Dying Room Only

Dying Room Only is a 1973 American made-for-television horror mystery thriller film directed by Philip Leacock and starring Cloris Leachman and Ross Martin. Written by Richard Matheson and based on his 1953 short story of the same name, the film follows a woman whose husband disappears after they stop by a rural diner in the Arizona desert.

Dying Room Only
Home video cover art
GenreHorror
Mystery
Thriller
Based on"Dying Room Only" (1953 short story)
by Richard Matheson
Written byRichard Matheson
Directed byPhilip Leacock
StarringCloris Leachman
Ross Martin
Ned Beatty
Louise Latham
Dana Elcar
Dabney Coleman
Music byCharles Fox
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producerLee Rich
Producers
  • Allen S. Epstein
  • Neil T. Maffeo
Production locationsBorrego Springs, California, U.S.
CinematographyJohn M. Stephens
EditorBill Mosher
Running time74 minutes
Production companyLorimar Productions
Release
Original networkABC
Original release
  • September 18, 1973 (1973-09-18)

Produced by Lorimar Productions, who was also in charge of many television films of the period, Dying Room Only had its world premiere broadcast on ABC as a Tuesday movie of the week on September 18, 1973.[1] It was later released on VHS, and eventually DVD by the Warner Archive Collection.

Plot

Bob Mitchell and his wife, Jean, are driving through the hot Arizona desert on their way home to Los Angeles. A detour has taken them 100 miles out of the way down a deserted road because Jean insisted on taking photographs of a particular area to take back to their daughter. Bob is irritated by the delay in getting home and, after he throws a few jabs at Jean, the two stop at a roadside cafe/inn called the Arroyo Motel. It's a rundown claptrap and, aside from cook Jim Cutler and one customer named Tom King, the place is empty. But the two travelers are hungry, and the diner will do for now. To their surprise, both Jim and Tom are hostile and downright rude to them. The situation makes Jean uncomfortable. She tries to call home using the payphone but the line is busy.

Jean gets up to go to the restroom and wash her face. When she returns, Bob is nowhere to be found. Perhaps he went to use the bathroom himself, she thinks. Their station wagon is still parked outside. Minutes pass and still no Bob. A tight-lipped Jim and Tom are extremely unhelpful, telling Jean that Bob probably just abandoned her. At Jean's request, Tom agrees to go into the men's room to see if her husband is alright. When Tom emerges, he tells Jean that Bob isn't there.

Jean goes next door to the motel, where a woman named Vi works the front desk. She's also vaguely unfriendly and of no help. Unbeknownst to Jean, hurried calls are being made between Vi and Jim in the diner. Starting to worry even more, Jean tries to go inside the cafe men's room, but it is locked. Jim finally opens the door when Jean threatens to call the police. Bob isn't around but she does notice a second door. The cook refuses to open it for her, and Jean contacts the police. Meanwhile, someone drives off in the Mitchell station wagon and Jean runs out screaming for her husband.

Night has now fallen, and the sheriff arrives. As Jean tells her story, the officer looks bewildered. In fact, the door to the men's room isn't locked. The other door inside leads to an old storage shed, but there’s still no trace of Bob. An APB is put out for the car, and Jean plans on staying in the motel until further notice from the sheriff. Neither Jim nor Vi are particularly happy to have her hang around. Despite Jean's plea for him to check out the other rooms, the sheriff doesn't see any cause to do so.

Later, Vi refuses to place a call to the FBI, and Jean is unable reach her home in Los Angeles. Jean confronts Vi and tells her, "I don't know what's going on here, but I will find out!" The now-frantic wife has no choice but to search around the motel by herself. She enters the shed behind the men's room. Peeking through the keyhole into the restroom beyond, she spies Tom entering on the other side and immediately notices a light bulb illuminate next to her. A third man must have been hiding in the shed when Bob entered the restroom; the bulb must have served as an alert to the kidnapper that it was time to nab her husband, leaving Tom and Jim free to distract her as they carried out their plan.

At that moment, Jean is relieved to see the family vehicle pull up. But instead of Bob stepping out, she is frightened by a tall, hulking character with a limp. She runs into some underbrush, and, when Tom comes near her, she whacks him with a stick. Then at last, she catches a glimpse of her husband: bound and gagged, he's being shuffled into the station wagon and driven away.

The sheriff returns, and this time he believes her story. The two drive through the desert towards an abandoned pump station, while Tom follows. The sheriff tells her that the man with the limp is named Lou McDermott and that he recently jumped parole. He also discloses that there have been other mysterious disappearances, a fact he neglected to tell Jean earlier. At the gas station, the sheriff shoots and kills Lou, and then the officer himself is snuffed out by Tom. Jean grabs the steering wheel of the police vehicle and tries to run Tom down, but she's caught.

Both Bob and Jean are taken back to the motel and are kept in Tom's truck until the three perpetrators can figure out what to do. Vi turns on Tom and shoots him. As Vi comes towards the truck with gun in hand, Jean lights a flare and blinds her. Jean then grabs the revolver and holds both Vi and Jim at bay until the authorities arrive. Now safe, Jean places a tearful call to her children and tells her daughter they had a "fine time" on their trip and that they’re coming home as fast as they can.

Cast

Production

Although set in Arizona, the film was shot on location in Borrego Springs, California, in 1973.[2]

Release

Dying Room Only had its world premiere on ABC as part of the network's Movie of the Week series, airing for the first time on September 18, 1973. Although the film was praised for its acting and cinematography, it did receive feminist criticism for its positioning of Leachman's character as a "helpless woman" who has had her "selfhood stolen" when she loses her husband.[3] In review after its world broadcast, Jack Friedman of The Village Voice criticized the film, saying, "The only frightening aspect of this tale of horror was that its latent hatred (class, regional, sexual) were being spewed all across the country. And the loam out there is rich enough already."[3]

After its premiere in 1973, the film became a staple of late night TV, airing erratically throughout the 1970s and 1980s.[4]

Home media

It was also released on VHS, and later on DVD in 2010 through the Warner Archive Collection.[5]

See also

References

  1. "'Dying Room Only' stars Cloris Leachman". Schenactady Gazette. 15 September 1973. p. 7. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  2. "San Diego Filmography". San Diego History. February 2002. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  3. Friedman, Jack (28 September 1973). "Off drugs and on alcohol". The Village Voice. pp. 33–4. Retrieved 28 December 2014.
  4. "Friday Night Movies". The Southeast Missourian. 14 September 1983. p. 36.
  5. Mavis, Paul (January 29, 2010). "Dying Room Only DVD". DVD Talk. Archived from the original on May 14, 2020. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.