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Title: | Movie Reviews and Discussion |
Notice: | Please do DIR/TITLE before starting a new topic on a movie! |
Moderator: | VAXCPU::michaud o.dec.com::tamara::eppes |
|
Created: | Thu Jan 28 1993 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1249 |
Total number of notes: | 16012 |
53.0. "Judgement Day: The John List Story" by DSSDEV::RUST () Wed Feb 24 1993 21:10
"Judgment Day" is a based-on-fact-made-for-TV-movie (or BOFMFTVM, as
the Boston Phoenix is fond of saying) about one John List, a New Jersey
man who murdered his wife, mother, and three kids, allegedly to save
them from the sins of this world (but wouldn't kill _himself_ because
he apparently considered suicide a more mortal sin than murder). [I
wouldn't normally post something about a TV-movie in here unless it was
available on video, but since this particular crime is a favorite of
mine, and I had high hopes for its dramatic treatment, I wanted to spew
some remarks net-ward.]
List, having made careful plans, vanished immediately after the
murders, and evaded the efforts of the local police and the FBI for
some 18 years. He was eventually captured thanks to "America's Most
Wanted" - which made the TV-movie look kind of silly when it tried to
promote the standard "tenacious local cop finally tracks the killer
down" subplot; the cop got to say all the usual stuff about how he was,
too, taking the case personally, but in the end his only major
contribution appeared to have been handing over the police photos to
the TV show...
At any rate, the movie itself was pretty darned trite, featuring
generous helpings of Standard TV-Movie-ese, a dialect spoken by few, if
any, real people, and never under the circumstances displayed in the
production. Given the chilling nature of the actual crime, it would be
hard to completely ruin it, but I have to say this production missed a
LOT of bets; if a director who's good with suspense ever took hold of
this story, the result would have people shrieking in the aisles, but
the TV production never got past "Eeew, how awful."
But. There was one facet of this production that, all by itself, left
me chilled, gave me the creeps, left me looking over my shoulder: the
casting. Beginning with Robert Blake as List (something of a step down
from "In Cold Blood," career-wise, but I s'pose he wanted the work),
the casting junta then chose Beverly D'Angelo (who's always looked a
little wild-eyed to me, especially in the "National Lampoon" movies she
did with Chevy Chase) as List's wife - a woman who married him on the
rebound, spent their early married life demanding more money and a
better house while fighting off chronic headaches with an assortment of
prescription painkillers, and then began to lose her mind completely
as a result of advanced, untreated syphilis. (As played by D'Angelo,
the wife was so horrifying that _I_ wanted to kill her; this may not
have been the producers' intention, but I found that it added some
interest.)
Then they cast Alice Krige (who played the smarmily creepy woman in
"Ghost Story", and has given me the vague-uneases ever since) as List's
wife's sister, who doesn't get murdered but does get to muse
philosophically over her Cobb salads over the years about how he could
possibly have done such a terrible thing.
AND, in a final casting coup, List's second wife, whom he married under
an assumed name while at large, was played by Melinda Dillon. (If you
don't recognize her name - I had to look it up - she's a character
actress who, from what I've seen, specializes in "mom" roles, from the
worried-frantic mother in "Close Encounters" to the really ditzy mom in
"A Christmas Story", and positively exudes an annoying kind of confused
helplessness trying to find something to cling to - "Don't hit me, but
if you do, please don't get blood on the towels.") Anyway, she was
perfect for the role of "surviving victim," as List left her with
almost no money and, in effect, no husband...
So, while the movie failed in a big way to live up to the story it was
based on, the casting choices did give it a certain twisted,
disturbingly misogynistic quality that was plenty scary in itself.
-b
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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53.1 | Melinda Dillon's most memorable role for me | TNPUBS::NAZZARO | I want a real adventure! | Thu Feb 25 1993 14:48 | 7 |
| Melinda Dillon played the woman who committed suicide in "Absence
of Malice", due to a story planted in the local paper by an assistant
DA (Bob Balaban) and written by a naive reporter (Sally Field). Paul
Newman was the object of the story, and Wilford Brimley was the man
who brought the assistant DA down. One of my favorite movies.
NAZZ
|
53.2 | We don't mind. Really! | 31113::WIEGLEB | Who is 'The Loneliest Monk'? | Fri Feb 26 1993 19:48 | 5 |
| > I wouldn't normally post something about a TV-movie in here...
Ah, the joys of moderatorship! (-hood?, -ness?)
- Dave
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