Magnum Force

Magnum Force 3d512u

1973 "This time the bullets are hitting pretty close to home."
Magnum Force
Magnum Force

Magnum Force 3d512u

7.2 | 2h4m | R | en | Drama

"Dirty" Harry Callahan is a San Francisco Police Inspector on the trail of a group of rogue cops who have taken justice into their own hands. When shady characters are murdered one after another in grisly fashion, only Dirty Harry can stop them.

View More
7.2 | 2h4m | R | en | More Info
Released: December. 25,1973 | Released Producted By: Malpaso Productions , Warner Bros. Pictures Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
info

"Dirty" Harry Callahan is a San Francisco Police Inspector on the trail of a group of rogue cops who have taken justice into their own hands. When shady characters are murdered one after another in grisly fashion, only Dirty Harry can stop them.

Genre

Crime

Watch Online

Magnum Force (1973) is currently not available on any services.

Cast

Robert Urich

Director

Jack T. Collis

Producted By

Malpaso Productions

Magnum Force Videos and Images c556v

View All
  • Top Credited Cast
  • |
  • Crew
Hal Holbrook
Hal Holbrook

as Lieutenant Briggs

Mitchell Ryan
Mitchell Ryan

as Officer Charlie McCoy

David Soul
David Soul

as Officer John Davis

Felton Perry
Felton Perry

as Insp. Early Smith

Robert Urich
Robert Urich

as Officer Mike Grimes

Jack T. Collis
Jack T. Collis

Art Direction

John Lamphear
John Lamphear

Set Decoration

Frank Stanley
Frank Stanley

Director of Photography

Shirley Dolle
Shirley Dolle

Hairstylist

Joe McKinney
Joe McKinney

Makeup Artist

Sass Bedig
Sass Bedig

Special Effects

Dar Robinson
Dar Robinson

Stunt Driver

Jerry Summers
Bob Harris
Bob Harris

Stunts

Bill Couch
Bill Couch

Stunts

George Sawaya
Chuck Hicks
Chuck Hicks

Stunts

Chuck Waters
Chuck Waters

Stunts

Carey Loftin
Carey Loftin

Stunts

Ted Grossman
Ted Grossman

Stunts

Gary Epper
Gary Epper

Stunts

Magnum Force Audience Reviews r91

Kattiera Nana I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
Cathardincu Surprisingly incoherent and boring
BeSummers Funny, strange, confrontational and subversive, this is one of the most interesting experiences you'll have at the cinema this year.
Griff Lees Very good movie overall, highly recommended. Most of the negative reviews don't have any merit and are all pollitically based. Give this movie a chance at least, and it might give you a different perspective.
adonis98-743-186503 Dirty Harry is on the trail of vigilante cops who are not above going beyond the law to kill the city's undesirables. Magnum Force is old Cinema at perhaps it's best form with lot's of action, terrific perfomances by Clint Eastwood, Hal Holbrook and the rest of the cast as a whole but also an interesting, thrilling and full of suspense storyline. Dirty Harry was an entertaining and spectacular movie and this sequel still keeps that awesome, badass and greatness of that film and brings on a sequel that i could only describe it as the 'Terminator 2: Judgment Day' of the Series which means? Just as freaking good as the first!!
J Besser "Magnum Force" is almost as good as the original "Dirty Harry". The action never lets up yet manages never to exhaust the viewer. It has a nice little mystery yet it's not a whodunnit. It's a macho movie but it doesn't mock the squares like Clint's also great "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot". Add to the mix a topless Suzanne Somers and you get a fantastic piece of entertainment.
connorbbalboa The ending of the first Dirty Harry (an excellent film) saw Clint Eastwood's Inspector Harry Callahan kill the disgusting and too-evil-to-live Scorpio and in turn, throw his badge away, signifying that he will never come back to the San Francisco police force and go on killing bad guys as a vigilante. Surely this would mean that there won't be any sequels...right? Wrong. Harry is back on the force and continuing his police work despite disobeying the orders of his superiors in Magnum Force, directed by Ted Post (Hang 'Em High, also with Eastwood; Beneath the Planet of the Apes), and sees him (temporarily) re-assigned to Stakeout instead of Homicide. Here, he is investigating the murders of many of the city's most notorious criminals, including narcotics kingpins and pimps (one of whom murders a prostitute with drain cleaner in one of the film's more graphic scenes). During the film, he meets a group of young rookie cops, including a fresh-faced Tim Matheson (Eric Stratton from Animal House (1978)) who ire Harry very deeply (not in a sexual way, mind you). As the film presses on, Harry believes that they are the ones doing the killings, and he is forced to confront his own ideas about violating the rights of the criminals when they are taken to the extreme.What I want to get out of the way is that the major problem I have with this film is that no matter how many Dirty Harry sequels you make, I can't get over the fact that Harry threw away his badge at the end of the first film after killing Scorpio. Did he decide to come back after a short while? And shouldn't