City in Fear
City in Fear | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama |
Written by |
Peter Masterson (story) Albert Ruben |
Directed by | Jud Taylor |
Starring |
David Janssen Robert Vaughn Perry King Mickey Rourke |
Theme music composer | Leonard Rosenman |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Peter Masterson |
Producer(s) |
Ronald Lyon Steve Nicolaides (associate producer) |
Cinematography | John Bailey |
Editor(s) | Fred A. Chulack |
Running time | 150 minutes |
Production company(s) | Trans World International |
Distributor | ABC |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | March 30, 1980 |
City in Fear is a 1980 Edgar Allan Poe Awarded television drama film. It was directed by Jud Taylor (using the pseudonym Alan Smithee) and written by Peter Masterson and Albert Ruben. The film score was composed by Leonard Rosenman.
The film stars David Janssen (his last film), Robert Vaughn, Mickey Rourke, Perry King, William Prince and Susan Sullivan. It is about a newspaper's attempts to sensationalize the killing spree of a psychopath. It premiered on March 30, 1980 in the USA.[1]
Cast
- David Janssen - Vince Perrino
- Robert Vaughn - Harrison Crawford III
- Perry King - Lt. John Armstrong
- Mickey Rourke - Tony Pate
- William Prince - Harrison Crawford II
- Susan Sullivan - Madeleine Crawford
- William Daniels - Freeman Stribling
- Pepe Serna - Raymond Zavala
- Allan Miller - George Weller
- M. Emmet Walsh - Sheldon Lewis
- Christopher Allport - Kenny Reiger
- Lane Smith - Brian
- Frank McRae - Captain Madison
- Mary Stuart Masterson - Abby Crawford
Production
The film was inspired by a conversation between two friends, William Goldman and Pete Masterson. Goldman admitted he had his daughter's hair cut short and dyed back because the Son of Sam, in his Son of Sam letters to Jimmy Breslin of the New York Daily News = said he liked to shoot women with long, auburn hair. "That's how pervasive women's fear became," said director Jud Taylor. Goldman told Masterson "This would make a terrific TV movie" and they hired another writer to write it up. Taylor cast Mickey Rourke as the killer. "It was one of Mickey's first big parts, and he was extraordinary, and conveyed just the sense of casual menace -- he was a bag boy in a Los Angeles supermarket, for God's sake -- that we wanted.".[2]
Director Jud Taylor later made Out of the Darkness based on the policeman who investigated the Son of Sam case,
Taylor had his name removed from the film. "After I left, the producers filmed four more point-blank murders without asking me, and I was offended," he said.[2]
References
- ↑ IMDb release dates
- 1 2 Kelley, Bill (11 Oct 1985). "SON OF SAM MOVIE TRAILS DETECTIVE". Sun Sentinel. p. 1.E.