Five Desperate Women (1971 TV Movie)
2/10
Desperation time: TV murder-melodrama without a hint of suspense...
17 July 2016
ABC movie-of-the-week from producer Aaron Spelling has five ladies, college friends from years before who went their separate ways after graduation, reuniting for a vacation on a remote island ("No phones...no interruptions...nobody!"); unfortunately--as we hear from a radio broadcast but the women do not--an escaped psychotic is loose in the area. Ted Post directed, and his use of point-of-view photography from the killer's perspective in one instance is very effective (and before its time). Still, there are really only two suspects in this thin scenario, and writers Marc Norman and Walter Black, working from Larry Gordon's story, are not interested in springing a surprise on us (no third-act plot twists from these guys). As the desperate women, Anjanette Comer, Joan Hackett, Denise Nicholas, Stefanie Powers and Julie Sommars do what they can with the mediocre material, but nobody stands out (not even Hackett, arguably the most talented member of the cast). By-the-numbers thriller is TV-tepid instead of suspenseful.
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