Duffy

Duffy

1968 "Who Says Piracy is Obsolete Entertainment?"
Duffy
Duffy

Duffy

5.7 | 1h41m | en | Comedy

Half-brothers Stefane and Antony despise their biological father, callous millionaire Charles Calvert. Because Charles refuses to share his wealth with his sons, Stefane and Antony ask hip American thrill-seeker Duffy to help steal the money they believe is their birthright. When Charles decides to move a large portion of his savings from Morocco to France, Duffy has an opportunity to stage a daring burglary attempt at sea.

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5.7 | 1h41m | en | Comedy , Crime | More Info
Released: September. 16,1968 | Released Producted By: Columbia Pictures , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Half-brothers Stefane and Antony despise their biological father, callous millionaire Charles Calvert. Because Charles refuses to share his wealth with his sons, Stefane and Antony ask hip American thrill-seeker Duffy to help steal the money they believe is their birthright. When Charles decides to move a large portion of his savings from Morocco to France, Duffy has an opportunity to stage a daring burglary attempt at sea.

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Cast

James Coburn , James Mason , James Fox

Director

Philip Harrison

Producted By

Columbia Pictures ,

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Reviews

Xaaralia When "Duffy" was released, I was working in one of my father's theatres as the projectionist. As a projectionist I saw a lot of movies...over and over again. I can tell you that when you screen the same movie six to eight times a day for two, three, four weeks or more, most films soon lose their lustre. Not so with "Duffy". Of course I was just a kid then, and the sixties "counter-culture" was my adolescent fantasy. James Coburn, already extremely cool from "The Magnificent Seven" and "The Great Escape" was riding a wave of popularity from the campy "Flint" movies, but "Duffy" was a very cool and fun movie that I never tired of watching. It never took off as a hit and I've often wondered why. It was just as effective as other caper movies of the era, such as "Topkapi" or "Gambit". I think the reason it never took off was because 1968 was an eventful, tumultuous year, and "straight" America was frowning hard upon hippies and counter-culture. Too bad. I think the owner of this film would be surprised and well rewarded by releasing it to DVD.
John Seal A hard to see film with a good reputation, Duffy recently popped up on TCM, perhaps presaging a full-fledged home video release. Alas, the film is not as good as its reputation suggests. James Coburn is fine as the title character, a based-in-Tangiers hipster/gangster hired by the Calvert Brothers (freak James Fox, straight John Alderton) to assist with the robbery of the S.S. Osiris, a ship owned by the lads' dad (James Mason). Along for the ride is groovy chick Segolene (Susannah York), who sports a dizzying array of late 60s fashions but doesn't have much else to do. Duffy suffers from a screenplay laden with hip-speak (pad, groovy, pop porno, ad nauseum) and the Moroccan setting reminds me of Peter Walker's Die Screaming Marianne and Mike Sarne's Joanna, neither of which are very happy comparisons. On the plus side of the ledger: a good arched eyebrow performance by Alderton and an absolutely smashing, Hammond-driven score by Ernie Freeman, so all is not lost. Temper your expectations and you'll probably enjoy it.
moonspinner55 Retired master criminal in Tangiers is recruited by a hedonistic British youth and his working-stiff brother to rip off a business tycoon of nearly three million dollars; complicating matters is the kid's kittenish girlfriend, who seems to change loyalties easily. Mod, swinging caper-comedy curiously doesn't spend a lot of time on plot-exposition (the planning of the actual heist is kept mostly off-screen), yet it does putter about lazily while introducing us to these people (who end many of their sentences with "man" and "baby"). James Coburn's decadent pad is really peculiar ("pop-porno", he calls it), and yet it has almost nothing to do with what's going on or even with Duffy's character (he does possess, however, the only fish tank-cum-slot machine I've ever seen!). Once the pieces of this location-rich adventure come into play, the picture becomes a passable piece of fluff (with a twist ending that is rather far-fetched, leaving a few questions unanswered). Still, Coburn is an intriguing presence, Susannah York is flighty and flirtatious (and beautiful with a tan), and James Mason is typically suave--and silently cunning--as their victim. ** from ****
sawyer-1 This is a "feel good" movie. It has a fun plot, the actors all put in a good performance, and it was filmed in gorgeous Mediterranean locations. If you like vacationing in the Mediterranean area, this movie whets your appetite for another visit. Most of the movie was filmed in and around the city of Almeria, located on the south coast of Spain. This area has been used frequently for "spaghetti westerns" because of desert-like scenery. The scenes of "Tangiers" were filmed right in the city of Almeria. I visited here in 1984, and the city still had many winding alleys and whitewashed houses that looked like they could have been Tangiers. The lighthouse and rocky beach scenes were filmed at nearby Cabo de Gato. I revisited Almeria in 1999, and it was unrecognizable - all ugly hi-rise buildings. The Cabo de Gato area is still gorgeous, though. There are many beach houses near the lighthouse, but it is now a protected natural reserve area. I've never been able to find the beach club in the movie, although the scenery is very much like the area around the nearby town of San Jose.