Mike Hodges


Michael Tommy Hodges was an English film and television director, screenwriter, playwright and novelist. After varied work on television, he made his feature film directing debut with the crime thriller Get Carter, which was a critical and commercial success and was voted one of the BFI Top 100 British films.
His subsequent works included the comic thriller Pulp, the sci-fi horror film The Terminal Man, the superhero film Flash Gordon, and the neo-noir Croupier. The British Film Institute described him as an "outsider auteur" and "a rule-breaking master given to deconstructing genre," while Andrew Sarris called him "one of the most under-appreciated and virtually unknown masters of the medium in the last 30 years."

Early life

Hodges was born in Bristol on 29 July 1932, and was raised in Salisbury and Bath. He qualified as a chartered accountant and spent two years of national service on the lower deck of a Royal Navy minesweeper.

Career

Hodges found a job in British television as a teleprompter operator. The job allowed him to observe the workings of the studios, and gave him time to start writing scripts. One of these scripts was Some Will Cry Murder, written for the ABC Television series Armchair Theatre. Although never performed, it served to get him enough writing commissions to quit his job as a technician.
After that, Hodges quickly progressed to producer/director status, with series such as Sunday Break for ABC, World in Action for Granada Television and the arts programmes Tempo and New Tempo for Thames Television. He wrote, directed and produced two filmed thrillers, Suspect and Rumour, again for Thames Television. These films formed the basis for the creation of Euston Films, the influential television production company that continued into the 1980s. These two films also led to Hodges being asked to write and direct Get Carter, which has been described as "one of the great British gangster films of all time." Hodges worked with Carter star Michael Caine again in Pulp, before proceeding to make films such as the Michael Crichton adaptation The Terminal Man and the space opera Flash Gordon. Some of Hodges' later films include A Prayer for the Dying, Croupier and I'll Sleep When I'm Dead.
Interspersed with Hodges's cinema work are some critically successful television films, including The Manipulators, Squaring The Circle, Dandelion Dead, and The Healer. Hodges also collaborated on the English language version of Federico Fellini's And the Ship Sails On.
Hodges wrote and narrated the biographical documentary All At Sea, which was in post production in 2022.

Theatre and radio

Hodges's theatre plays included Soft Shoe Shuffle and Shooting Stars and Other Heavenly Pursuits, which was adapted for BBC radio. Other radio plays included King Trash. His first novel, Watching The Wheels Come Off, was published first in French by Rivagse/Noir in 2009 then in English in 2010. In 2018 his trio of novellas was published by Unbound.

Personal life and death

Hodges was married twice. His first marriage was to Jean Alexandrov; they had two sons and later divorced. He then married Carol Laws.
Hodges died from heart failure at his home in Dorset on 17 December 2022, at the age of 90.

Recognition

Hodges was awarded the degree of 'Doctor of Letters' by the University of the West of England, Bristol in 2005.

Selected filmography

Feature films

Television

  • The Tyrant King
  • Rumour
  • Suspect
  • The Manipulators
  • Missing Pieces
  • Squaring the Circle
  • The Hitchhiker season 3, episode 4: "W.G.O.D."
  • Florida Straits
  • Dandelion Dead
  • The Healer
  • ''Murder by Numbers''