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Ellery Queen: Don't Look Behind You

  • TV Movie
  • 1971
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
187
YOUR RATING
Skye Aubrey, Peter Lawford, Harry Morgan, and Stefanie Powers in Ellery Queen: Don't Look Behind You (1971)
CrimeDramaMystery

Detective Ellery Queen has to solve a series of murders where the victims were killed in numerically descending ages, the male victims were strangled with blue cords and the female victims w... Read allDetective Ellery Queen has to solve a series of murders where the victims were killed in numerically descending ages, the male victims were strangled with blue cords and the female victims with pink ones.Detective Ellery Queen has to solve a series of murders where the victims were killed in numerically descending ages, the male victims were strangled with blue cords and the female victims with pink ones.

  • Director
    • Barry Shear
  • Writers
    • Ted Leighton
    • Frederic Dannay
    • Manfred Lee
  • Stars
    • Peter Lawford
    • Harry Morgan
    • E.G. Marshall
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    187
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Barry Shear
    • Writers
      • Ted Leighton
      • Frederic Dannay
      • Manfred Lee
    • Stars
      • Peter Lawford
      • Harry Morgan
      • E.G. Marshall
    • 12User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast23

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    Peter Lawford
    Peter Lawford
    • Ellery Queen
    Harry Morgan
    Harry Morgan
    • Inspector Richard Queen
    E.G. Marshall
    E.G. Marshall
    • Dr. Cazalis
    Skye Aubrey
    Skye Aubrey
    • Christy
    Stefanie Powers
    Stefanie Powers
    • Celeste
    Coleen Gray
    Coleen Gray
    • Mrs. Cazalis
    Morgan Sterne
    Morgan Sterne
    • Police Commissioner
    Bill Zuckert
    Bill Zuckert
    • Sgt. Velie
    Bob Hastings
    Bob Hastings
    • Hal Hunter
    Than Wyenn
    • Registrar
    Buddy Lester
    Buddy Lester
    • Policeman
    William Lucking
    William Lucking
    • Lt. Summers
    Pat Delaney
    Pat Delaney
    • Miss Price
    • (as Pat Delany)
    Tim Herbert
    Tim Herbert
    Robin Raymond
    Robin Raymond
    David Armstrong
    • Official
    • (uncredited)
    Gary Bohn
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Nick Borgani
    Nick Borgani
    • Protestor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Barry Shear
    • Writers
      • Ted Leighton
      • Frederic Dannay
      • Manfred Lee
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    5.4187
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    Featured reviews

    10bjoates

    please find a way to create on DVD

    The 70's Ellery Queen series is a joy for any mystery buff like me. I have the ones from the 30's and would love to obtain all of the ones from the 70's. Hutton is the best yet. Today' movies just cannot compete They depend too much on special effects The earlier movies gave you a chance to become part of it. You were able to think along with the characters. Solve the crime or at least attempt to.
    10Cheyenne-Bodie

    Peter Lawford's "Ellery Queen" was competing with "Columbo", "McCloud", and "McMillan and Wife" to be on the NBC Mystery wheel.

    "Ellery Queen: Don't Look Behind You" was a super stylish pilot for a projected NBC series for the 1971-72 season.

    "Ellery Queen" was up for a slot on the new "Wednesday Mystery Movie" wheel that wound up including "Columbo", "McCloud", and "McMillan and Wife". NBC almost picked "Ellery Queen" over "McMillan and Wife".

    Barry Shear's direction of "Ellery Queen" was really stunning (including cartoon segments of the "hydra" killer).

    Peter Lawford gave a light, suave, likable performance as Ellery Queen, even if he was miscast. Lawford was an appealing actor, who had been fine in "Good News", "The Longest Day", and "Advise and Consent". He even made a good Nick Charles in "The Thin Man".

    I wish "Queen" had sold. "Ellery Queen" was really a who-done-it mystery, which you can't say for "Columbo" or "McCloud". "Ellery Queen" could have been a fine fourth detective on the mystery wheel. I think it would have been a success.

    I could well have lived with the charming Peter Lawford as Ellery, but if the role had to be recast I think James Wainwright, Roy Thinnes, Mike Farrell, Michael Douglas, Michael Parks, or Bradford Dillman might have been interesting.

    Andrew Duggan or Jose Ferrer would have been cool as Inspector Richard Queen, Ellery's father. But Harry Morgan made an excellent Inspector Queen in the movie.

    To produce the show, I would have tried to get the great Richard Alan Simmons ("Trials of O'Brien", the "Banyon" movie pilot).

