Kidnappers making a ransom demand dial a wrong number & reach a struggling actor instead. He decides to cut himself in for some of the money.Kidnappers making a ransom demand dial a wrong number & reach a struggling actor instead. He decides to cut himself in for some of the money.Kidnappers making a ransom demand dial a wrong number & reach a struggling actor instead. He decides to cut himself in for some of the money.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Photos
John Goddard
- Serviceman
- (uncredited)
Michael Gregory
- Pauly
- (uncredited)
Bob Harks
- Bank Customer
- (uncredited)
Robert Lipton
- Dex
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The plot to "See the Man Run" is an odd one. Ben Taylor (Robert Culp) is awakened by a phone call from a crook...telling him his daughter has been kidnapped! The problem is that Ben doesn't have a daughter and the callers were actually trying to call some doctor (Eddie Albert)! So, Ben tries to call the doctor and tell him what's happened...and the doc and his wife overreact and think Ben has kidnapped her. However, at the urging of Ben's wife (Angie Dickinson), he decides to pretend to be the kidnapper. That way, he'll just ask for MORE money than the kidnappers and pay them off himself...and keep the difference!! Considering Ben's an out of work actor, this plan, though very illegal, seems to make sense. But will it work?!
There are many reasons to see this film....not the least is to get a load of Robert Culp in a silly wig. The script is great, the relationship between Ben and his wife strange and weirdly kinky and the ending is just terrific. This is one of the better made for TV films of the era...and holds up great today. It can be found on YouTube by the way.
There are many reasons to see this film....not the least is to get a load of Robert Culp in a silly wig. The script is great, the relationship between Ben and his wife strange and weirdly kinky and the ending is just terrific. This is one of the better made for TV films of the era...and holds up great today. It can be found on YouTube by the way.
And I really mean that. This film, a Movie of the Week special, has a quietness about it, yet beneath everything there's a sense of foreboding that lurks, with a twist ending that is memorable and certainly had folks talking about it at the dinner table that evening and even beyond, one of the best thrillers I've seen in a while. The late Robert Culp plays this role with so much skill, that I for a split second during a conversation with the kidnappers, I'd thought he was actually the doctor. There are several moments of comedy here--entirely unintentional, I suppose--which to me were a delicious bonus to this most entertaining film. Just a good old- fashion thriller, which will undoubtedly remind lovers of how good the storytelling in the past often could be. I give it a 10 all the way.
9 for good to great tragedy or noir with a moral. But 10s for good to great uplifting movie with a moral.
Culp and Dickinson were superb. Very well done. Twist ending.
Culp and Dickinson were superb. Very well done. Twist ending.
Actor Robert Culp wakes groggily when the phone rings. It's kidnappers telling him they have his daughter and want $50,000 in small bills. Don't contact the police. He tells wife Angie Dickinson, and they are confused. They're broke and they don't have a daughter. The kidnapper called him Doctor and another name. He checks the phone exchange and are connected to Eddie Albert, whose wife, June Allyson, grows hysterical. They are cut off. Culp starts to phone back, then a thought strikes him: suppose they tell Albert it's $150,000, pay the kidnappers their ransom, and keep the rest. But the best laid plans of mice and men aft gang agley.
It's a TV movie from Universal, and you can tell by the visuals. It looks like a TV movie. But the script is a fine one, the performers are old pros, and Corey Allen directs with a firm hand, from Culp and Miss Dickinson waking with morning hair through a fine twist ending.
That's not me as 'Dex'.
It's a TV movie from Universal, and you can tell by the visuals. It looks like a TV movie. But the script is a fine one, the performers are old pros, and Corey Allen directs with a firm hand, from Culp and Miss Dickinson waking with morning hair through a fine twist ending.
That's not me as 'Dex'.
I saw this movie in 1981 on a rerun. I wish some station like MPIX or even Disney or A&E network would show this movie again. The twists and turns in this movie, I can remember like just yesterday I saw it, make me go nuts. When the unemployed actor thought that his girl was trying to cheat him with the ransom they had collected from the kidnappers, I don't want to give the ending here but . . . I saw this movie in Ceylon in 1981 twice. PLEASE HELP ME SEE THIS MOVIE AGAIN OR BUY THE DVD OR VHS. It took me about 24 years to finally get some info about this movie on IMDb database (the best) system. Since this is a TV-Movie some station must come forward to help people like me.
Did you know
- TriviaThe famous Hindi movie Hera Pheri is based on this movie.
- ConnectionsRemade as Ramji Rao Speaking (1989)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 13m(73 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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