Blackout
- TV Movie
- 1985
- 1h 40m
Dedicated police officer Joseph Steiner suspects that local family man Allen Devlin, who has recently undergone facial surgery due to injuries received in a car accident, is the same man who... Read allDedicated police officer Joseph Steiner suspects that local family man Allen Devlin, who has recently undergone facial surgery due to injuries received in a car accident, is the same man who committed a quadruple murder years before.Dedicated police officer Joseph Steiner suspects that local family man Allen Devlin, who has recently undergone facial surgery due to injuries received in a car accident, is the same man who committed a quadruple murder years before.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
- Dr. Kay
- (as Ken Kimmins)
Featured reviews
Great film, I really enjoyed it. Supported by a strong cast, the characters are all fleshed out and feel real. The film also plays with your expectations, turning them around time and time again. This in turn ratchets up the tension. There are some creepy moments as well, like sinister phone calls and the scenes with the zipper-faced maniac on the prowl. Speaking of that, I loved the mask, and wished it had been used more. It comes off too soon during the finale. Two other minor quibbles: I didn't find Quinlan's character sympathetic, and there's one bothersome contrivance involving a radio towards the end.
Highly recommended film with a strong central theme.
The latest lead takes him to another town a few hundred miles away where Keith Carradine was an amnesia patient and no memory of his after surviving a fiery car crash and needing much plastic surgery. He marries his nurse Kathleen Quinlan and now they have three children seven years after the other incident.
Could he be Widmark's quarry? No evidence, no forensic evidence to go either way. There's another complicating factor, a serial rapist starts operating in the area whom the cops suspect is Carradine. At least one cop is pursuing that. Michael Beck has not forgotten that Carradine snatched Quinlan from him. He'd love to get him out of the way.
Widmark as the veteran cop dominates this film. Only at the beginning and the end does this film merit being called a slasher flick. Otherwise it's a good nail biting mystery.
When the story begins, a maniac named Ed Vincent has butchered his family and compulsively arranged the bodies about the home---and even left a birthday hat on his murdered 5 year-old! Considered he not only killed his wife but his three kids, this is a case that really weighs heavily on Detective Joe Steiner (Widmark). However, despite looking for seven years, the case remains unsolved and Steiner retires from the police force.
In the meantime, some man is involved in a horrible auto accident where they are completely disfigured. After being in the hospital many months, he's rebuilt by doctors and is ready for discharge. However, during this time, no one has been able to determine who he is...and the guy appears to have no idea who he is as well. He names himself Allen Devlin and eventually he gets married and has some kids...and appears to be leading a rather normal life.
Steiner has refused to let the old case die and follows a lead taking him to the guy in the accident. Perhaps this was Ed Vincent...though after all the plastic surgery, it doesn't look like Vincent. So Steiner digs a bit deeper and even approaches Devlin to tell him his suspicions. At this point, Devlin is willing to listen...and wonders if perhaps he IS Ed Vincent. So, Devlin begins to investigate on his own...to see if anything can link him to the monster, Ed Vincent. What's next in this suspense film? Well, a weird masked man begins assaulting women...and it looks a lot like a case that coincided with the disappearance of Ed Vincent.
As far as suspense films go, this one provides a lot of suspense. It also keeps you guessing and has a lot of misdirection to keep confusing the audience (in a good way). Excellent acting and a film worth seeing.
Did you know
- TriviaA TV movie made for the HBO network.
- GoofsA prominent boom mic is visible a little before Allen takes the kid out of the bathtub.
- Quotes
Joe Steiner: I'll tell you one thing; he made one hell of a big mistake when he decided to clean house on my fuckin beat.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Forensic Files: Dinner and a Movie (2003)
- How long is Blackout?Powered by Alexa