Blackout
- Téléfilm
- 1985
- 1h 40m
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDedicated police officer Joseph Steiner suspects that local family man Allen Devlin, who has recently undergone facial surgery due to injuries received in a car accident, is the same man who... Tout lireDedicated police officer Joseph Steiner suspects that local family man Allen Devlin, who has recently undergone facial surgery due to injuries received in a car accident, is the same man who committed a quadruple murder years before.Dedicated police officer Joseph Steiner suspects that local family man Allen Devlin, who has recently undergone facial surgery due to injuries received in a car accident, is the same man who committed a quadruple murder years before.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
- Dr. Kay
- (as Ken Kimmins)
Avis en vedette
Meanwhile, in Washington state, there is a car accident resulting in a fiery crash. One passenger is killed and burned beyond recognition. The other (Keith Carridine) is thrown clear of the wreckage and survives, but is badly burned and will need extensive facial reconstructive surgery. He has completely lost his memory and no ID is found at the accident site. The police do some tracing and figure that one of the occupants is named "Alan Devlin". That is the name that the survivor takes, although he can find nobody in the town or surrounding area who knows him or why he is there. He spends a year in the hospital, falls in love with his nurse, Chris (Kathleen Quinlan), and they marry. They have a child of their own plus her two kids from a previous marriage. Alan becomes a very successful realtor and seven years pass.
Back in Ohio, Steiner was forcibly retired from his job, but he continues to work on the murder case from seven years before. Then one day he gets an anonymous letter saying that Devlin may be his man. Accompanying the note is an article from the local paper showing Devlin and family - Alan won realtor of the year in his town. The age is right, the height and general appearance are right, but of course he can't be exactly physically identified because of the extensive plastic surgery. So Steiner is off to Washington to see if Devlin is in fact Ed Vincent, the suspect in the Ohio murder case. Realize that the ability to analyze DNA evidence did not exist in 1985 or else this would have been a very short movie. Lots of complications and twists and turns ensue.
I loved Richard Widmark's character (who said all the things the audience was probably thinking.) Keith Carradine is always good at playing affable family men, and his role here is no exception. This was an early HBO effort at filmmaking and I'd say they did well.
Several people pick on different aspects of this one, but I had only one major sticking point that really has no impact on the plot. When in the hospital, Alan Devlin has no ID, no name, no memory, and thus no health insurance that can be identified. And the first thing out of the doctors' mouths is all about the extensive plastic surgery they'll be doing with obviously no insurance to pay for it? Not now and certainly not in 1985 if we are talking about any hospital in the United States. Any hospital in America would leave you on the curb looking like Frankenstein's monster if you have no means of payment. But then we'd have no movie.
The latest lead takes him to another town a few hundred miles away where Keith Carradine was an amnesia patient and no memory of his after surviving a fiery car crash and needing much plastic surgery. He marries his nurse Kathleen Quinlan and now they have three children seven years after the other incident.
Could he be Widmark's quarry? No evidence, no forensic evidence to go either way. There's another complicating factor, a serial rapist starts operating in the area whom the cops suspect is Carradine. At least one cop is pursuing that. Michael Beck has not forgotten that Carradine snatched Quinlan from him. He'd love to get him out of the way.
Widmark as the veteran cop dominates this film. Only at the beginning and the end does this film merit being called a slasher flick. Otherwise it's a good nail biting mystery.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesA TV movie made for the HBO network.
- GaffesA prominent boom mic is visible a little before Allen takes the kid out of the bathtub.
- Citations
Joe Steiner: I'll tell you one thing; he made one hell of a big mistake when he decided to clean house on my fuckin beat.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Forensic Files: Dinner and a Movie (2003)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Blackout?Propulsé par Alexa