Matialth
Good concept, poorly executed.
Limerculer
A waste of 90 minutes of my life
ChampDavSlim
The acting is good, and the firecracker script has some excellent ideas.
Sammy-Jo Cervantes
There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.
tc_nafsasp
Interesting film, however this is less a review more a footnote. One of the horses involved was well known to racing enthusiasts of the day, Go-Pontinental, owned by Fred Pontin, who ran in the '68 National as a fancied horse, missed out the next 4 Nationals, returning as a 13 year old in '73, and a 14 year old in '74, by which time he was the proverbial 100-1 rank outsider. Timeform shortly after the '74 National rated him "of no note whatsoever".
DansLaLuna
I have never heard of this flick but rented it out of interest, being a fan of Dame Judi Dench, Tony Richardson and horses. It's deals with horse tampering and throwing the books in the world of British horse racing. I didn't read the book so I don't have that insight. The acting is good, I have not heard of any of the other in the cast besides Dench. It gives a fairly light look into the actual sport and the physical and mental exertions of it, and the whole "bad guy taxi mob" and what they get away with is, well, totally implausible. That being said, I wasn't bored, it was nice to see the very "dated" fashion and lingo and the "shots" on horseback. I did figure out who the head bad person was early on, but it kept my attention. I do get the comment above about the end but it was just kind of an unfinished thing for me, didn't ruin it for me. It certainly wasn't award winning film-making, it reminded me more of a made for TV movie. I am curious about the lead actor, Scott Antony, who apparently has disappeared off the face of the earth after doing this film and "Savage Messiah" in the same year. He was really good and apparently very good in that movie as well.
hhartling
At our house we're big fans of Dick Francis novels. "Dead Cert" was this champion jockey's first thriller. I bought this DVD a couple of years ago and we had great expectations. We were hugely disappointed in the way the story was adapted. I am re-reading the novel so I thought it would be fun to try the movie again. Well, it has not improved with age. The only saving grace is you get some idea (or at least Tony Richardson's idea) of what a British racetrack is like. The characters in the movie share some of the same names as the characters in the novel but hardly any of the same traits. There isn't a soul in this movie you would want to know personally (I am talking about the characters not the actors), except perhaps the horses.
Comeuppance Reviews
"Dead Cert" is a well-made British mystery. The plot is about Alan York (Scott Antony) who is a jockey. When his friend dies after a race, Alan takes it upon himself to figure out what happened. He uncovers corruption in the horse riding industry and the police force.The next part of the review does contain spoilers!!!"Dead Cert" has good acting and directing, but the ending is flawed and weird. At the end, Alan and Sandy (Michael Williams) are racing their horses. They're right next each other and Sandy starts whipping Alan with his racing stick. Then Alan, whips back and makes Sandy fall on a sharp railing, and he dies. Alan wins the race but no one ever mentions that Sandy is dead. I thought that hurt the film a lot.If you can get past the odd ending, it's a decent film.For more insanity, please visit: comeuppancereviews.com