

Willing to help in any way, Chris agrees to a sexual tryst with Reese inside his heavily guarded penthouse apartment where she will unbolt a door for Walker. Walker approaches car dealer Stegman for information, smashing a new car and terrorizing him until Stegman says Reese is with Walker's sister-in-law, Chris.īreaking in on Chris, he learns that she despises Reese and admires Walker. Lynne is distraught she takes an overdose of sleeping pills. Reese used all of the money from the job to pay back a debt to a crime syndicate called "The Organization." Walker goes to Los Angeles where he bursts in on Lynne and riddles her bed with bullets, only to find Reese has long since disappeared. With assistance from the mysterious Yost, Walker sets out to find Reese and recover his half of the robbery: $93,000. Reese takes the money and Walker's wife, Lynne. After counting the money, Reese shoots Walker, leaving him for dead. Walker works with his friend Mal Reese to rob a major crime operation, ambushing the courier on deserted Alcatraz Island. In 2016, Point Blank was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress, and selected for preservation in its National Film Registry.


The film grossed over 9 million dollars at the box-office in 1967, and has since gone on to become a cult classic, eliciting praise from such critics as film historian David Thomson. Boorman directed the film at Marvin's request and Marvin played a central role in the film's development. Point Blank is a 1967 American crime film directed by John Boorman, starring Lee Marvin, co-starring Angie Dickinson, Keenan Wynn and Carroll O'Connor, and adapted from the 1963 crime noir pulp novel The Hunter by Donald E.
