A US racing champion is haunted by intense visions of an American woman in some kind of danger in a English mansion. A British ESP and occult expert believes that his visions will really hap... Read allA US racing champion is haunted by intense visions of an American woman in some kind of danger in a English mansion. A British ESP and occult expert believes that his visions will really happen and asks him to help her investigate them.A US racing champion is haunted by intense visions of an American woman in some kind of danger in a English mansion. A British ESP and occult expert believes that his visions will really happen and asks him to help her investigate them.
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It's not a masterpiece but still a clever movie. A red herring here and there help keep the end a surprise. It looks like the sort of movie that they had fun filming. Moreover, it was neat to see Nimoy in a role so unlike the one with which he's most associated. And I also liked Vera Miles's role.
I particularly liked the dialog between the two leads. There was a good chemistry and considering the time and that it was a Telefilm for a pilot, it COULD have simply been tossed off without much thought put into it. But, I liked the humour and interplay between them.
You could tell that they were sort of shooting for a feel similar to the series The Avengers. Between the two of them, her being British and him being a pretty cool fellow, I felt it worked rather well.
There was a decent Mystery too, and I liked the way the story unfolded where they continued to build a sense of tension as the audience tries to figure out what is going on.
Again, considering the time and type of film, the characters were all portrayed fairly well. Usually during that time and with such a low budget production, you would see a lot of overacting and hammy performances, but not here.
It was really nice to see Leonard Nimoy in such a role and see him smiling freely and using humour, which as we all are well aware for a few years there we almost never got to see... : )
All 'n' all I truly felt it was a fun, entertaining movie. If you have the right mindset for the time and what kind of production it is, and you are not expecting too much, then you may very well find some enjoyment here.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ MY PARTICULAR WAY OF RATING:
5 - Flawed, but with some entertainment value.
6. A decently passable story maybe worth a watch.
7. A solid film, well made, effective, and entertaining.
And, obviously, you can probably figure out what above and below these would mean... : )
Leonard Nimoy seems to have been enjoying himself in the title role of this entertaining TV movie. Like others have said, it does have the whiff of a pilot for a TV series about it. It would be quite easy to imagine a male/female psychic/parapsychologist team going around and saving innocent people from bad guys every week. But alas no, there was no series of this. However, that doesn't change the fact that Baffled! is a fair amount of fun. It has a pretty compelling mystery plot to it that combines ESP with the occult. The acting from everyone is good while the production values have that solid made for TV cosiness about them. If I had to make a complaint, it would be a minor one, but it would be that despite the great build it has a slightly overly silly denouncement that would not have looked out of place in a Scooby Doo cartoon. But, no matter, this one is still a lot of fun.
BAFFLED! has all the elements of a good mystery but without enough doomed tension. And yet it works from the affable chemistry between Nimoy and Hampshire, brightening up the surrounding ensemble of Agatha Christie-like suspects including a tempestuous Rachel Roberts; Vera Miles as the possibly doomed starlet; and scene-stealing Jewel Blanch as a childlike pre-teen whose personality morphs into a creepy, possessed teenager...
Making the best scenes a "Spock verses THE EXORCIST" kind of thing, and a year earlier. But it's really Susan Hampshire's ride. She energetically tackles the part as if it were truly the beginning of an assured series. In fact this "movie" ends with their next case shaping up. Sadly, it was her show to lose.
This is a light entertaining film which was apparently filmed as a pilot to a series that never got off the ground. Though much of it plays like a cinematic movie, the credit sequence and ending allow one to guess as much.
The thing that struck me most about this film was the choice of Leonard Nimoy as the lead character in a role that would have been a much more obvious fit with someone like (ideally) Rock Hudson. Nimoy already has quite a serious face, and his close identification with his role as the ultra-serious Mr Spock in the STAR TREK franchise would not naturally suggest him in scenes of lighthearted banter.
However, he does lighten up in the movie, we see him smile frequently, and the initial feeling of the oddness of the choice of the lead does subside eventually. Who knows, had the series got off the ground, his aura of seriousness might even have faded.
The film has some editing issues (perhaps due to time constraints?), there is a car chase which is pretty lame by today's standards (though FRENCH CONNECTION (1971) and its phenomenal car chase scene were filmed the year prior, so we know people could do better even back then), and the supernatural shtick got a bit much for my taste, but nonetheless it keeps the audience guessing with various red herrings while doing a good job of only gradually revealing the mystery.
This is especially for people who want to see Mr. Spock like they've never seen him before, but fans of old-fashioned light mystery films might also enjoy this.
Did you know
- TriviaProduced as a pilot for a TV series that never materialized.
- GoofsDuring his chase with the Bedford van, the rear number plate of Kovack's Bentley becomes detached at the right hand fixing; when the chase concludes the number plate is in its correct position.
- Quotes
Tom Kovack: [berating himself] Next time, Kovack, stick to wheels. No more TV interviews.
- Alternate versionsThere are prints that have variations in the Title frame (one version has the title small and the other has the title large). Also the music over the closing credits is rearranged between versions. The same music is used but at different points.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Greatest Show You Never Saw (1996)
Details
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- Also known as
- Die tödliche Vision
- Filming locations
- Taplow Court, Taplow, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(Wyndham Manor House)
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