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IMDbPro

Disconnected

  • 1984
  • Unrated
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
672
YOUR RATING
Disconnected (1984)
Slasher HorrorCrimeDramaHorrorMysteryThriller

Alicia has started getting these very noisy, and disturbing phone calls. The question is, are they real, or is it all in her head?Alicia has started getting these very noisy, and disturbing phone calls. The question is, are they real, or is it all in her head?Alicia has started getting these very noisy, and disturbing phone calls. The question is, are they real, or is it all in her head?

  • Director
    • Gorman Bechard
  • Writers
    • Gorman Bechard
    • Virginia Gilroy
  • Stars
    • Frances Sherman
    • Mark Walker
    • Carl Koch
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    672
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gorman Bechard
    • Writers
      • Gorman Bechard
      • Virginia Gilroy
    • Stars
      • Frances Sherman
      • Mark Walker
      • Carl Koch
    • 27User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos48

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    Top cast31

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    Frances Sherman
    Frances Sherman
    • Alicia
    • (as Frances Raines)
    • …
    Mark Walker
    • Franklin
    Carl Koch
    • Mike
    Professor Morono
    • Joey
    William A. Roberts
    • Old Man
    Carmine Capobianco
    Carmine Capobianco
    • Tremaglio
    Ben Page
    • O'Donovan
    Donna Derouin
    • Girl Franklin Takes Home
    Stefan Rybak
    • Charles Keaton
    Gorman Bechard
    Gorman Bechard
    • Niles
    Nancy Theroux
    • Girl in Franklin's Bed
    Bette Kintzer
    • Alicia's Mother
    James W. Kiely
    • Suspect on Street
    Kathy Milani
    • Customer in Video Store
    The Excerpts
    • The Excerpts
    Jon Brion
    Jon Brion
    • The Excerpts
    Dean Falcone
    • The Excerpts
    Steve Harris
    • The Excerpts
    • Director
      • Gorman Bechard
    • Writers
      • Gorman Bechard
      • Virginia Gilroy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    4.6672
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    Featured reviews

    8Falconeer

    A Film For Film People...

    Four stars...for THIS film; all the proof you need to realize the rating system here just can't be taken seriously. "Disconnected" is, for lack of a better description, a movie for people who are truly into film. It's not a movie to simply watch for entertainment, or as a distraction, but rather something to be studied for it's technique, camera angles, experimental ideas that come together to create a totally unique experience. New wave music and 80's fashions are on display, as this intriguing story that centers around a group of people that love movies and music...and sex and murder, unfolds like some nostalgic dream. The fact that the cast, both male and female, is gorgeous, doesn't hurt the production at all. Alicia works at a local video store where she rents big box movies to the locals. The store is decorated with movie posters. When she goes home to a place that is also covered with movies posters, you realize that Alicia is a big movie fan. She has an identical twin sister, Barbara Ann, who is as crazy about her sisters boyfriends as Alicia is about classic movies. One of the men sis decides to steal, is a violent, psychotic serial killer.. But things aren't as they seem, and Alicia has unknowingly invited an evil force into her home, by way of a mysterious old man, who seems homeless, and in need of a phone to call for help. That old man disappears when Alicia turns her back. She assumes he has left her house...but he hasn't. This evil presence manifests itself through the telephone, when Alicia starts being terrorized by a horrible, evil, ear splitting sound on the other end of her phone line. The connection between the serial killer and this evil force isn't explained, but the whole thing is just such a chilling and fascinating mix of horror and oblique mystery. "Disconnected" is sort of a punk rock movie, with it's music and clothing, and those night club scenes. The characters are those hip people who always seem to know the cutting edge bands and the underground music venues. Shot on a tiny budget, the gray, late Autumn scenery creates an atmospheric and unsettling world. Strangely the recent horror film "It Follows" has a very similar aesthetic to this film, and I wonder if the director of that movie is a fan of this obscure gem. The bluray restoration for "Disconnected" is a welcome addition to any fan of cult and avant garde horror, and it already goes for a hefty price on auction sites. And this film is exactly that; a film for movie collectors and serious film buffs. Casual viewers will most likely not comprehend the greatness that is this film..
    3martinscrimm

    It Tried Something Different

    You have to give Disconnected a hand for daring to go against the grain and do something different. It's not your typical "teens in the woods/at a grad night/at prom/at camp/etc." being hacked up kind of horror movie, but that doesn't mean it works. In fact, it doesn't work.

    Besides some flashes of potential here and there, Disconnected fails to make much of an impact due to a lack of suspense and underdeveloped characters. The entire thing is as baffling as a David Lynch movie but without the finesse. It's hinted that there might be something supernatural at play which gives it a slightly dreamlike feel, but I can't tell if that was intentional or because the filmmakers weren't sure what they were doing. However, it's probably the most interesting aspect of the film.
    4FieCrier

    psycho serial killer and weird phone calls; poor, but not terrible, low budget horror

    Not very good, but somewhat watchable. Someone is killing young women in a small town; we don't see the killings or bodies until the killer is identified. Meanwhile, an odd but polite young man tries to date Alicia, a young woman who is working at a video store. She has a slutty identical twin sister. Alicia is getting strange phone calls: nobody there, or horrible sounds, or overhearing other people's phone calls. The calls may or may not be related to the killer.

