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House on Greenapple Road (1970)

Benutzerrezensionen

House on Greenapple Road

26 Bewertungen
6/10

Terrific set-up, routine mystery

TV-movies, especially those from the late-'60s and early-'70s, are an under-appreciated breed (probably the least-respected in the film industry). Leonard Maltin has all but dropped them from his annual review book, and you never hear about anybody trying to preserve Barbara Eden in "Let's Switch!" or Gloria Swanson in "Killer Bees". Every once in awhile, a TV-movie gets mentioned with respect, such as "Brian's Song" or "Sunshine". I've always thought "House On Greenapple Road" could have been a theatrical film, it is produced with such style and has a great, scary set-up: a young girl gets dropped off from school, runs up the driveway to her house, opens the door and finds the entire place ransacked, with blood spattering the walls. This sequence terrified me as a kid (I was amused to discover years later that the young actress was "Brady Bunch"'s Eve Plumb!). Onto the mystery, which surrounds a missing lady (Janet Leigh) and the investigator on the case (Christopher George playing Dan August). The character of August later got his own series (starring Burt Reynolds), but this feature is more than just a pilot, it has twists and a sophisticated script. The ending doesn't cop-out, although I must say it followed a rather routine development. Overall, a neat little yarn, and Janet Leigh is just gorgeous.
  • moonspinner55
  • 20. Mai 2001
  • Permalink
8/10

See it if you ever get the chance

This movie haunted me for years. I was 8 or 9 years old when I first saw it and it scared the hell out of me. Back then I was past the point of being afraid of "monsters" and such, but the opening scene in which a really young Eve Plumb( yes, "Jan" on The Brady Bunch) comes home from school, enters the empty house calling out for her mother and finds a bloody hand-print on the refrigerator just hit home with me. What would be a child's worst fear?? Losing their parent(s). The rest of the film is a decent enough murder mystery with some fairly big name 70s actors rounding out the cast. Watch for it in reruns on local TV; I have seen it a couple times over the years.
  • staticeat
  • 31. Jan. 2005
  • Permalink
8/10

Wow! This one sure brings back memories!

It's good to know that I'm not the only one who was freaked out by those chilling opening scenes! I too was a very young child when I saw this film, so I can scarcely recall any details...only that infamous kitchen footage. The title alone still gives me the creeps! It is definitely a shame that this movie is not shown on TV, and is apparently not available on VHS or DVD. I'd really love to watch it again to see if it holds up to my childhood memories! Sadly, I have a feeling it can't possibly be as frightening as I remember. Years of slasher film viewing have left me quite jaded. Perhaps I'll just read the book instead.
  • moonwing
  • 20. Juli 2005
  • Permalink

If You Get The Chance To See It, Do So

I'm glad to see all of the positive comments for this unjustly neglected - and, apparently, largely unknown - made-for-TV movie. Can't imagine why it's not available on home video (or at least on the Mystery Channel or some such).

This whodunnit is presented with style and economy; a lean, mean little thriller, with a prestigious cast that just won't quit. In case you didn't peruse the names, I'll spotlight a few: Janet Leigh, Julie Harris, Walter Pigeon, Keenan Wynn, Barry Sullivan, William Windom, Ed Asner and, of course, Chris George, a solid and dependable actor with screen presence and authority, who was taken from us too soon. Not many made-for-TV movies that weren't big-deal miniseries had casts like this (if any).

Along with these are some players whose names may not be as well-known, but whose talent is as illustrious as those named above, and whose faces will be quite familiar to anyone who was a TV viewer during the late 60's-early 70's. Tim O'Connor, Paul Fix and Joanne Linville deserve honorable mention.

This production is intelligent, witty and literate; indeed, some elements of the plot, dialogue and visuals were pretty strong for TV of the day. At any rate, it's far superior to so many of the tired retreads that pass for mystery-thrillers today (unless you watch the BBC a lot.)

All in all, a nifty picture that deserves to be seen
  • Doghouse-6
  • 26. Apr. 2004
  • Permalink
6/10

Whodunnit?

Police lieutenant Christopher George (Dan) is under pressure to arrest travelling salesman Tim O'Connor (George) for the murder of his wife Janet Leigh (Marian). One problem, though, there is no body.

