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| T. C. Jones, Louise Latham, Dana Wynter |
AN UNLOCKED WINDOW: The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. (Season 3, episode 17/1965). Directed by Joseph M. Newman.
In the middle of a thunder storm, two nurses, Stella (Dana Wynter of
The View from Pompey's Head) and Betty (T. C. Jones), and a cook/housekeeper (Louise Latham of
Marnie), are alone in the house with their patient, Glendon (John Kerr), who is in bed in an oxygen tent. The caretaker has been sent off to get another tank of oxygen, and the ladies are nervous because several nurses in the area have been murdered by an unknown maniac. Stella is determined to make certain that every door and window in the house is locked, but down in the basement she is startled by a mouse, and forgets to lock a window swinging in the wind ... Something
nags at Stella, who does seem forgetful at times, as Betty reminds her.
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| Nurses in the bedroom with John Kerr |
Based on a story by Ethel Lina White, and with a script by James Bridges,
An Unlocked Window is one of the most memorable episodes of
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. The big reveal at the end is not as shocking as it was back in the sixties, and if you know anything about the actors you will be clued in early on, but the program is still quite suspenseful and well-acted (even if in some scenes Wynter doesn't act quite as terrified as she should). The show is well-directed by Joseph M. Newman for maximum tension. Admittedly there is one scene that is a bit of a cheat, rather impossible in fact -- people simply can't be in two places at once -- but this doesn't completely ruin things (blame it on the editing). Busy director Newman's most famous film is probably
This Island Earth. Writer James Bridges later directed such films as
The China Syndrome and
Urban Cowboy.
Verdict: Very creepy, with a chilling finale -- you just can't trust anyone, can you? ***.
Love those ladies and am also a fan of John Kerr, so good in South Pacific and Tea and Sympathy. Yhought he would have turned out a bigger star.
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Yes, Kerr sort of faded out after a couple of big movies. He did Corman's "Pit and Pendulum" and a great deal of TV work.
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