Robert Elliot
James Coburn
Robert Elliot

“Who will be alive when the hands stop?”
Offered a job as a presidential adviser, a professor is forced to dispose of those who knew him when he was a spy.
The Internecine Project ≣ 1974 ≣ Trailer
Robert Elliot
James Coburn
Robert Elliot
Jean Robertson
Lee Grant
Jean Robertson
Albert Parsons
Harry Andrews
Albert Parsons
Alex Hellman
Ian Hendry
Alex Hellman
David Baker
Michael Jayston
David Baker
Christina Larsson
Christiane Krüger
Christina Larsson
E.J. Farnsworth
Keenan Wynn
E.J. Farnsworth
Business tycoon
Terence Alexander
Business tycoon
Arnold Pryce-Jones
Julian Glover
Arnold Pryce-Jones
Eliot's Secretary
Philip Anthony
Eliot's Secretary
Jean's Secretary
Mary Larkin
Jean's Secretary
Laboratory Technician
Ewan Roberts
Laboratory Technician
James Coburn is quite effective in this action thriller. He is "Prof. Elliot", about to become a high ranking government advisor. Snag is, he has quite a past - and so must devise a cunning plan to ensure that all those privy to his dirty laundry are eliminated. The plot utilises quite a clever domino-style effect. Those doing the killing don't know who is instructing them, nor that they won't last much longer themselves, and the pace from director Ken Hughes is well managed eliciting a good effort from both Coburn and from the usually reliable Keenan Wynn ("Farnsworth"). What makes this work is the way the plot draws us in. It's not so much that people are dropping like flies - we neither know them nor care about them - it's more the sheer cleverness of his plan, and I was quietly hoping he would succeed... Unfortunately, the quality of dialogue - an early outing for Barry Levinson - doesn't really add much to the film. It's all just a little bit bland, and I could have been doing with more on screen time from Coburn. Still, it's an interesting and new take on a political thriller that I quite enjoyed for 90 minutes.
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