The night before I watched this, I had drunk a load of wine. So, I wanted something easy to watch that would carry me along and not hassle me with any brain work. And that's what this film provided, so I'm grateful. It's obviously a TV film with very pale colours and boasting a cast of familiar faces. It's a murder detective story in the same mould as Columbo, only more like Hawaii-Five-O because George resembles Jack Lord in this one. It's like a formulaic episode of a detective series and it succeeds at that. There is a moment at the end which may throw you and in my case, it was the only scary part – the bit when George breaks into the clubhouse apartment and finds something in the bathtub.

It's what I wanted to watch – perfect viewing for a hangover, but it doesn't have any meaning outside of this context. It's OK to while away the time.
  • AAdaSC
  • 20. Feb. 2017
  • Permalink
7/10

Plot-driven Whodunit Procedural with some Unusual Features

  • Gatorman9
  • 11. Aug. 2023
  • Permalink
9/10

Excellent TV Movie with Janet Leigh & Christopher George!

This is probably one of the best TV movies made in this era. Great opening scene with Eve Plumb finding one of the bloodiest crime scenes in any movie of the era (TV or Theater). All that blood and no body! We see Janet in flashbacks to great advantage with a who's who of Hollywood at the time (Peter Mark Richman, William Windom, etc) Great locations as well, the "House" is in Pacific Palisades, the old Oxnard, CA Library serves as the police station. The old Santa Monica Beach Home of Marion Davies is the Country Club. Great acting all the way around. The flashbacks are really interesting and do not get boring. I never get tired of seeing this great movie, I wish it were on DVD! Julie Harris is also very good in a rare TV role. Too bad they didn't use Christopher George in the series, it may have lasted longer. Look for Chris' wife Lynda Day in a small role as a pothead secretary. The ending is a plot twist as well, and kind of ironic considering Janet's earlier work in Psycho.
  • Hoohawnaynay
  • 26. Okt. 2003
  • Permalink
7/10

a blend of police procedural and mystery thriller

  • myriamlenys
  • 16. Juli 2025
  • Permalink
10/10

a classic 70s thriller/mystery

I am dying to see this film again but cant find it anywhere and everyone i ask about it gives me blank looks! Mommy i'm home is the opening line, and what follows has stuck in my head for 38 years! just goes to prove that this era produced some of the best entertainment around! the bloody hand print on the fridge, the mess in the kitchen, all simple stuff by todays standards but left a much bigger impression on me than some of the rubbish that passes for entertainment nowadays! I was only 6 years old when i first saw this film so i didn't really appreciate Janet Leigh's professionalism and beauty until i watched Psycho much later, i then realised the similarity between the two films! if the powers that be are reading, please release this on DVD!
  • dshakey
  • 21. Jan. 2008
  • Permalink
5/10

Another mysterious missing Marian.

  • mark.waltz
  • 8. Dez. 2021
  • Permalink
10/10

Janet Leigh's performance...and the film in general.

I would have to agree that Janet Leigh looks very beautiful in this movie, but I hope that people also notice how great of a performance she gives. This character gives her the chance to play a much more seedy part, and she plays it to the hilt.

I don't want to take away from the other great things about this movie because there are many. The plot was great, most of the actors were very good, and the use of flashbacks was COOL! The script was quite racy for a TV movie of that time.

House on Greenapple Road still holds up watching it today, and many believe it is one of the better made for TV movies.
  • tomsharp
  • 11. Juni 2006
  • Permalink

Just thinking of this movie scares me!

I saw this once when I was a kid (around 8)...all I remember is the opening scene, it scared the @#$% out of me!...a house, someone coming home, and blood everywhere...very chilling. Plus, I lived on Greenville Road so the fear "hit home" even more.

That 70's made-for-TV-movies genre is greatly under-appreciated and unrecognized. Other movies that I remember about the same time that were really creepy (you might too):

  • "When Michael Calls" (Ben Gazzara, Elizabeth Ashley, Micheal Douglas)


  • "The Screaming Woman" (Olivia DeHavilland)


  • "Picture Mommy Dead" (Zsa Zsa Gabor)


  • "How Awful About Allen" (Anthony Perkins)


  • "Two On a Guillotine" (Connie Stevens)


  • "The Victim" (Elizabeth Montgomery)
  • dwieselq
  • 15. Apr. 2004
  • Permalink
10/10

Intelligent and engrossing slasher-thriller starring the incomparable Janet Leigh in her prime.

