Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA man honeymooning with his new wife in the Rockies reports his wife's disappearance to the police. Hours later, a strange woman escorted by the local priest claims to be his missing wife, d... Alles lesenA man honeymooning with his new wife in the Rockies reports his wife's disappearance to the police. Hours later, a strange woman escorted by the local priest claims to be his missing wife, despite the man's inability to recognize her.A man honeymooning with his new wife in the Rockies reports his wife's disappearance to the police. Hours later, a strange woman escorted by the local priest claims to be his missing wife, despite the man's inability to recognize her.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 wins total
- Flute Girl
- (as Heather Ward Siegel)
- Pilot
- (as Paul Jolicoeur)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The film suffers from limited locations and characters. The casting is TV-Movie all the way with Mike Farrell, Margot Kidder, and Eliott Gould getting the bulk of the screen time. Fred Gwynne (don't we all love Fred Gwynne?) does a nice turn in a smaller role..
If you make it through the first 20 minutes of needless expanse, you'll wonder into an interesting little mystery with plenty of surprises.
Well worth watching on a rainy afternoon.
Not generally a favourite genre of mine, I stumbled across this movie on TV late one night years ago and never forgot it. I then managed to track it down on an ancient VHS quite recently and watched it again. It was every bit as good as I remembered.
No special effects, no overblown budgets. Just a cracking script, superb performances, tight and efficient direction and one of the best twists ever.
An absolute masterclass in small budget movie-making.
Classic mystery is an engaging remake of the 1976 James Fanciscus telemovie "One of My Wives is Missing" with a capable cast which features Gould as an enigmatic detective with more going on between the ears than he lets on, while Kidder is an almost haunting presence in the role previously played by Elizabeth Ashley. The situations are taut and the dialogue is careful in containing the mystery until the last scene which is a cracker.
The only liabilities are the telemovie budget which limits the scope of the production and the casting of, while talented performers, actors who are sometimes difficult to separate from their long time small-screen alter egos (BJ Hunicutt and Herman Munster occasionally remembered in the performances of Farrell and Gwynne). In this respect, although the original Franciscus movie has more credibility as a serious thriller, "Vanishing Act" still leverages a superbly conceived idea with enough potential to please the matinée audience for whom this was intended.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis film is a remake of Honeymoon with a Stranger (1969) starring Janet Leigh.
- Zitate
Father Macklin: I'm going back to the Church to burn these photographs. Just a joke!
- Alternative VersionenThe 1987 UK VHS release was cut by 30 seconds by the BBFC to secure a PG rating. It was done so to edit a possibly imitable scene where a key is pushed out of a door lock using a wire coat-hanger.
- VerbindungenReferences M*A*S*H (1970)