Taglines: The score is one dead, ten witnesses to go.
The Midnight Man movie storyline. A former Chicago policeman, Jim Slade (Burt Lancaster), has just been released on parole from prison for shooting his wife’s lover in their bed. He goes to live with friends, Quartz (Cameron Mitchell) and wife Judy (Joan Lorring), in a small town where he has been offered a job (part of his parole agreement) as a night watchman at Jordon College.
A coed (Catherine Bach) is murdered and the local sheriff, Casey (Harris Yulin), tries to pin the crime on a creepy college janitor (Charles Tyner) who spouts Biblical revelation while hiding pornography. Slade has other ideas and pursues an unauthorized investigation of his own. “Taking the lid off the hornet’s nest involves him in considerable danger as blackmails, beatings, attempted rape and further murders wrestle for screentime before the long and-overcomplicated drama grinds to a close.”
The murdered student turns out to be the daughter of Senator Clayborne (Morgan Woodward), who subsequently receives blackmail letters over his daughter Natalie’s confession to her campus psychiatric department counselor about an incestuous relationship with her father. Incriminating cassette tapes of the account have fallen into the hands of the blackmailers.
Slade questions possible suspects including Natalie Clayborne’s estranged boyfriend Arthur King (played by Burt Lancaster’s son, William), who declares to Slade that the generation gap “just got a little wider,” and Dean Collins, the psych professor (played by actual Clemson faculty member Harold N. Cooledge Jr.), as well as a nerdy student whose taped psych rant was also stolen and Senator Clayborne himself.
All the while, Slade is being warned off of overstepping his authority as a mere night watchman, no longer a cop, by his parole officer Linda Thorpe (Susan Clark), as well as by his buddy Quartz. A brief affair between Slade and Thorpe begins. A rustic family of thugs, including Leroy (Ed Lauter), overseen by a “Ma Barker”-ish mother arrive, turning out to be “muscle” for certain corrupt members of the Sheriff’s Department.
The Midnight Man is a 1974 American neo noir mystery film starring and co-directed by Burt Lancaster. The film also stars Susan Clark, Cameron Mitchell, Morgan Woodward, Harris Yulin, Robert Quarry, Joan Lorring, Lawrence Dobkin, Ed Lauter, Mills Watson, Charles Tyner and Catherine Bach.
Burt Lancaster shared directing credit with Roland Kibbee, and shared writing credit with Kibbee and author David Anthony upon whose 1969 novel The Midnight Lady and the Mourning Man the movie was based. Featuring a fairly convoluted plot, the movie was not a major success and Lancaster did not consider it to be among his better work. Other than 1955’s The Kentuckian, this was Lancaster’s only film as a director.
Co-stars included Susan Clark and Cameron Mitchell, Eleanor Ross as Nell, as well as the future Daisy Duke, Catherine Bach, in her first screen appearance, and character actors Ed Lauter and Charles Tyner who would both be featured in 1974’s The Longest Yard starring Burt Reynolds.
It was filmed in Clemson, South Carolina, and Anderson and Pickens counties in 1973, with the first shots begun on February 13, 1973, the opening scenes of the Jim Slade character arriving by Trailways bus at Jordon College. The film was released in the United States on June 10, 1974, in New York City, and nationwide on June 14. It premiered at the Astro III theatre, Clemson, S.C., on March 14, 1974, with a red carpet ceremony.
The Midnight Man (1974)
Directed by: Roland Kibbee, Burt Lancaster
Starring: Burt Lancaster, Susan Clark, Cameron Mitchell, Morgan Woodward, Harris Yulin, Robert Quarry, Joan Lorring, Lawrence Dobkin, Ed Lauter, Mills Watson, Charles Tyner, Catherine Bach
Screenplay by: Roland Kibbee, Burt Lancaster
Production Design by: James Dowell Vance
Cinematography by: Jack Priestley
Film Editing by: Frank Morriss
Set Decoration by: Joseph J. Stone
Music by: Dave Grusin
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: Universal Pictures
Release Date: June 14, 1974
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