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Blackout (1985 film)

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Wikipedia article




'Blackout' is a 1985 American made-for-television psychological thriller film directed by Douglas Hickox, and written by Richard Smith, Richard Parks, Les Alexander, and David Ambrose.

Plot



A veteran police detective suspects that local realtor and father Allen Devlin---who underwent full facial reconstruction because of injuries received in a near-fatal car accident, and married the nurse who tended him during his recuperation---may actually be the same man who committed the quadruple murder of his adulterous wife and their children several years earlier.

Cast



* Richard Widmark as Joe Steiner

* Keith Carradine as Allen Devlin

* Kathleen Quinlan as Chris Graham

* Michael Beck as Mike Patterson

* Dameon Clarke as Battered Child Mauro

* Martina Deignan as Pauline

* Kenneth Kimmins as Dr. Kay (as Ken Kimmins)

* Jason Michas as Mark

* Gabrielle Rose as Victim's Friend

* Jerry Wasserman as Motel Clerk

* Don Hood as Phil Murphy

Reception



While John J. O'Connor of the 'New York Times' opined that 'Blackout' was "never entirely convincing" and not even remotely memorable, he still admitted that it did manage "to build up a steady stream of scary suspense" and attain "maximum mileage" out of its "top-flight cast." A score of 2/5 was awarded by Joanna Berry of the 'Radio Times', who wrote that the film was an "average thriller" with "no real surprises in store for the detective or for the audience." In a review written for Ozus' World Movie Reviews, Dennis Schwartz gave 'Blackout' a grade of B+ and labelled it a "fun watch" in spite of its predictable and "murky" plot that culminated in a "bland" ending. Horror News's Todd Martin was also frustrated and disappointed by 'Blackout's' "bland and vanilla" conclusion, expressing the view that it and the director's apparent aversion to taking risks turned what could have been "a brilliant film" into "an overall fumble."

Real-life murder



'Blackout' gained notoriety following Ed Sherman's murder of his pregnant wife Ellen on 3 August 1985 in Connecticut due to its possibly being inspired by the film, which was submitted as evidence at Sherman's trial. Like a character in the film, Sherman killed his wife and used an air conditioner to try to slow decomposition of her remains in an attempt to establish an alibi. Sherman was sentenced to fifty years in prison in 1992, but died of a heart attack after serving almost four years. The case was featured in the 'Forensic Files' episode "Dinner and a Movie."

References




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