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Payback

Get ready to root for the bad guy.
1999 | 100m | English

(151689 votes)

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Popularity: 5 (history)

Details

With friends like these, who needs enemies? That's the question bad guy Porter is left asking after his wife and partner steal his heist money and leave him for dead -- or so they think. Five months and an endless reservoir of bitterness later, Porter's partners and the crooked cops on his tail learn how bad payback can be.
Release Date: Feb 05, 1999
Director: Brian Helgeland
Writer: Donald E. Westlake, Brian Helgeland, Terry Hayes
Genres: Action, Drama, Crime, Thriller
Keywords new york city, prostitute, hotel, robbery, based on novel or book, anti hero, heroin, greed, revenge, organized crime, money, drugs, criminal, one against many, double cross, neo-noir, corrupt cop, parker
Production Companies Paramount Pictures, Icon Productions
Box Office Revenue: $161,626,121
Budget: $90,000,000
Updates Updated: Jul 30, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Mel Gibson Porter
Gregg Henry Val Resnick
Maria Bello Rosie
David Paymer Arthur Stegman
Bill Duke Det. Hicks
Deborah Kara Unger Mrs. Lynn Porter
John Glover Phil
William Devane Carter
Lucy Liu Pearl
Kris Kristofferson Bronson
Jack Conley Det. Leary
Mark Alfa Johnny's Friend #2
Kwame Amoaku Radioman
Justin Ashforth Michael, Bartender #1
Len Bajenski Fairfax Bodyguard #1
James Coburn Justin Fairfax
Trevor St. John Johnny Bronson
Freddy Rodríguez Messenger
Kate Buddeke Counter Girl
Price Carson Bronson's Heavy #1
Jeff Imada Chow's Bodyguard
Elizabeth Berridge Hooker in Bar (uncredited)
Jovanna Vitiello Waitress (uncredited)
David Dunard Doctor (uncredited)
Name Job
Donald E. Westlake Novel
Daryn Okada Additional Photography
Jim Lemley Unit Production Manager
Brian Helgeland Screenplay, Director
Terry Hayes Screenplay
Pamela Thur Production Manager
Mic Rodgers Second Unit Director, Stunt Double
Lance Gilbert Stunts
Kenny Endoso Stunts
Ericson Core Director of Photography
Tim Gilbert Stunts
John C. Meier Stunts
Pat Romano Stunts
Linda Perlin Stunts
Billy D. Lucas Stunts
Richard Hoover Production Design
Ha Nguyen Costume Design
Kevin Stitt Editor
Mark Steinbeck Boom Operator
Bill Meadows Sound Recordist
Bruce McCleery Gaffer
Shawn E. Helgedalen Best Boy Electric
Cece Destefano Art Department Coordinator
P.R. Tooke Script Supervisor
Conrad Chitwood Construction Coordinator
John K. Adams Sound Editor
Barry Franenberg Property Master
Chris Carriveau Leadman
Jordan Valenti Rigging Gaffer
Chris Culliton Electrician
Marion Dougherty Casting
Chris Boardman Orchestrator, Original Music Composer
Dennis McNeill Color Timer
Gina B. Cranham Set Designer
John Richards Scoring Mixer
Raymond W. Beal Stunts
William P. Lafon Driver
John Mikels Standby Painter
Cindy Jo Hinkleman First Assistant Sound Editor
Kimberly Guenther Durkin Costume Supervisor
Anthony Joseph Fatigato Painter
Marianne Urioste First Assistant Editor
Michael D. Weldon First Assistant Camera
Ronald O. Jaynes Construction Foreman
Mark Cotone First Assistant Director
Mark O'Kane Steadicam Operator
Andrew Cooper Still Photographer
Andrew L. Ullman Location Manager
Mindy Hall Makeup Artist
Joseph Keideth Security
Kyle Rochlin Foley Mixer
Jim Harrison Supervising Music Editor
Mark Carter Key Set Production Assistant
Weldon Brown ADR Mixer
Thomas Thoms Utility Sound
Rusty Reilly Best Boy Grip
Theresa Repola Mohammed Negative Cutter
Rick Bioni Assistant Property Master
Michael Ahasay Special Effects Technician
Troy Sizemore Art Direction
Sandy Struth Set Decoration
Stephanie Pond-Smith Unit Publicist
Ayenne J. Applebaum Scenic Artist
Kevin Boyd Video Assist Operator
Ross L. Kulma Set Medic
Bob Stoker Special Effects Supervisor
Daniel Berkowitz Set Production Assistant
Jennifer Bell Hairstylist
Geoffrey Patterson Production Sound Mixer
Jim Shelton Grip
Neil Gahm Propmaker
Jenny Baum Set Dressing Artist
Charley Bob Burnham Transportation Coordinator
James Ryan Utility Stunts
Chris Silver Finigan Production Accountant
Charlene Amateau Set Costumer
Lee Stepp Transportation Captain
Jon Johnson Sound Supervisor
Cliff Latimer ADR Editor
Jayson Merrill Second Second Assistant Director
George Atamian Swing
Angela H. Brice Assistant Production Coordinator
Shauna L. Kroen Assistant Accountant
Joseph Graham Key Rigging Grip
Paul Santoni Second Assistant Camera
Peter McNulty Assistant Editor
Carolyn Sauer ADR Recordist
Lisa Bonaccorso Camera Loader
Joanna S. Frank Art Department Assistant
Ken Cabrera Craft Service
Jonas Cukierman Production Coordinator
Harry Lu Armorer
Briana Burke Assistant Location Manager
Mark Spatny Visual Effects Production Manager
Jay Johnson Assistant Chief Lighting Technician
Thomas S. Ciciura Camera Loader
Dominique Decaudain Foley Artist
Laura Nisbet Peters Second Assistant Director
Molly Mitchell Key Costumer
Ruta Palulonis Production Assistant
Kelly Clear Chief Lighting Technician
Richard L. Carden Dolly Grip
Earl Martin Foley Recordist
Timothy A. Burris First Assistant Accountant
P.J. Abrahams Location Assistant
Terence Harris Casting Associate
Bobbi Banks Dialogue Editor
Michelle Manning Assistant Camera
Name Title
Bruce Davey Producer
Stephen McEveety Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 39 55 25
2024 5 40 73 25
2024 6 31 46 18
2024 7 37 53 23
2024 8 29 44 15
2024 9 21 35 13
2024 10 37 86 15
2024 11 23 40 15
2024 12 21 35 14
2025 1 24 46 15
2025 2 18 28 4
2025 3 7 23 1
2025 4 3 4 2
2025 5 3 4 3
2025 6 3 4 3
2025 7 3 4 3
2025 8 3 5 3
2025 9 5 7 2
2025 10 4 5 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 767 827
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 816 915
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 850 891
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 298 557
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 227 620
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 504 732
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 448 788

