Sheriff Dan Barnes is confronted with senior citizen deaths in his New England town. He thinks something is amiss and investigates with coroner Lemuel Lovell, smart aleck receptionist Blanch... Read allSheriff Dan Barnes is confronted with senior citizen deaths in his New England town. He thinks something is amiss and investigates with coroner Lemuel Lovell, smart aleck receptionist Blanche, and dotty possible victim Marge.Sheriff Dan Barnes is confronted with senior citizen deaths in his New England town. He thinks something is amiss and investigates with coroner Lemuel Lovell, smart aleck receptionist Blanche, and dotty possible victim Marge.
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Excellent TV movie
This is a great TV movie with a good story and many comic moments thanks to the excellent cast.
The only problem this movie has is that it hasn't stood the test of time as well as it might have.
Despite this, it's definitely worth viewing, particularly if you are an Alan Alda or Ruth Gordon fan.
The only problem this movie has is that it hasn't stood the test of time as well as it might have.
Despite this, it's definitely worth viewing, particularly if you are an Alan Alda or Ruth Gordon fan.
A potentialy great film dragged down to only a good film by bad dialogue.
I remembered this film when I was a kid and loved it.
Does it still match up to my memories? Yes and no but in the end I'll say yes.
Okay lets start positive:
The cast is great, Alan Alda and a cast of veteran actors making the most they can of the material available.
The plot is different and interesting at first you think its just a serial killer on a spree but there is a sanity to the killers insanity.
The negative:
Who wrote the dialog? its crap!
I said the cast made the most of the material they had and man its a good thing they knew their job because the script writer sure didnt.
The actors are all saying what they are doing before or as they do it, who the hell does that?
The cast & plot are great but the screenplay's dialog drags this film down to only a good film.
Does it still match up to my memories? Yes and no but in the end I'll say yes.
Okay lets start positive:
The cast is great, Alan Alda and a cast of veteran actors making the most they can of the material available.
The plot is different and interesting at first you think its just a serial killer on a spree but there is a sanity to the killers insanity.
The negative:
Who wrote the dialog? its crap!
I said the cast made the most of the material they had and man its a good thing they knew their job because the script writer sure didnt.
The actors are all saying what they are doing before or as they do it, who the hell does that?
The cast & plot are great but the screenplay's dialog drags this film down to only a good film.
"Why would a man do this? He's nuts, that's why!"
Mount Angel, a small New England community inhabited mostly by seniors, is beset with a serial killer; the bachelor chief of police and his kooky assistant figure out the murderer's motive. "Isn't it Shocking?", an ABC movie-of-the-week scripted by mystery writer Lane Slate and directed by John Badham, is full of talent, yet it fizzles out somewhere along the way. The teleplay, the handling and the performances are all offbeat, yet not odd or unusual enough; the scenario is tinged with black comedy, but it isn't funny enough; and, worst of all, there's no guesswork needed in these killings because neither Slate nor Badham is interested in making the film a mystery (the killer is revealed to us right off). Alan Alda has the perfect dryly-eccentric manner for a role like this; if he were comically frazzled, it would add too much weight to the material (he gives the proceedings the cautiously light touch it needs). But there's no sympathy for the elderly victims (the first of whom, a woman, is found stripped), and the succession of funeral services is too gloomy. Badham doesn't provide any sting (or, conversely, any dark humor) to the narrative; he's determined to bend this thing towards the bizarre but, like the pun in the title, he lacks taste and finesse.
This truly is one of my All Time Favourite Telefilms! An extremely engaging and fun well written and acted little Crime/Murder Mystery/Thriller...
Yeah, that basically says it all ...
I love this movie, the interplay between Alan Alda and Louise Lasser Alone is worth the price of admission. They are absolutely Perfect for those roles.
The Murder Mystery is great, Ruth Gordon is of course her usual excellent self, especially in this role. I mean, even the deputy is beautifully acted.
There are a handful of very, Very special Telefilms that are among my favourites in over 45 years of collecting movies and such, and this is one of them (along with the brilliant 1976 'Murder By Natural Causes' starring an excellent Hal Holbrook, the 1973 Creepy and effective 'A Cold Night's Death' starring Robert Culp and Eli Wallach, and the amazingly almost unknown, deeply atmospheric 1973 'Child's Play' even though it is directed by Sidney Lumet and stars James Mason, Beau Bridges, Robert Preston, and others)
Yes, this one is Most Highly Recommended for those who like fun, and truly entertainingly well written Murder/Mystery/Thrillers. Definitely a well earned, strong '8'...
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My Particular Way of Rating:
5 - Flawed, but perhaps with a little entertainment value here and there for some.
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... : )
I love this movie, the interplay between Alan Alda and Louise Lasser Alone is worth the price of admission. They are absolutely Perfect for those roles.
The Murder Mystery is great, Ruth Gordon is of course her usual excellent self, especially in this role. I mean, even the deputy is beautifully acted.
There are a handful of very, Very special Telefilms that are among my favourites in over 45 years of collecting movies and such, and this is one of them (along with the brilliant 1976 'Murder By Natural Causes' starring an excellent Hal Holbrook, the 1973 Creepy and effective 'A Cold Night's Death' starring Robert Culp and Eli Wallach, and the amazingly almost unknown, deeply atmospheric 1973 'Child's Play' even though it is directed by Sidney Lumet and stars James Mason, Beau Bridges, Robert Preston, and others)
Yes, this one is Most Highly Recommended for those who like fun, and truly entertainingly well written Murder/Mystery/Thrillers. Definitely a well earned, strong '8'...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My Particular Way of Rating:
5 - Flawed, but perhaps with a little entertainment value here and there for some.
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... : )
One of the less notable made for TV seventies horror flicks
I've found, after seeing a dozen or so of them, that made for TV seventies horror flicks are generally good for seventy minutes of entertainment. This one looked really good considering the comments about it, so I hoped that I'd be in for one of the better ones; however, that wasn't the case. It's not that this is a bad film, but it's not all that good either and certainly isn't one of the better made for TV movies from the seventies that I've seen. The plot is interesting enough, and focuses on a small town where a bunch of old people are dying. There are certain similarities between the deaths, and it leads Sheriff Dan Barnes (Alan Alda) to investigate. The plot plods along at a relaxing pace, and there's not a great deal of suspense or interest, which is a bit of a surprise since director John Badham would go on to make the very suspenseful thriller 'Nick of Time'...though that was twenty two years later. The small town setting provides a good place for the film to take place, but this isn't taken advantage of to any notable extent, and the film simply boils down to a simple ending. Overall, this film isn't terrible; but it's not great either, and I can't really recommend bothering to track it down.
Did you know
- TriviaIn his biography 'Please Don't Shoot My Dog', Jackie Cooper claims virulent anti-second amendment actor Alan Alda justified playing a gun-carrying lawman by stating the character he played - a sheriff - wouldn't have actually used his gun.
- ConnectionsReferences The Man (1972)
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