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6.1/10
593
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In Daniel Petrie's made-for-TV movie, disillusioned homemaker Liza Crocker on a vacation in the woods is disturbed by her husband Eddie continually trying to get her to come home, and more o... Read allIn Daniel Petrie's made-for-TV movie, disillusioned homemaker Liza Crocker on a vacation in the woods is disturbed by her husband Eddie continually trying to get her to come home, and more ominously, by a mysterious howling at night.In Daniel Petrie's made-for-TV movie, disillusioned homemaker Liza Crocker on a vacation in the woods is disturbed by her husband Eddie continually trying to get her to come home, and more ominously, by a mysterious howling at night.
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Barbara Eden and Larry Hagman definitely didn't end things on a sour note after I DREAM OF JEANNIE as the next year they starred as a married couple in a mystery-thriller that sounds like a werewolf-horror, the made-for-television A HOWLING IN THE WOODS. Then again, they're hardly on screen together at all. It's mostly Eden's ride, beginning three decades of TV movies...
Centers on a rich woman who returns to a woodsy small town where she's given the silent treatment by the locals. Expository from her mother-in-law Vera Miles's wimpy secret lover John Rubinstein teaches us the town's been broke since her currently out-of-town father sold a factory, and only he and his family got rich. Although Eden's character is no spoiled brat since she made her own money as a fashion designer in New York fashion designer while Hagman, a photographer of naked women, wants her to return home via random phone calls...
The townspeople want her gone too, which is most of the mystery involved without that many thrills. Eden, sans her cute smile, broods most of the time, trying to figure things out after the initial long-stretched shun...
Which is also the most entertaining aspect as she and the audience remains in the dark while various characters add up including Ruta Lee as a jovial diner waitress; Ford Rainey as the sheriff; Lisa Gerritsen as an abused little girl; and Tyne Daley as the only person willing to eventually speak up. After which Hagman earns half his paycheck and... almost helps out. At one point near the end, wanting to join her quest for the truth, his wife tells him, "You stay here... I'm better off alone."
Perhaps Eden was predicting her own solo TV-movie future following what would always be her signature role as the friendly Astronaut's gorgeous Jeannie. Meanwhile, Larry Hagman's lucrative television future hadn't yet begun: From this point it was no more Mr. Nice Guy.
Centers on a rich woman who returns to a woodsy small town where she's given the silent treatment by the locals. Expository from her mother-in-law Vera Miles's wimpy secret lover John Rubinstein teaches us the town's been broke since her currently out-of-town father sold a factory, and only he and his family got rich. Although Eden's character is no spoiled brat since she made her own money as a fashion designer in New York fashion designer while Hagman, a photographer of naked women, wants her to return home via random phone calls...
The townspeople want her gone too, which is most of the mystery involved without that many thrills. Eden, sans her cute smile, broods most of the time, trying to figure things out after the initial long-stretched shun...
Which is also the most entertaining aspect as she and the audience remains in the dark while various characters add up including Ruta Lee as a jovial diner waitress; Ford Rainey as the sheriff; Lisa Gerritsen as an abused little girl; and Tyne Daley as the only person willing to eventually speak up. After which Hagman earns half his paycheck and... almost helps out. At one point near the end, wanting to join her quest for the truth, his wife tells him, "You stay here... I'm better off alone."
Perhaps Eden was predicting her own solo TV-movie future following what would always be her signature role as the friendly Astronaut's gorgeous Jeannie. Meanwhile, Larry Hagman's lucrative television future hadn't yet begun: From this point it was no more Mr. Nice Guy.
Most of the made-for-TV movies of the early '70s were junk. "A Howling in the Woods" is the one glorious exception, and should have been released to theatres. Two eerie plots eventually converge in an expertly plotted thriller. Always underrated as an actress, Barbara Eden is superb as the lady-in-distress who indeed, while staying in a remote rural locale, is literally jolted by the nocturnal sounds of a "howling in the woods." This nifty, scarifying thriller is always two steps ahead of the viewer in it's deliciously intricate plot turns and twists. Expertly directed by Daniel Petrie. A forgotten jewel, long overdue for restoration and a cable-TV or theatrical release. Utterly terrifying, and Miss Eden, never more breathtakingly beautiful and vulnerable, is at her peak. Forget "I Dream of Jeannie". Instead check out and shiver through this spellbinding mystery-suspense-thriller classic!
8tavm
A year after the cancellation of "I Dream of Jeannie", Barbara Eden and Larry Hagman reteamed for this made-for-TV movie that was as different from their series as night and day! It seems Ms. Eden is coming back to the house she grew up in to the surprise of her stepmother (Vera Miles) and new stepbrother (John Rubinstein). There's also a little girl (Lisa Gerritsen) who mentions another one her age who drowned in a nearby river. Not to mention a howling dog constantly bellowing...There's more but I don't want to spoil anymore of what happens. I will, however, mention that Hagman plays Ms. Eden's husband who's trying to reconcile with her after she abruptly left. Also, future "Cagney & Lacey" star Tyne Daly also makes a pivotal appearance. The suspense builds with each new revelation which is to the credit of director Daniel Petrie. So on that note, I recommend A Howling in the Woods.
One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by Daniel Petrie; Produced by Douglas Benton, for Universal TV, broadcast by NBC-TV. Screenplay by Richard De Roy, based on Velda Johnston's novel; Photography by JackMarta; Edited by Robert Shugrue; Music by Dave Grusin. Starring: Barbara Eden, Larry Hagman, John Rubinstein, Vera Miles, Ruta Lee, Tyne Daly, George Murdock, Ford Rainey, Bill Vint and Karl Swenson.
Unsuspenseful, unstylish attempt at a horror mystery, based on a poorly-presented "Bad Day at Black Rock" combined with impersonation type plot. TV's ersatz attempt at "daring" entertainment includes near-nudity and pretend incest, but Petrie's handling of a "Road to Salina" type trio and irrelevant flashback is poor. Laughable is the Vera/Barb versus Vera/Janet Leigh resemblance, plus thrown-in Eden/Hagman teaming and a bit of Barb in white nightgown action.
Unsuspenseful, unstylish attempt at a horror mystery, based on a poorly-presented "Bad Day at Black Rock" combined with impersonation type plot. TV's ersatz attempt at "daring" entertainment includes near-nudity and pretend incest, but Petrie's handling of a "Road to Salina" type trio and irrelevant flashback is poor. Laughable is the Vera/Barb versus Vera/Janet Leigh resemblance, plus thrown-in Eden/Hagman teaming and a bit of Barb in white nightgown action.
The title was "Pleasant movie" but it wasn't a pleasant story. The film starts off with a little girl witnessing a murder, and then she's caught and we hear her scream as the film fades. Next is a scene of Liza in a car driving to a small town, but the locals are unfriendly and cold. It was a shock to find out that she used to live there and knew them so why have they turned hostile? Hmm. She stays with her very odd step mother and creepy step brother, Justin who she meets for the first time. She befriends a little girl that tells her about the death of her cousin, who was the other girl from the very beginning scene. For some reason everyone doesn't like to talk about it. The howling in the woods comes from a stray dog. Liza wants to help the poor dog, and discovers something sinister in the woods. A really good film, tense in places, dated and very homely, with some atmospheric thunderstorms and plenty of paranoia going on. What is exactly going on? Its worth finding out.
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough given second billing, Larry Hagman has little screen time and it takes 47 minutes--half the runtime--before he is in the same room with Barbara Eden.
- Quotes
Lonnie Henshaw: Hey, I don't care if she is my sister--I'll break her back.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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