Pierrepoint with Timothy Spall: DVD Cover

    Pierrepoint
    a.k.a. The Last Hangman Director: Adrian Shergold Cast: Timothy Spall, Juliet Stevenson, Cavan Clerkin, Eddie Marsan

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    • DVD Release Date: 10/30/2007
    • Original Release: 2006
    • Rating: Rated R
    • Sales Rank: 52,371

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
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    Scenes

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Pierrepoint: The Last Hangman
    1. Job Overview [7:36]
    2. Restless [4:47]
    3. First Day on the Job [2:59]
    4. Married Life [5:21]
    5. A Hangman's Chores [3:28]
    6. New Speed Record [8:17]
    7. A Night at the Cinema [4:38]
    8. The Field Marshal's Offer [2:48]
    9. Arrival in Germany [4:57]
    10. Mixed Emotions [6:33]
    11. A Hero's Welcome [2:40]
    12. New Endeavors [:46]
    13. Haunted Souls [5:07]
    14. Personal Reservations [7:16]
    15. Unbearable Guilt [9:25]
    16. Protested [6:03]
    17. Letter of Resignation [4:27]
    18. End Credits [3:58]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    The life and career of the last in a long line of highly praised British executioners is explored in this drama directed by Adrian Shergold and starring Timothy Spall in the role of Albert Pierrepoint. As a youth, Pierrepoint was discouraged from pursuing the family career by a mother who claimed that the horrific line of work spurned his father to take up drink before eventually ushering him to an early grave. Despite his father's adverse reaction to the job's more gruesome details, Albert still thinks that he has what it takes to make it as an executioner and is soon rising to the upper echelon of hangmen thanks to his speed on the job and unwavering humanity. Eventually called before General Montgomery so that he may employ his skills in dispensing the Nuremberg criminals, Pierrepoint earns the respect and admiration of his fellow Britons just as his experiences in Germany stir his increasingly troubled conscience and abolitionists set into motion a heated campaign aimed at bringing the practice of hanging to an end. Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

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    Pierrepointby Anonymous

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    December 09, 2007: PIERREPOINT: THE LAST HANGMAN is one of those films that emerges from the cracks in the theater 'failures' only to find its poignant message when released on DVD. Granted, the idea of a story based on England's most famous executioner doesn't immediately catch the interest of the general audience, but for those fortunate enough to either rent or buy this DVD, the rewards are plentiful. It is a little masterpiece of writing, acting, directing and production values. Albert Pierrepoint was the third man in his family to 'ascend' to the list of executioners (capital punishment in England at the time was by hanging), and when he is accepted to the list in 1932 he begins what became the longest and most prolific career of British executioners. He took enormous pride in his work, assuring his peers as well as his 'victims' that every aspect of his job was done with obsessive professionalism: his timing of his duties was the shortest on record, meaning that from the moment he opened the door to the condemned prisoner's room through the hooding and noose placement and tripping of the platform and subsequent death of the 'criminal', he spared suffering as much as was feasible. He was supported by a wife who kept the secret of her husband's anonymous role and it was only when the Pierrepoint's pride in his job became known that downfall of their lives is threatened. At times adored by the public for his assignment to hand the Nazi criminals and the famous murderers and eventually the target of the anti capital punishment activists, Pierrepoint's professionalism sustained him until a final tragic assignment changed his view of his job. Timothy Spall is splendid as Pierrepoint, capturing all of the nuances of the simple, honest man's pride as well as his Achilles' heel. Juliet Stevenson turns in yet another understated and completely realized role as Pierrepoint's wife. Director Adrian Shergold, using a script written by Bob Mills and Jeff Pope, paces the film sensitively, drawing on the atrocious duties involved in the job of executioner (they actually had to prepare the bodies of the dead victims for the morticians!) along with the moments of pub frivolity to allow the audience to understand the true person Timothy Spall absorbs in his portrayal of Pierrepoint. The sets and lighting and cinematography could not be better. This is a film to view and absorb and appreciate the superior quality of acting of Spall and Stevenson. Highly Recommended. Grady Harp