his superiors have been more critical of him for disobeying his orders (like firing him or prosecuting him)? Regardless, neither the Scorpio killing nor Harry throwing his badge away is mentioned in the whole film. Another issue is that during the film, Harry develops a casual romance with a young woman named Sunny, who seems to have the hots for him right away. It's cute, I will it, but like with Harry's romance with Sam in The Dead Pool (1988), it's glossed over quickly.After the problems I highlighted, the rest is pretty damn great. The film keeps up the action and graphic violence of its predecessor, especially during two great scenes in a store robbery stakeout and a shootout with a gang of criminals at a food plant. The score by Lalo Schifrin is also catchy, with the opening theme being the standout. It's pure 70s style tunes. And even though Harry's relationship with Sunny is glossed over, the film also shows Harry's (not romantic) relationship with the wife of his friend, Charlie (Mitchell Ryan from High Plains Drifter and Lethal Weapon), who holds the safe beliefs as Harry, but is a bit more unhinged about the situation, best described when his wife mentioned an occasion when he played Russian Roulette with himself. The scenes between Harry and Charlie's wife feel appropriately calm and gives audiences a chance to see Harry as a human being more than his scenes with Sunny. Hal Holbrook makes a great turn as Lt. Briggs, and Eastwood himself makes Harry a tough, but understandable and human guy the second time around. It's also interesting to see Harry delve into more police work than he did in the first film, especially when he's using Ballistics to match up the bullets found at the murder scenes to the weapon used, and then the killers.Now I want to discuss the best thing about this film: the themes of taking vigilantism too far, and whether following the system is the right decision. The first film was about how maybe democracy needs to be put aside in order for the police to properly catch criminals, and that maybe the criminals are given too much leeway by the law. Part of the reason this film was created was to answer to the negative criticism towards the first film about Harry maybe being "fascist." However, it doesn't just feel like a simple throwaway piece that the film just inserts. It feels like the film really wants you to think about how it would be to live in a society with squads of killer cops and whether their current democratic system is really a good system to live under.Harry says at one point that he hates the system but will stick with it until something better comes along because he has no choice. We can all get the sense that there are quite a few people in real-life living in this country that hate the system as well, but unless they want to go something so extreme they'll get jailed or worse, they don't have a choice either. When it comes to vigilantism, the film looks at and then makes you think further about how far it could go before it goes too far. Harry discusses how it would be excessive to kill somebody because their dog takes a dump on their neighbor's lawn.Even that's not the worst of it; there's also the possibility of someone killing somebody simply because that person doesn't like the way the other looks at him. Even the killer cops fit so well into the message: more people today are nervous of cops because of police brutality; how safe would they feel if there was a whole squad of them just going out and shooting bad guys dead, point blank? In short, watch this sequel. Like the first film, it does its utmost to make you think about our legal system and whether criminals should be given much leeway by it. It's action-packed to the max and it is a solid sequel that can be a great companion piece to the original Dirty Harry. "It's all in a day's work for Inspector Harry Callahan."
moonspinner55 The second "Dirty Harry" film, directed by Ted Post (a friend of star Clint Eastwood's from their days in television), is full of smash-ups, crash-ups, a pimp killing a prostitute with drain cleaner down her throat, a metal girder catching a crime czar right in the face, and a police inspector (Eastwood's partner) dispatched in a shameful manner--by opening a bobby-trapped mailbox! The plot is inverted from 1971's "Dirty Harry"--this time, the kids are all right and the cops are the bad guys. No matter; Eastwood's Harry Callahan dispatches with the legalities and mows down the crooked rookies just as he did with the hippie sniper from the predecessor. The screenwriters (John Milius and Michael Cimino!) don't even attempt to recognize the irony inherent in the scenario--it's just a plot gimmick to them, another way to go with this character. Still, for fans of completely mindless action fare, one could do worse than "Magnum Force". It has built-in audience approval, which is impossible to shake; one goes into the movie knowing exactly what to expect--and enjoying that all expectations are fully met. Post keeps it moving--thumping, thumping--like an erotic dance for would-be assassins. ** from ****