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Reviews

John Chard
9.0

Indestructible Gibson in grim and gritty telling of The Hunter. This is not an out and out remake of John Boorman's 1967 offering Point Blank, the structure is different from the 67 film, and where Point Blank is a dark psychological thriller that is rightly regarded as being towards the top of t ... he neo-noir tree, this Brian Helgeland directed film really should be seen as a different interpretation of Donald E. Westlake's novel The Hunter. Mel Gibson plays tough as nails thief Porter, who is double crossed, shot, and then left for dead by his wife Lynn (Deborah Kara Unger) and his partner in crime Val Resnick (Gregg Henry). We are then taken on a dark journey as Porter sets out to reclaim the $70.000 that he was shot and almost killed for. He wants no more, no less than what he is owed, and he literally will stop at nothing to achieve his goal. Including taking on the Chicago mob organisation known as The Outfit. Payback is a mean and violent movie, it is unrelenting in its willingness to keep nastiness at the top of the story. The film is full of flawed and vile people, even Porter himself, the closest we have to a (anti) hero has badness coursing through his veins, he is a dislikable killer, the film is about exactly what the tag-line suggests, Get Ready To Root For The Bad Guy! As Porter trawls through this part of Chicago, he will come across bent coppers, drug pushers/addicts/runners, Asian gangsters, prostitutes, violence fetishists and the slimy chain of command of the Chicago mob. Nobody here is about to cheer you up. The style of the film owes its being to classic film noir and the 1970s hard crime movies led by Dirty Harry and Death Wish. The makers had originally wanted to film it in black and white, but instead went for a de-saturation technique, a bleach by-pass process that really puts a grim grey and blue sheen on the visuals. The thumping score is tonally correct, while a good sound track also helps (always nice to see hear Voodoo Chile), and the use of voice over narration by Porter evokes the classic noir period and works a treat because it's not over done. The film strongly relies on Mel Gibson to bring menace and a measure of sympathy to the vengeful Porter, and it is with much credit that he manages to achieve both these things skilfully. He is backed by a strong support cast, Maria Bello admirable in her big shift from TV to film - Lucy Liu hilarious and stunningly sexy as a dominatrix and Gregg Henry is just wild. The Outfit chain of command features William Devane, James Coburn and Kris Kristofferson, all slick and welcome additions, even if they are all under used; though this is more by narrative necessity than film making decisions. Bill Duke, David Paymer and Jack Conley fill out the impressive roll call of scum-bags. Violent, laconic and darkly comic as well, Payback is one of the best remakes around, a neo-noir essential in fact. 8.5/10 Footnote: Director Helgeland released his own Directors Cut in 2006. Unhappy with the original version, he changed some of the structure and visual style and made it shorter by ten minutes. It's inferior to the 100 minute original cut in my opinion, losing much of the noir stylisations, but the last quarter is different and will (does) certainly appeal to others.

May 16, 2024
tmdb15435519
8.0

An underrated crime noir that somehow snuck it's way into the overcrowded 90s. With phrases like, "expected horizontal refreshment", you know this is going to be good. ...

Jun 23, 2021
Wuchak
6.0

_**Amusing neo-noir in Chicago with Mel Gibson, Gregg Henry and Maria Bello**_ After a heist with an Asian gang, a no-nonsense man (Mel Gibson) is left for dead by his accomplices (Gregg Henry & Deborah Kara Unger) in the underbelly of the Big City, but he unexpectedly recovers and wants vengeanc ... e, not to mention his $70,000. Maria Bello, Lucy Liu, William Devane, Kris Kristofferson, James Coburn and other notables are on hand. "Payback" (1999) is modern film noir with colors so muted it’s almost B&W (although I hear the Director’s Cut heightens them). It’s a remake of Coburn’s “Point Blank” (1967) and is ‘hip’ & entertaining in an amusing Tarantino kind of way, although it’s nowhere close to the greatness of “Pulp Fiction” (1994) or even “Jackie Brown” (1997). However, my wife liked it more than me and gave it 7/10, but then she’s a fan of Gibson. The film runs 1 hour, 40 minutes, and was shot mainly in Chicago, along with Mount St. Mary's College in Los Angeles with studio stuff done in Burbank. There’s also an establishing shot of Manhattan. GRADE: B-

Jun 26, 2021