Funeral for an Assassin (1974)

Directed by Ivan Hall, Funeral for an Assassin is a South African political thriller that blends espionage, revenge, and social commentary. Released during the height of apartheid, the film stars Vic Morrow as a cold-blooded revolutionary whose vendetta against the regime unfolds through calculated violence and psychological warfare.

Plot Summary
Michael Cardiff (Vic Morrow) is a highly trained assassin and political dissident who escapes from prison and fakes his death by planting identification on a decomposed corpse. Free and presumed dead, he begins a meticulous plan to destabilize the South African government.

His first move: assassinate a prominent judge and disguise it as an accident. But the real target is the judge’s state funeral, where Cardiff intends to detonate an explosive device and eliminate multiple high-ranking officials. Only Captain Ben Deelman (Peter van Dissel), a skeptical and nonconformist police officer, suspects something is amiss and races against time to stop the attack.

Cast Highlights

  • Vic Morrow as Michael Cardiff
  • Peter van Dissel as Captain Deelman
  • Gaby Getz, Sam Williams, and Anthony Wilson in supporting roles

Production Notes

  • Filmed in South Africa, with urban and institutional settings reflecting the apartheid-era tension
  • The film was reportedly banned and unbanned by South African censors in 1974, highlighting its controversial nature
  • Morrow’s portrayal includes a notorious scene in blackface disguise, a choice that has drawn criticism for its insensitivity and implausibility
  • The tone is grim and procedural, with Cardiff shown as a ruthless operator willing to kill innocents to achieve his goals

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