    The movie gets a little odd after the killer is dealt with by the police. A restless night Alicia has is depicted through a series of black & white photographs. An old man in a black hat and black coat who was seen at the beginning of the movie shows up again at the end. I'm not sure if he is significant or not.

    As in Gorman Bechard's other movies, Carmine Capobianco talks to the camera. Here, he's a cop talking to someone, a journalist? Oddly, he's shot against a white wall, and wears the same shirt in scenes supposed to be taking place on different days.

    Lots of pop/rock songs on the soundtrack. Sometimes scenes play without dialogue or environmental sound, serving as little more than music video montage scenes. There's some good music by XTC and Hunters & Gatherers.

    If this was Bechard's first film as a director, as it seems to be, it's not bad considering that.
    8jcx238

    bonkers and beautiful..

    Pretty much loved this through and through - the blaring pop-punk soundtrack - Francis Raines' believable acting/characterization - the weird off-kilter blend of the banal and truly bizarre - the use of real apartments/clubs/videostore/Waterbury streets in which it all takes place - guaranteeing nothing feels like a "cheap set" despite (and/or because of it) being a low-budget production.. there's great choices being made all over the place here including a plethora of odd-ball, random little details - like shrimp newberg for dinner (!?!) - realizing she lives right across the street from the cemetery - or the ridiculous Groucho Marx statue in her apartment (that takes on a truly creepy demeanor at one point) - make it much richer a watch than expected and not just a by-the-books/let's-make-a-buck exploitationer.. and when it shifts from being (mostly) "I know where this is going" into something darker, more sinister and more somewhat incomprehensible - it manages to become truly frightening and nightmarish.. and that cacophonous noise coming out of her phone is pretty darn unsettling.. all of the reviews I read (positive or negative) pointed out a particular shot as a complaint towards being amateurish - a shot that actually had me almost leaping outta my seat thinking how bold and beautiful a choice it was - and it doesn't feel out of place in a movie that is doing a lot of things its own way.. Director Bechard's Psychos In Love is probably better known - possibly better regarded - than Disconnected - but I found this one to be more enthralling, more particular, more interesting - and less straining to be funny or quirky.. and in the words of the Disconnected nice-guy-but-a-serial-killer, Franklin's trade-mark sign-off that I got a kick out of once I realized he was going to keep saying it: "ok - see ya - bye"..
    lor_

    Okay regional horror film

    My review was written in January 1986 after watching the movie on Active video cassette.

    "Disconnected" is a low-budget horror film made by locals in Waterbury, Connecticut, which tries to surmount the cliches of the genre, but emerges as a routine picture. One-man filmmaker Gorman Bechard shows some style, especially in flashy insert shots, but needs to come up with more original material.

    Frances Raines toplines as Alicia Michaels, a young woman who works as a sales clerk at Valley Video, a home video store. She's had a fight with her deejay boyfriend Mike (Carl Koch), accusing him of having slept with her twin sister Barbara Ann (also played by Raines), and now a young guy Franklin (Mark Walker) keeps hanging around Valley Video trying to get a date with Alicia.

    Meanwhile, the cops are investigating a series of slasher murders, with evidence (shown to the viewer but not known to the cops) implicating Franklin. Alicia is plagued by annoying phone calls that feature harsh noises. She also becomes involved romantically with Franklin.

    Although Bechard plants some interesting clues in the opening reel, plotline goes haywire when Franklin is seduced by twin Barbara Ann, murders her and then, in a poorly designed scene (it's largely omitted, referred to verbally later) is killed by the cops. The killings continue after Franklin's death with an open-ended finale ponting at the real killer.

    Bechard's exposition scenes, particularly with the lackadaisical cops, continually mock the rigid format of slasher films, but ultimately his picture lapses into these cliches, such as the overuse of he phone call gimmick. Leading lady Raines, who has been featured in many B-films of late, is impressive in her dual role, combining vulnerability with the ambiguity of possible madness necessary in a "Repulsion"-type heroine.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This film was shot on weekends.
    • Connections
      Featured in Dissecting 'Disconnected' (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Talking to a Stranger
      Written by John Archer (uncredited), Geoff Crosby, Doug Falconer (uncredited), Robert Miles (uncredited), Greg Perano (uncredited), Mark Seymour (uncredited) and Ray Tosti-Guerra (uncredited)

      Performed by Hunters & Collectors

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 1984 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Telephone Killer
    • Filming locations
      • Naugatuck, Connecticut, USA(video rental place)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $40,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Disconnected (1984)
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