Charles Crossley
Alan Bates
Charles Crossley

“A film of intense perversity - the madness of the mind.”
A traveller by the name of Crossley forces himself upon a musician and his wife in a lonely part of Devon, and uses the aboriginal magic he has learned to displace his host.
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Charles Crossley
Alan Bates
Charles Crossley
Rachel Fielding
Susannah York
Rachel Fielding
Anthony Fielding
John Hurt
Anthony Fielding
Chief Medical Officer
Robert Stephens
Chief Medical Officer
Robert Graves
Tim Curry
Robert Graves
Vicar
Julian Hough
Vicar
Cobbler's Wife
Carol Drinkwater
Cobbler's Wife
Inspector
John Rees
Inspector
Fielder in Cowpat
Jim Broadbent
Fielder in Cowpat
Harriet
Susan Wooldridge
Harriet
Cobbler
Nick Stringer
Cobbler
Harry the Shepherd
Peter Benson
Harry the Shepherd
I remember seeing this when it first came out (1978) and thinking it a bit overblown. Just watched it again (2020) after it was featured in a list of films containing an English cricket match (a short list; The Go Between from the same period is another one, also with Alan Bates in a similar role) It now seems a bit better than I remembered despite some inconsistencies and plot holes. Alan Bates, for all his brooding lumbering around, never quite pulls off the surreal menace that the role of Crossley, the man with The Shout That Can Kill, demands. John Hurt as Anthony the philandering cuckold composer, seems unbelievably weak in the face of Crossley's invasion of his life, but that's what the role as written demands. Tim Curry as Robert Graves (not the real one!) listens to Crossley's tale with suitable wide-eyed innocence in the hut as they are scoring the locals versus loonies cricket match at the asylum. The cast features many well known English actors of the period, including Susannah York getting her nipples out as usual and a young Jim Broadbent ripping his kit off to prance about in his pants in the thunderstorm that terminates the match, and the film. The Devon locations are an added bonus. All in all an entertaining 90 minutes although not a great film by any means. (and there isn't that much cricket!). Worth 3/5 or 4/7 if you prefer a finer grained rating system)
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