I probably haven't seen "House on Green Apple Road" (HOGAR) since its release (c. 1970, made-for-TV) but have been watching for it ever since. I saw it probably two or three times and can scarcely remember it in detail, but I have a strong desire to see it again and an even stronger desire to acquire it for my private viewing. (Like that'll happen! Only crap is available today, with some exceptions.) HOGAR has always stuck in my memory because it is so well done. Almost 100 times out of 100, no matter what, I can spot the culprit or the killer or guess the outcome in movies and books, but this was one of the exceptions that had me guessing until the denouemont. ("Sixth Sense" is another one, but it is not nearly as good a movie as HOGAR.) Janet Leigh is still really spectacular looking in this one and gives a first-rate performance -- this movie certainly makes one realize how utterly unappreciated Leigh was during her film hey-day. I can't recommend this movie highly enough. The blood and gore are tame, by today's standards, and nobody uses gratuituous four-letter-words or gratuitiously talks about "making love," ahem! -- but if that is not a priority for you I think you will enjoy it enormously.
  • negevoli-44
  • 8. Juni 2000
  • Permalink
9/10

Lost treasure-one of the best who-dun-it's ever made

When I think of lost treasure movies by genre, this one certainly makes the claim as the best "Who-dun-it?" police drama mystery I've seen.

It hits the mark on so many levels: first, an all star banner cast of great actors who are just fun to see all working together on this unique TV mystery. Clever scripting and a brilliant red herring that make for a puzzle that gradually unfolds until that one big key element is finally revealed.

As evidence witness statements are gathered, the story takes form of a middle aged suburbia housewife's (Janet Leigh) numerous trysts while her traveling salesman is away. At the opening, her daughter (trivia alert- -that's Eve "Jan Brady" Plumb) arrives home and finds a blood soaked mess in the kitchen, and her mother missing. Soon, Lt. Dan August (Christopher George), a shrewd and dedicated detective tries to sort through all the evidence and the gossip about the missing woman, and determine what really happened in that house. There are several fine sub-plots about police work in general, and wonderful characterizations all around from the cast.

A TV movie from the 70's made by the Quinn-Martin people, who produced several crime dram TV shows at that time. Definitely worth finding this one for a good watch.
  • MartianOctocretr5
  • 8. Juni 2013
  • Permalink
10/10

Masterful cult thriller a work of pure art.

House on Greenapple Road 1970, is a memorably athmospheric murder mystery benefitting from excellent script and superb acting from tough 1970s great leading man Christopher George.
  • worldlaw1
  • 28. Mai 2003
  • Permalink

i agree

i also saw this movie when younger (around 7 or 8) and like the other user comments, i remember one scene with blood all over the place in a house. it scared me so much at the time that i actually remembered the name of the movie, found it on IMDb and am now writing this comment. over the years i have remembered then forgotten again, but from time to time would search for it out of curiosity, as if to see if the movie was really the one i saw. I don't remember anything else, just that one haunting scene. there was something about the presentation of themovie/scene that was very realistic, unlike many movies today. it was like suburban nightmare behind close doors sort of image.
  • slsutton-1
  • 24. Sept. 2008
  • Permalink
9/10

Now it is available!

I saw the initial telecast of this crime drama on ABC in 1970. The Sunday Night Movie was usually a theatrical film trimmed for broadcast and every so often a made for TV "world premiere" was shown as well. This was one of the best of those in-house TV movies.

I was in junior high and it made quite an impression at the time. Well-acted, more sophisticated than many of the procedurals we have on television today. Not gratuitous but pretty graphic for the time on ABC.

Christopher George was an under-appreciated actor who was often cast as the heavy. Here he gave a layered, realistic performance as Lt. Dan August.

I recently found a DVD-R copy of this title at www.adifferentcity.com. The quality was pretty good and it was great to see the movie after 34 years!
  • TSMChicago
  • 18. Dez. 2005
  • Permalink
8/10

Eerie mystery

  • SusieSalmonLikeTheFish
  • 17. Okt. 2014
  • Permalink
9/10

Not as scary as I remember, but very cool nonetheless

I remember seeing this as a child...It would come on TV every now and then. As a little boy, I could never get past the opening scene where Eve Plumb comes home and finds all that blood. I was terrified that it was real. Seeing this 30 years later, it has lost more than a bit of the terror it held over me, but with that said, it is very well acted. The detective story is pretty run of the mill, and not as clever as Columbo, but a notch above Murder She Wrote. The final scenes are pretty powerful and the dialog seems very risqué for the 70s. It is great to see this again; it is very well made for a TV movie and it made me long for the days of 70s TV. Now all we got are Lifetime movies, which are pretty dumb. This movie is not on Netflix, but I was able to order one from www.adifferentcity.com the copy is fine.
  • stefanbain
  • 24. Jan. 2007
  • Permalink

Based on a novel

This made-for-TV movie turned out to be a successful pilot for the immediately following series "Dan August", but the starring role went to Burt Reynolds instead of Christopher George. Chris George plays Dan August as an independent spirit who is tough in any confrontation. You don't want to be on his bad side.

