Showing posts with label Allan Miller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allan Miller. Show all posts

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Fear on Trial (1975) TV Movie

William Devane stars as John Henry Faulk, a popular radio and TV entertainer of the 1950s. In 1956, Faulk is blacklisted on the basis of an attack from the self-appointed anticommunist group AWARE. Fired by CBS, Faulk decides to sue AWARE for libel. His attorney Louis Nizer (George C. Scott) warns him that such a case will take several years to get to court, thus Faulk reluctantly takes a series of low-paying jobs to sustain himself during his "down period". In 1962, the case is finally brought before a judge, with several witnesses pointing out the idiotic iniquities of the Blacklist mentality (one child actor was prohibited from working because he had a name that sounded like that of an adult blacklistee). Appearing as themselves during the courtroom scenes are actress Kim Hunter, herself a blacklist victim, and producers David Susskind and Mark Goodson. Faulk wins his case, though his original award of $3.5 million in damages is later reduced to $550,000, and he is never able to completely return to his pre-blacklist prominence. Like several other filmic recreations of the "witch-hunt" era, Fear on Trial was first presented in the mid-1970s (October 2, 1975, to be exact), long after the most zealous of the 1950s anti-Red groups had fallen by the wayside. The film earned an Emmy award for screenwriter David Rintels. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Fear on Trial (1975) TV Movie
Cast: George C. Scott, William Devane, Dorothy Tristan, Allan Miller, Paul Hecht, Lois Nettleton, John Houseman, Judd Hirsch, David Susskind

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Obsessive Love (1984) TV Movie

"Her fantasy is to possess him. But now, it had become an obsession." The ad copy for the TV movie "Obsessive Love" said it all. Yvette Mimieux stars as the "number one fan" of soap-opera actor Simon McCorkindale. Not content with an autographed 8X10 glossy, Mimieux plots and plans to seduce McCorkindale and ruin his marriage to Constance McCashin. It could be worse: Yvette Mimieux could have been Kathy Bates. The best scenes go to Lainie Kazan as the Agnes Nixon-ish soap opera creator. Co-produced and co-written by Ms. Mimieux, "Obsessive Love" made its TV debut on October 2, 1984 ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Obsessive Love (1984) TV Movie
Cast: Allan Miller, Constance McCashin, Kin Shriner, Lainie Kazan, Louise Latham, Simon MacCorkindale, Yvette Mimieux