Armed robber Eddie Holcomb flees his latest job and gets trapped with stolen loot and innocent people in a high-rise building's jammed elevator while his accomplice Pete Howarth waits to kil... Read allArmed robber Eddie Holcomb flees his latest job and gets trapped with stolen loot and innocent people in a high-rise building's jammed elevator while his accomplice Pete Howarth waits to kill witnesses who pose the slightest threat.Armed robber Eddie Holcomb flees his latest job and gets trapped with stolen loot and innocent people in a high-rise building's jammed elevator while his accomplice Pete Howarth waits to kill witnesses who pose the slightest threat.
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Me loves disaster movies, and me also loves tense & short made-for-television thrillers. And you know what is so great about the 1970s? They had both in one and the same film! Next to boisterous and massively budgeted disaster blockbusters (like "Towering Inferno", "Poseidon Adventure", etc.) there also exist a handful of modest and inconspicuous but nevertheless fantastic disaster films that were part of the legendary "ABC Movie of the Week" series. "Runaway!", "The Day the Earth Moved", and "Heatwave" are splendid examples, and I'm now also adding "The Elevator" to the shortlist.
Simple, straightforward, compelling, and loaded with strong performances from a great cast. That's how you can describe the majority of "ABC Movies of the Week"; - "The Elevator" included. Right before a long holiday weekend, eight people get trapped in an elevator somewhere around the 30th floor of a still unfinished fancy building. The group remains relatively calm and rational, except for one person... And he's an armed robber with briefcase full of stolen money and a severe case of claustrophobia!
James Farentino ("Dead & Buried") is very convincing as the panicky thief Eddie, but some of the supportive characters are even better. There's veteran Roddy McDowall as the uptight real-estate salesman, Myrna Loy as the elderly lady with lots of vivid stories, and Don Stroud as Eddie's psychotic partner who just "missed" the elevator.
Simple, straightforward, compelling, and loaded with strong performances from a great cast. That's how you can describe the majority of "ABC Movies of the Week"; - "The Elevator" included. Right before a long holiday weekend, eight people get trapped in an elevator somewhere around the 30th floor of a still unfinished fancy building. The group remains relatively calm and rational, except for one person... And he's an armed robber with briefcase full of stolen money and a severe case of claustrophobia!
James Farentino ("Dead & Buried") is very convincing as the panicky thief Eddie, but some of the supportive characters are even better. There's veteran Roddy McDowall as the uptight real-estate salesman, Myrna Loy as the elderly lady with lots of vivid stories, and Don Stroud as Eddie's psychotic partner who just "missed" the elevator.
THE ELEVATOR is a simple made-for-TV suspense-thriller about a group of people trapped in an elevator with a claustrophobic criminal. I have to disagree with the negative reviews on here: the movie is suspenseful and does a good job ratcheting up the stakes. The criminal in the elevator is getting frantic, his accomplice trying to rescue him is willing to murder anyone who poses the slightest threat, and the elevator itself grows closer and closer to total collapse with every minute wasted. The characters, while simple, are well-played by the actors and likable enough to where you don't want to see them dead. The standout is Myrna Loy as an initially irritating but ultimately sympathetic and poignant old woman.
The atmosphere is tense-- you can feel the heat and unstated panic brewing in that elevator-- and the storytelling is very tight. The filmmakers establish all of the characters with economy and do not waste time in getting to the good stuff. While it won't blow anyone's mind, this is an underrated little thriller fans of old-school suspense will enjoy.
The atmosphere is tense-- you can feel the heat and unstated panic brewing in that elevator-- and the storytelling is very tight. The filmmakers establish all of the characters with economy and do not waste time in getting to the good stuff. While it won't blow anyone's mind, this is an underrated little thriller fans of old-school suspense will enjoy.
I agree the movie is of its time - I love the fashions and the snobbery - it's not just Britain that has a class system! But I don't agree there's no suspense. The point of the movie is the claustrophobic atmosphere, it's actually a bit more subtle than you'd think from the blurb.
The film isn't what you'd call outstanding, it's average at best but it's still interesting and pretty good to watch. Some of the cast you'll recognize while others you might not recall right off the bat - cast is fine.
The story is a bit predictable and not very suspenseful but there is something about it that kept my interest. It's about a thief and murderer who is claustrophobic and scared that gets stuck in an elevator with others. He has two accomplices trying to get to him but building security will not allow them into the building that is closed to the public. Will anyone survive? This is a good early morning film or one for boring afternoon.
6/10
The story is a bit predictable and not very suspenseful but there is something about it that kept my interest. It's about a thief and murderer who is claustrophobic and scared that gets stuck in an elevator with others. He has two accomplices trying to get to him but building security will not allow them into the building that is closed to the public. Will anyone survive? This is a good early morning film or one for boring afternoon.
6/10
Well, any movie buff will recognize here a pure tribute to Louis Malle's ASCENSEUR POUR L'ECHAFAUD, where a criminal is trapped in a jammed elevator just after he committed his murder. Even a blind man could recognize this, only by earing the dialogues !! And this TV movie made in 1974 is also in the line of the disaster movies wave, where we have some former Hollywood stars who happen to be put together in front of the "disaster" just after being separately presented. See AIRPORT, TOWERING INFERNO, POSEIDON ADVENTURE, EARTHQUAKE, THE SWARM and so on...And, it's of course a small budget feature, the perfect TV product setting, cheap and efficient. But not advised for claustrophobic people. And the character study is also interesting. Some unbelievable scenes, such as this one when Farentino's character, after threatening the people with him in the elevator with his gun, gets on the elevator roof without any problem, as if he had a ladder... It was aired in France in the late seventies.
Did you know
- TriviaRoddy McDowell and Carol Lynley co-starred together in The Poseidon Adventure (1972) before this.
- GoofsWhen the suitcase falls to the floor in the elevator and the money falls out, there is far less in the suitcase than there was when it was originally inspected and closed earlier.
- ConnectionsEdited into Earthquake (1974)
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- Fahrstuhl des Schreckens
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- Runtime
- 1h 15m(75 min)
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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