of the feature, these two storylines intersect until the film reaches its violent conclusion.
Cast
- George Peppard as Captain Frank Matthews
- Jean Seberg as Adele Matthews
- Richard Kiley as Woodrow Wilson King
- Charles McGraw as Deputy Chief John P. Hildebrand
- Madeleine Sherwood as Mrs. Eileen Sanderson
- Robert F. Lyons as Paul Martin Sanderson
- Frank Marth as Lt. Smithson
- Marj Dusay as Liz Tennant
- Paul McGrath as Senator Augustus Cole
- Stewart Moss as Richard D'Angelo
- Isabel Sanford as Effie
- Dana Elcar as Detective 'Red' Thornton
Legacy
In 2019, the film is referenced in Quentin Tarantino's film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, on a movie theater marquee that Sharon Tate walks past just before first seeing her own name on the marquee display of The Wrecking Crew at the Fox Bruin Theater.
References
- Scheruer, Philip (28 April 1968). "Man of Many Emmys Eyes Oscar". Los Angeles Times. p. d18.