IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,1/10
239
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA doctor at a hospital tries to develop a "fountain of youth" serum to give to his female patients.A doctor at a hospital tries to develop a "fountain of youth" serum to give to his female patients.A doctor at a hospital tries to develop a "fountain of youth" serum to give to his female patients.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Carolyn Ann Clark
- Leslie Ann
- (as Carolyn A. Clark)
Doris Belack
- Edna Burns
- (as Doris Belak)
William H. Macy
- Ben Duffy
- (as W.H. Macy)
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"The Cradle Will Fall" is an extremely tame and mundane made-for-television thriller of the mid-eighties, and usually one looks judgmentally at the director in such cases. I don't blame him for the mediocrity, because I know his work and know what he's capable of delivering. John Llewellyn Moxey was, hands down, the most competent TV-director of the sixties & seventies, and he has numerous masterpieces on his repertoire to prove it ("Where have all the People gone", "Nightmare in Badham County", "The Night Stalker", "City of the Dead", ...). In other words, the director knew very well how to generate tension and atmosphere; - the setting and character drawings simply didn't allow for it.
Neither do I want to put the fault on the source material. "The Cradle Will Fall" is based on a novel by Mary Higgins Clark, whom I learned recently died at the blessed age of 92. I have read a handful of books by Higgins Clark, like "I heard that song before", "Daddy's gone a Hunting" and "Terror Stalks the Class Reunion", but unfortunately not this one. Her mysteries and whodunits aren't as good as, say, the work of Agatha Christie, but definitely compelling and suspenseful. The plot of "The Cradle Will Fall" is intriguing as well, albeit quite derivative, as it revolves around a sinister doctor attempting to cover up the murder of a patient on who he experimented with a rejuvenation treatment. The investigating female District Attorney also happens to be a patient of his, and even witnessed how the doctor loaded the dead body in the trunk of a car. She was heavily sedated and recovering from a car accident at the time, but the doctor doesn't know that.
So, who's to blame for "The Cradle Will Fall" being tedious and unmemorable? The era and the producer standards, I suppose. The script contains far too many sub plots and soap opera elements. On top of her murder/suicide investigation, the female protagonist has personal and physical struggles. She has a childhood trauma relating to hospitals, her husband died, her new lover wants her to move to Seattle with her. This is acceptable in a novel, but a film script shouldn't necessarily include all these secondary storylines. The plot is far too complicated for Moxey to properly build up suspense. His TV-thrillers of the 70s were short, straightforward and hence much more effective. The body count is too low and there's an unforgivable shortage of action. Speaking of soap operas, allegedly the film takes place within the universe of a show called "Guiding Light". I never heard of it, but the prominently featuring hospital and even some of the supportive characters apparently come from that show.
Neither do I want to put the fault on the source material. "The Cradle Will Fall" is based on a novel by Mary Higgins Clark, whom I learned recently died at the blessed age of 92. I have read a handful of books by Higgins Clark, like "I heard that song before", "Daddy's gone a Hunting" and "Terror Stalks the Class Reunion", but unfortunately not this one. Her mysteries and whodunits aren't as good as, say, the work of Agatha Christie, but definitely compelling and suspenseful. The plot of "The Cradle Will Fall" is intriguing as well, albeit quite derivative, as it revolves around a sinister doctor attempting to cover up the murder of a patient on who he experimented with a rejuvenation treatment. The investigating female District Attorney also happens to be a patient of his, and even witnessed how the doctor loaded the dead body in the trunk of a car. She was heavily sedated and recovering from a car accident at the time, but the doctor doesn't know that.
So, who's to blame for "The Cradle Will Fall" being tedious and unmemorable? The era and the producer standards, I suppose. The script contains far too many sub plots and soap opera elements. On top of her murder/suicide investigation, the female protagonist has personal and physical struggles. She has a childhood trauma relating to hospitals, her husband died, her new lover wants her to move to Seattle with her. This is acceptable in a novel, but a film script shouldn't necessarily include all these secondary storylines. The plot is far too complicated for Moxey to properly build up suspense. His TV-thrillers of the 70s were short, straightforward and hence much more effective. The body count is too low and there's an unforgivable shortage of action. Speaking of soap operas, allegedly the film takes place within the universe of a show called "Guiding Light". I never heard of it, but the prominently featuring hospital and even some of the supportive characters apparently come from that show.
Set at the Guiding Light hospital, this movie uses the soap stars in an interesting way! Although the story is not focused upon the GL stars, it offers a peak into their lives at the hospital. Lauren Hutton is very effective as a strong-willed woman having to make time in her life for an operation. Nice plot twists at the end will keep you guessing as to the outcome. Joe Ponazecki as Detective Wyatt is perfect casting!
I don't always watch a steady diet of TV movies but during this couple of years I saw some because I am the completist of some actors with which nobody ever did, and some are good, some are bad and some are just ok like this.
Kathy DeMaio (Lauren Hutton) is a lawyer involved with the case of doctors Richard Carroll (Ben Johnson) and Edgar Highley (James Farentino) that invented a serum that works like a fountain of youth for the patients. But the serum apparently makes people die and Kathy discovers it just in time even tho at the beginning she isn't believed but in the end justice will triumph.
It was a bit confusing in the first half but in the second it improved because there were also various tense moments especially when Kathy was chasen by Highley for avoiding that the truth would have been discovered. The acting by all the cast members was adequate, nothing to rave about.
Overall, if you are into 1980s and 1990s TV movies you can give it a try, and if you are interested, it's available for free on YouTube.
Kathy DeMaio (Lauren Hutton) is a lawyer involved with the case of doctors Richard Carroll (Ben Johnson) and Edgar Highley (James Farentino) that invented a serum that works like a fountain of youth for the patients. But the serum apparently makes people die and Kathy discovers it just in time even tho at the beginning she isn't believed but in the end justice will triumph.
It was a bit confusing in the first half but in the second it improved because there were also various tense moments especially when Kathy was chasen by Highley for avoiding that the truth would have been discovered. The acting by all the cast members was adequate, nothing to rave about.
Overall, if you are into 1980s and 1990s TV movies you can give it a try, and if you are interested, it's available for free on YouTube.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesCast members of the television soap opera Springfield Story (1952) reprise their roles in this TV-movie.
- VerbindungenSpin-off from Springfield Story (1952)
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