The Face of Fear
Original Movie Poster / Newspaper Print Ad 1990
GenreThriller
Based onThe Face of Fear
by Dean Koontz
Screenplay byDean Koontz
Alan Jay Glueckman
Directed byFarhad Mann
StarringPam Dawber
Lee Horsley
Theme music composerJohn Debney
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producersGrant Rosenberg
Lee Rich
ProducerWilliam Beaudine Jr.
CinematographyPeter Mackay
EditorM. Edward Salier
Running time120 minutes
Production companiesPapazian-Hirsch Entertainment
Warner Bros. Television
Original release
NetworkCBS
ReleaseSeptember 30, 1990 (1990-09-30)

The Face of Fear is a 1990 American television film directed by Farhad Mann and starring Pam Dawber and Lee Horsley. It is based on the 1977 novel of the same name by Dean Koontz, who also co-wrote the teleplay with Alan Jay Glueckman.

Plot

During a snowstorm, a killer traps a former mountain climber who has psychic powers and his fiancee in a New York skyscraper office building. In order to escape, they will have to face impossible odds by rappelling down the outside of the building as if it is a mountain.

Swedish VHS cover. (The English language version is mostly identical.)

Cast

Production

To create some of the scenes in the movie Pam Dawber had to be suspended from ropes.[1] She had initially expected that most of the rappelling scenes would be filmed by stunt doubles, but found that the cast had to do many of their own stunts. Dawson had chosen to film The Face of Fear as it was different from the roles she was typically offered at the time, which she described as "the nice girl or the mom".[2] Actor Lee Horsley experienced some difficulty while filming, as his character had a phobia of heights and Horsley himself was not. He had to use one of his own phobias, claustrophobia, to evoke the emotions needed for Graham.[3]

Author Dean Koontz was brought on to co-write the script.[4]

Release

The Face of Fear aired on CBS on September 30, 1990.[5][6]

Reception

The Wisconsin State Journal rated the movie at two stars, writing that "Tension is maintained for the most part and if you have a fear of heights, you'll be in a perpetual sweat for about two-thirds of this TV movie."[7]

Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a C−, calling it "bland" and "mediocre", saying "a psychic mountain-climber" has "Koontz stretch(es) the limits of credibility", that the "murders are more graphic than anything I’ve seen on TV recently" but that the "constraints of prime-time don’t allow this movie to become truly unsettling."[8]

On the other hand, Empire, who gave it three stars, called it "a gripping TV time-waster", saying it took "the most hackneyed of TV movie premises — a psychic is pursued by the serial killer whose crimes he has been mentally witnessing — and a few leftover bits of the plot of Die Hard" and that it was "surprisingly, well, good" and that "the clichéd characters are given a touch more depth than usual, and there are neat, non-stereotyped supporting performances from cop Bob Balaban and smarmy journalist William Sadler".[9][10]

References

  1. Hughes, Mike (September 29, 1990). "Actress faced 'Fear' fearlessly". The Times.
  2. Buck, Jerry (September 29, 1889). "Fear has taken many forms for actress Pam Dawber, who keeps facing up..." Citizens' Voice.
  3. Schmidt, Amy (September 28, 1990). "Lee Horsley, Pam Dauber star in 'Face of Fear'". North Adams Transcript.
  4. Bobbin, Jay (September 30, 1990). "Pam Dawber turns stuntwoman for CBS movie 'The Face of Fear'". Daily Press.
  5. Schindler, Harold (September 30, 1990). "'The Face of Fear'". The Salt Lake Tribune.
  6. DiMatteo, Robert (September 30, 1990). "Horsley plays key role in psychological thriller". The Vincennes Sun-Commercial.
  7. Scheuer, Steven (June 8, 1991). "Television highlights". Wisconsin State Journal.
  8. Tucker, Ken (28 September 1990). "The Face of Fear". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 12 January 2018.
  9. "Face of Fear, The Review | Movie - Empire". webcache.googleusercontent.com. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
  10. "The Face of Fear". Empire. 2000-01-01. Retrieved 2021-01-29.
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