Is There Anybody There? (TV Movie 1976) Poster

(1976 TV Movie)

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8/10
Positively seethes with darkly broiling passions, and foul-hearted duplicity!
Weirdling_Wolf2 October 2022
In this especially dark-hearted, criminally unappreciated, Australian made-for-TV chiller we see rakishly handsome, upwardly mobile architect John Hersey (George Lazenby) get all 'touchy-feely' with his deliciously touchable mistress, Marianne Dickson (Wendy Hughes) mere hours before dutifully picking up his no less handsome wife (Tina Greville) from the bucolic rest home wherein she had been slowly recuperating from a rather severe nervous breakdown.

As oft happens, while the cat's away, the errant mouse doth enthusiastically play, and moustachioed dreamboat Lazenby made the most of his poor wife's absence, keeping his loins busy with a goodly number of lustily enjoyed extra marital nookie, while finalizing the final niggling details concerning the spankingly new tower block he and his wife plan on moving into. But once inside this modern penthouse apartment, the ostensibly deserted building proves to be anything but empty, and the increasingly inhospitable sounds and eerie events provide a far from welcome homecoming for the fragile Kate.

With a delightfully clever, frequently mischievous script by wicked wordsmith Bruce A. Wishart, which positively seethes with darkly broiling passions, morbidly fermenting secrets and foul-hearted duplicity, the gripping, ceaselessly tense, twisty-turny, Tales of the Unexpected-style plot has an embarrassment of creepy riches for the more discerning thriller fan to enjoy. Outside of the inventive, air-tight plot, the performances are never less than enthralling, with the increasingly frantic exchanges between Kate and her rival Marianne being especially fascinating.

Peter Maxwell's remarkably compelling Aussie thriller 'Is There Anybody There?' is quite the joyous discovery, an immersive, extraordinarily well-written 1970s TV play that is no less thrilling when seen today, and presciently, the empty, forbiddingly sleek tower block remains one of the more sinisterly monolithic motifs of metropolitan estrangement, and especially potent is the sublime shot of myriad, ominously impenetrable windows starkly highlighted by the single row of lights at the very top, plus the ferociously funky, organic-sounding score by talented composer Bob Young DEMANDS to be released on CD, since it is so uncommonly groovy and musically menacing!
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3/10
Wendy Hughes!
PeterM278 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This 1976 TV movie is a chance to see a young Wendy Hughes, in a flawed thriller.

I only saw this on Youtube, which was a pretty washed out version, so it may not have been at its best. The film has several annoying things that don't make sense - particularly regarding the building keys, and also the usual thing of heading out into dark corridors to search for intruders. The main twist is interesting, but the last twists are really overkill.

But it does have Wendy Hughes!

Minor Spoilers (plot) follow: Kate (Tina Grenville) returns home from a sanatorium, to her unfaithful husband, John (George Lazenby) after a nervous breakdown, but someone is watching her. Her husband has been having an affair in her absence with her friend Marianne (Wendy Hughes), but perhaps others as well. When John goes out of town on business a couple of days after her return, he leaves her alone in the penthouse of a new high-rise apartment building, in which all the other apartments are empty, and there is only an elderly janitor by day. Marianne offers to come and keep Kate company and help her unpack, but they soon hear noises, and become aware that there is a stranger in the building.

Real Spoilers (the ending) follow:

The noises become more frequent, the women leave the apartment (together and singly) to catch sight of someone lurking around in an overcoat, the phone keeps ringing with threats, then goes dead when they try to ring the police. This continues until they find the replacement janitor apparently dead in the lift. Kate finds John's gun, and then Marianne has a shootout with one intruder in the stairwell. The women then hide in the bedroom and prepare to defend themselves. Eventually, when John returns home in the morning, Marianne thinks he is the intruder and accidentally shoots him dead. Then, when Marianne is arrested for murder, it is revealed that Kate knew about the affair and hired the replacement janitor and intruders to scare Marianne and trick her into killing John. As she prepares to run off with her new lover, one of the intruders, we see that he has a plan to kill her and get John's money. However, she still has the gun. Da ta!

PS: the summary for this film has a mistake: Marianne is Kate's friend, not her sister.
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