The movie is PACKED with past, current, and future stars, many of whom aren't listed in the opening credits, like Ed Asner and Lynda Day George ... some in cameo roles.

I wonder how Quinn Martin sold Janet Leigh on her role?

Quinn Martin: "Janet, you've been murdered just before the movie starts. Your character is a slut who's been running around on her weak husband for years. You'll appear in a series of flashback scenes with various men while in swimsuits or your underwear."

Janet Leigh: "Sounds great! When do we start!"

LOL

The movie is well worth the watch if you're into police and detective procedural dramas. I say drama, but there are a few throwaway chuckles along the way.

It's available on YouTube with a surprisingly good picture for YouTube.
  • VetteRanger
  • 12. Feb. 2023
  • Permalink
8/10

Could have been a 10-star movie, but for a couple of problems.

Starts out with a lot of excitement, including a car peeling out of a driveway, a frightened kitty cat knocking over a flower pot, and a wrecked kitchen soaked in human blood. This was heading toward a 10 star review. And the plot twist at the end was amazing; it should have received the 10 stars.

But a couple of things got in the way. Poor writing about the police work, and way too many guest stars.

From the beginning, there is some very sloppy police work. The detectives who arrive on the scene tramp across the blood-soaked floor. They pick up the telephone to make a call (no fingerprinting?). And instead of looking for a body in the house, they start going through dresser drawers.

The next problem was just way too many actors. It's exciting to see one big-name TV star after another. Everyone from the 1960's and 70's makes an appearance (see the credits for the lengthy list of names). A couple of movie screen idols, in addition to Janet Leigh, also appear.

But trying to keep track of who is who becomes diffficult. There is this detective, that police chief, this sheriff, that mayor, the old man at the pier, the lifeguard, the priest, the sister, the little girl, and on and on. The number of characters overwhelms the story.

So my 10 star review gets cut down to 8 stars. However, this is still a very good movie. Watch and enjoy.
  • FloridaFred
  • 9. Juni 2022
  • Permalink

"You Know What?! You're A Dirty, Fink Cop!"...

HOUSE ON GREENAPPLE ROAD is the pilot film for the TV series, DAN AUGUST.

A murder has apparently been committed. At least there's evidence of extreme violence, in the form of a blood-spattered kitchen. In spite of the copious amount of blood, no body is found. The apparent victim is Marian Ord (Janet Leigh), whose story is told through flashbacks.

Christopher George is quite good as August, playing him with a harder edge than Burt Reynolds' version in the series. Keenan Wynn plays Dan's partner. There's also Barry Sullivan as the police Chief, and Ed Asner as the sheriff! Julie Harris is also involved, playing Marian's sister, Leona.

More drama / police procedural than thriller, this movie may be considered "boring" by those raised on mindless action films.

Amid the grim goings on, there is mirth to be found when we're introduced to the kooky "Church Of Contemplation" and its loopy leader (Lawrence Dane).

Also, watch for young Eve Plum in an early role...
  • Dethcharm
  • 28. Juni 2021
  • Permalink

A Suspense Thriller

I really enjoyed this movie and I wish it was released to video. In the opening scene, where Janet Leigh's daughter Eve Plumb comes in, raises chills. There's blood on the refrigerator door. You wonder, what happened. Where there's blood then there must be a body. Could it be Janet Leigh was murdered like in Psycho, by Anthony Perkins? You start detective work, investigating and come up, with your own clues.
  • dlp
  • 10. Okt. 2001
  • Permalink

Dan August's first case.

I started watching this made for TV film partly because Janet Leigh was in it. I was surprised that it turned out to be a pretty good TV movie. Leigh plays a cheating wife who disappears and the men who she has been having affairs with come into question as her possible abductor/murderer etc. This film spun off into the Dan August TV series. Dan August is the plain clothes police officer assigned to crack the case and find the missing Janet Leigh character. Overall an entertaining picture. Janet Leigh looked good in a white bathing suit by the way.
  • yenlo
  • 24. Aug. 1999
  • Permalink

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