Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA high school football hero Bo Reinecker tries to piece together the events leading up to murder of his girl friend Lisa Nolen. Claiming to have experienced a total blackout, Bo is ultimatel... Leggi tuttoA high school football hero Bo Reinecker tries to piece together the events leading up to murder of his girl friend Lisa Nolen. Claiming to have experienced a total blackout, Bo is ultimately found not guilty of the murder by reason of insanity and placed in an institution for fo... Leggi tuttoA high school football hero Bo Reinecker tries to piece together the events leading up to murder of his girl friend Lisa Nolen. Claiming to have experienced a total blackout, Bo is ultimately found not guilty of the murder by reason of insanity and placed in an institution for four years. Meanwhile, the dead girl's father, Tom Nolen, and her sister Wynn, bitterly prep... Leggi tutto
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Of course father Karl Malden doesn't think that the punishment was sufficient enough. But wouldn't you know it, who emerges as young MacArthur's champion is Holly Hunter in one of her earliest roles who is the younger daughter of Malden.
If that all doesn't sound too ridiculous, be prepared for what follows in this most trashy made for TV film. Other players like Paul Sorvino and Shirley Knight as MacArthur's parents and William Devane as the editor of the local newspaper where Hunter is doing an internship just mouth the words and look embarrassed.
This cheap ripoff of Spellbound was inflicted on the public by CBS as a made for television release. I'll bet Ingrid Bergman and Gregory Peck never got anything as shoddy as this offered to them.
Sure, it's a bit cliched and contrived in places, but overall it's a decent, very watchable story that covers numerous themes including justice, forgiveness (and lack of it), class, prejudice, abuse of authority, the power of the press, impartiality, second child inferiority complex and the parental fixation that no one can ever be a good enough suitor for their child.
Handsome young football team captain Bo Reinecker (Alex McArthur) was incarcerated in a mental institution for causing the death of his cheerleader girlfriend Lisa Nolen, but four years later he is now out and returning to his home town of Bannon to try and piece things together as his memory of the incident is lacking due to a blow he received to the head in the struggle.
Of course, his return gets under the skin of Lisa's embittered father, Thomas (Karl Malden), an influential figure in the town as he runs the local bank. The Reinecker family, who operate a humble haulage company in the town, have carried the stigma of Bo's guilt and are at breaking point - physically, mentally and financially. But now Bo's return is ramping up the pressure on them.
Caught in the middle is Thomas Nolen's surviving daughter Wynn (Holly Hunter), now trying to establish herself as a journalist in the town's newspaper. Whilst her father expects her to respect Lisa's memory and support him in using her influence to get Bo taken back into custody, she knows she has the professional responsibility to remain impartial. Yet Wynn also remembers when she, like all the other young girls in Bannon, was attracted to the rugged young football captain and those feelings have not entirely deserted her.
Although far from being an A-list movie, decent performances, strongly-defined characters and a plot that unfolds well with one or two unexpected twists along the way, make this a perfectly watchable drama.
It basically adds up to a sales pitch for the psychiatric drug Lithium. Every ten minutes the Holly Hunter character repeats that the kid who killed her sister is on Lithium, so he is incapable of violence.
This piece of crap would get the approval of the drug company that makes Lithium, but the movie stinks.
Everyone except the kid who killed the girl is painted as a villain. What a screwed up attempt by whoever wrote the script for this lame pitch for psychiatric drugs.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizA TV movie for the CBS network.