Mike Hodges Dies: Director Of ‘Get Carter,’ ‘Croupier’ & ‘Flash Gordon’ Was 90

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Mike Hodges, best known as the director of gritty, stylish thrillers like Get Carter — the original — Croupier, The Terminal Man and I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead died December 17, according to Mike Kaplan, his longtime friend and the producer of I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead. Hodges was 90.

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Hodges was a relatively new director who’d worked mostly in TV when he burst upon the international film scene with Get Carter in 1971. The crime drama starring Michael Caine is still considered among the best British gangster films ever made. Set against a working class background in northern England, Hodges blended irony and humor with stark tension and sudden violence. Those elements became, along with his attention to atmosphere, his signatures. The film was remade in 2000 with Sylvester Stallone as the lead.

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<a href="https://deadline.com/tag/michael-caine/" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Michael Caine;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Michael Caine</a> in ‘Get Carter’ circa 1971. (Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images)
Michael Caine in ‘Get Carter’ circa 1971. (Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images)

In 2000, his film Croupier introduced the world to Clive Owen. The two would work together again just three years later on I’ll Sleep When I’m Dead, which also starred Charlotte Rampling, Malcolm McDowell and Jonathan Rhys Meyers.

On the release of Croupier, legendary New York Observer critic Andrew Sarris called Hodges, “One of the most under-appreciated and virtually unknown masters of the medium in the last 30 years.”

Clive Owen and Mike Hodges on the set of ‘Croupier,’ 1998
Clive Owen and Mike Hodges on the set of ‘Croupier,’ 1998

Hodges took a broader approach to comedy with his 1980 camp classic Flash Gordon, which was powered by a title tune from Queen, for whom Hodges went on to direct several music videos

New York Times critic A.O. Scott  wrote that it was Pauline Kael’s review of Flash Gordon that made him take films seriously.

Hodges other notable movies include The Terminal Man with George Segal, Pulp with Caine and Mickey Rooney and A Prayer for the Dying, which starred Bob Hoskins and Mickey Rourke.

His television career included the mini-series Dandelion Dead and Squaring the Circle, written by Tom Stoppard.

Hodges was recently accorded a monthlong retrospective by the British Film Institute at the National Film Theater.

He is survived by his wife, Carol Laws, his sons Ben and Jake Hodges, and five grandchildren Marlon, Honey, Orson, Michael and Gabriel.

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