In a remake of the 1940s film, Helen has been incapable of speech since seeing her husband die - will she become the target of a deranged serial killer targeting disabled people?In a remake of the 1940s film, Helen has been incapable of speech since seeing her husband die - will she become the target of a deranged serial killer targeting disabled people?In a remake of the 1940s film, Helen has been incapable of speech since seeing her husband die - will she become the target of a deranged serial killer targeting disabled people?
- Steven
- (as John Philip Law)
- Visitor
- (uncredited)
- Police Photographer
- (uncredited)
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However, there was one thing that I derived from the movie. Christopher Plummer's character in one scene talks about no tolerance for imperfection. We in the 21st century have taken that to the extreme. We want everyone made up so that they all look the same, we go for style over substance, and more. Then again, I'm probably reading too far into the movie, as it was most likely intended as a straight thriller (although it doesn't really thrill).
Anyway, it's a mediocre way to pass time. Also starring Elaine Stritch and John Philip Law (the "Barbarella" angel).
Pointless redo. The original is a classic--what's the point or remaking it? I caught this on TV late at night back in the 1970s. I had seen the original and was interested in seeing how this stood up. Sadly it turned out to be pretty bad. Despite a great cast (Bisset, Christopher Plummer, John Phillip Law, Elaine Stritch) this is pretty slow-moving and dull. There's virtually no suspense or atmosphere and it looks like it was made on a very low budget which hurts. The cast tries their best but even their considerable talents can't liven this up. You can safely skip this one. See the original.
I give it a 3 because the cast does try and Bisset looks stunning (as always).
To make things worse, the film stars that store mannequin, John Phillip Law. Ugh.
The highlight is Elaine Stritch. She has the best lines and provides much needed comic relief. Unfortunately, there isn't enough of her.
Even though this review is long enough, imdb is requiring 600 characters now. What are we supposed to do? Describe every scene?
Did you know
- TriviaThird of four versions of "The Spiral Staircase." The first was The Spiral Staircase (1946), the second was The Spiral Staircase (1961), made for television, and the fourth was The Spiral Staircase (2000), also for television.
- GoofsAll entries contain spoilers
- Quotes
Blanche: Do you know that we have four hundred and eighty-five applications for next year's course already?
Dr. Sherman: You know, I swear if I propose to you, you'd file it under "applications".
Blanche: [pulling a book from the shelf and clearing her throat before she starts to read aloud] On page eighteen, chapter three, rule four: "Many a good secretary has married her boss. No good boss has ever married his secretary." Quote, unquote.
Dr. Sherman: [pointing to the now closed book in her hands] I wrote that before you came in.
Blanche: Why don't we go have a drink to that.
- ConnectionsRemade as The Spiral Staircase (2000)
- How long is The Spiral Staircase?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Das Geheimnis der Wendeltreppe
- Filming locations
- Bracknell, Berkshire, England, UK(location)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1