    The writer of this "Ellery Queen" pilot movie was "Ted Leighton", which was a pseudonym for Richard Levinson and William Link ("Columbo"). Levinson/Link later produced the fondly remembered "Ellery Queen" series with Jim Hutton and David Wayne. (Edward Herrmann was also considered to play Ellery in the series in addition to Jim Hutton.) Levinson/Link sold their first story to "Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine" when they were teenagers. They must have been big fans of the writer/detective. Levinson/Link later created "Murder, She Wrote" about a woman writer/detective.
    5bkoganbing

    Blue for boy and pink for girl

    In this adaption of an Ellery Queen novel obviously meant to be a TV pilot for a series, Peter Lawford essays the part of the famed mystery writer Criminologist. The case that he solves for the NYPD involves the seemingly random strangulations of certain men and women who have no apparent connection to each other. They're strangled with ribbons, blue for the men and pink for the women. And the press has given the serial killer the name of the Hydra.

    The colors of the ribbons might give you a clue to what common denominator the victims have. And the motive is a twisted one from a very twisted mind.

    Harry Morgan was a very good choice to play the part of Inspector Queen of the NYPD. Given their relative ages I thought that Peter Lawford was too old to be believable as Morgan's son. But fans of Ellery Queen must have been shocked when Morgan becomes Ellery's uncle and only a half brother at that to his father.

    That helped the believability in ages, but Lawford turns out to be quite the swinger, something the cerebral Ellery Queen never was in the novels. Purists must have been aghast. Later on in the Seventies, Jim Hutton was perfect as the cerebral intellectual Ellery with David Wayne as his detective father. Too bad that series didn't have a longer life as well as it star should have.

    E.G. Marshall plays a consulting psychiatrist who has an agenda himself and Coleen Gray his wife. Possible suspects and victims include Stefanie Powers and Skye Aubrey.

    The film is all right, but Ellery Queen fans no doubt were disappointed.
    8danielmartinx

    Surprised

    I caught this on Youtube last night. I am a devotee of giallo and 70s horror and 60s/70s stylish detective/mystery films. The cast in particular intrigued me: Peter Lawford, Stefanie Powers, EG Marshall, Harry Morgan. The film itself is about a serial murderer in NYC, and there are scenes of public demonstrations as the entire city bunkers down to avoid being slain by the Hydra, who mysteriously strangles people based upon their age.

    Stylistically, this is the pinnacle of 70s coolness. There are all of the decor elements (lamps with huge shades, shag carpeting, everyone with luxurious hair, groovy overcoats) and 1970 NYC is filmed beautifully, with its parks and sidewalks and traffic creating a very iconic backdrop for the acting.

    The acting. Stefanie Powers can give a line reading like almost no one else. She really is in command of every dimension of the craft of acting, from microexpressions to posture to movement to speaking. She drops her voice down and uses a hushed girl-next-door tone when she speaks alone with Peter Lawford, and it's unbelievably warm and compelling. I found myself wishing that there were more scenes with her.

    Lawford plays an annoying narcissistic juvenile of sixty whose only interests are substance abuse and promiscuity, and although I raised my eyebrow and was repulsed at first, I was won over quite soon. Harry Morgan is funny, and EG Marshall is a pompous and cold psychiatrist who makes me think of every TV psychiatrist I've ever seen.

    The story is fun. They reveal the killer far earlier than I expected, and the rest of the film is a cat-and-mouse caper. There is one scene on the World Trade Center roof that suddenly becomes a Hitchcock-styled surrealist fantasy. NYC was beautiful in 1971, and the film uses the city for maximum effect.

    I recommend this movie for fans of stylish and hip comedic murder mystery films.
    5boblipton

    Ellery Queen And The Serial Killer

    Peter Lawford as Ellery Queen is called in by his half-uncle, Harry Morgan as Inspector Queen, to investigate a serial killer dubbed 'the Hydra' who is terrorizing New York City.

    It's based on the Ellery Queen novel Cat of Many Tails. Published in 1949, it may have been the first mystery novel to deal seriously with serial killers, and it made use of several novelties in telling its tale, including lengthy vignettes of the victims to begin the book. By 1971, serial killers were much more a commonplace of the world and fiction, and this TV movie soon gets bogged down in cliches. Lawford in a ridiculous toupee is poorly cast. While there was extensive shooting in Manhattan to provide atmosphere, the pieces are put together in a way that is clearly wrong; a commonplace of movie geography, alas. Finally, the solution to the mystery of who the murderer was turned out not to be too difficult. I had it figured out by the 40-minute mark. Well in advance of the intrepid crime novelist. With E. G. Marshall and Stefanie Power.

    When NBC began the television series in 1975, they wisely used Jim Hutton as Ellery, and David Wayne as the Inspector.

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    Mystery

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This was a first pass at a pilot for an Ellery Queen series by Richard Levinson and William Link, before the 1975 series starring Jim Hutton.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 19, 1971 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ellery Queen: nu privi îndărăt
    • Filming locations
      • Hollywood, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Universal Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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