Ein entkommener Geisteskranker entführt ein ungebildetes junges Bauernmädchen und bringt sie zu seinem Bergversteck, wo sie bald Freunde und schliesslich Liebhaber werden.Ein entkommener Geisteskranker entführt ein ungebildetes junges Bauernmädchen und bringt sie zu seinem Bergversteck, wo sie bald Freunde und schliesslich Liebhaber werden.Ein entkommener Geisteskranker entführt ein ungebildetes junges Bauernmädchen und bringt sie zu seinem Bergversteck, wo sie bald Freunde und schliesslich Liebhaber werden.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Nominierung insgesamt
- Sheriff Emmet
- (as Lee DeBroux, Lee Debroux)
- Hank Smathers
- (as Bill Sterchi)
- Tom Martinez
- (as Michael C. Eiland)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
It was interesting seeing Linda Blair in a role very different from the one with which she's most associated. At a Wizard World convention last year I got her autograph. She's a really nice person. Martin Sheen had just played a delinquent in Terrence Malick's "Badlands", so this wasn't a totally new role for him. Both do a great job with the characters. I really liked the scene where Sheen's character and the Indian do the Vulcan salute; that scene now feels like a tribute to Leonard Nimoy.
Nathaniel Benchley was the father of "Jaws" author Peter Benchley, and it turns out that Nathaniel Benchley's father was also a noted author. The director, Lee Philips, had directed a completely different kind of TV movie the previous year: "The Stranger Within", starring Barbara Eden as a woman who inexplicably becomes pregnant and then starts behaving very strangely (it had to be the only movie in which Barbara Eden looks terrifying).
All in all, I thought that this was a good movie. I wish that more movies got filmed in New Mexico. I really liked it when I spent spring break there in 2002. And above all, please remember to use correct grammar ("if I had done X yesterday", NOT "if I did X yesterday" or "if I would have done X yesterday").
I first saw the movie when it ran on t.v. in 1975. After repeated near-misses, I finally got it on tape almost 20 years later. I was already a Linda Blair fan, and this movie introduced me to Martin Sheen (I still have not seen a bad Martin Sheen movie).
The movie gives a moving portrayal of a hopeless love affair. It's a must-see if you enjoy a good tear-jerker.
A literate script, a totally involving storyline, Linda Blair's best-ever performance, and an awesome turn from Martin Sheen, all go to make up one of the best films of the 1970s.
A pity about the slightly OTT music soundtrack and naff song, and the film could have been a little longer. Also the much better book title of 'Welcome to Xanadu' should never have been dumbed down to 'Sweet Hostage'. But these are minor gripes about what is in any sense of the word a masterpiece.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesLinda Blair accepted the role hoping the producers would cast then-boyfriend Rick Springfield to star alongside her; after Martin Sheen was cast, Blair admits to "falling madly in love with him", although no real-life affair ensued.
- PatzerWhen Leonard leaves the cabin to go into to town to do the shopping, he leaves the shopping list on the table. Later, in the store, he is seen reading from the list.
- Zitate
Dry Goods Clerk: You wanna buy that dress for a cook?
Leonard Hatch: If it's all right with you.
Dry Goods Clerk: Crazy. I never heard of men buying women's clothes before!
Leonard Hatch: [looking around, secretivly] Pst, hey. There are no women. The cook just likes to dress up like one!
- VerbindungenReferenced in Camp Midnite: Show 119 (1989)
- SoundtracksStrangers on a Carousel
Music by George Barrie ASCAP
Lyrics by Bob Larimer ASCAP
Sung by Stephen Schwartz (as Steven Michael Schwartz)
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 33 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.33 : 1