Fantasies (TV Movie 1982) Poster

(1982 TV Movie)

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6/10
Decent Tv made thriller
coltras358 August 2022
Middleton USA is the sexiest late-night soap opera on American TV, the creation of Carla, a beautiful divorcee. But the show's success is threatened when its star is killed. Carla manages to rewrite the show, then another member of the cast is murdered. Someone wants to destroy both the show and Carla. But who is it? And why?

A decent hybrid between a soap opera drama and a slasher, though don't expect any gruesome killings; it's a made to Tv film with a good cast - Susanne Pleshette, Barry Newman, Robert Vaughn, Stuart Damon - and it's quite watchable. There's some good suspense, some scary parts such as the killer's point of view with his constant humming. After a major red-herring the killer is revealed, which came as a surprise.
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5/10
TV slasher
BandSAboutMovies6 October 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Middletown, U.S.A. is the biggest show on TV. Sure, its controversial, but the ratings are through the roof. The only problem is that every time a major villain gets any traction, they end up dying for real.

Last year, we interviewed Amanda Reyes from Made for TV Mayhem. She recommended this film and it's been on our list for awhile. Trying to get in sixty slashers that aren't all that well-known for October gave us the perfect opportunity to watch it. If you'd like to read Amanda's take on the movie, check out her site.

Director William Wiard was also behind This House Possessed, a fine example of made for TV horror. Here, he's working from a script by David Levinson, who also worked on that film.

Suzanne Pleshette plays Carla Webber, who after being left by her husband decided that she'd become an independent woman. After watching daytime soaps, she soon learned that she was pretty good at writing for them, which leads to her running the biggest soap around. Barry Newman from Vanishing Point shows up as her love interest, plus Robert Vaughn is the slimy network president.

While this film doesn't have much gore, it doesn't skimp on the murders. It's close to giallo territory with a humming killer only seen from their own POV, as well as a duplicitous identity and mental disorders at the end.

It's not perfect, but Pleshette is. It's fun to see her fully embracing a leading role after so many only knew her as Newhart's wife. I know that Lifetime exists now to create movies similar to this, but there's just something missing in a world that no longer has made for TV movies quite like this. Sure, TV is going through a golden age now, but give me the 1970s and 1980s past.
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Elementary Logic Is The Very First Victim
JasonDanielBaker19 February 2019
Top-rated soap opera Littleton, USA has a huge following. The success of the show coincides with the phenomenon of soap operas reaching a peak of popularity (There were 15 American network TV soap operas on the air in 1982) across North America and worldwide. The show's creator Carla Sherman (Suzanne Pleshette), who is also head writer, faces the unexpected crisis of Quenton Mallory (John Gabriel) one of her stars getting murdered. His character, the show's resident cad, was pivotal to her new story-line.

Suzanne Pleshette's character is meant to be a reflection of the audience. She used to be a soap fan who then tried her hand at writing. As a former member of the audience she is appalled when she hears the network wants to have a morbid clips show celebrating the career of the murdered star. Real audiences would be appalled too. But it is probably what the network, and the show, would have done if that had really happened. Almost nothing of what we see appears formulated from what would have been done if any of this really happened.

In keeping with the expected for a murder mystery the victim was roundly loathed which could have maximized the number of possible assailants with similar but different motives offering solid basis for a whodunit. But when a well-liked younger star (Peter Bergman) is murdered days later any suspect and motive becomes less clear. With a second slaying it also becomes less clear why the network doesn't put the show on hiatus and lock down the set. But they soldier on with two fewer characters. This is where the plot veers off into complete absurdity.

After another popular young star (Robin Mattson) and her husband are murdered, the network of course shelves things. But they quickly get production going again hiring security people to watch the cast. That doesn't help when Carla is nearly strangled in her apartment. She recovers quickly. So quickly she even signs for the package the delivery guy drops off after his pushing of the buzzer to her apartment has scared off her assailant.

Detective Flynn (Barry Newman) of the LAPD, the man assigned to the high-profile case, is entirely ineffectual as a cop but somehow successful as a love interest. Carla, rebuffs his suggestion that a security guard be assigned to her. She tells him she'll just get the locks changed. If there were any realism at all her house would be locked down as an active crime-scene and she'd be in hospital.

Instead Carla and Flynn get cozy on her couch and bounce around theories about the killer. They muse about the aspect of fans thinking the show is real - a well-known but highly exaggerated phenomenon. Carla appears to conclude that is what the motive really is. Without the flimsiest of clues indicating anything of any kind her theory cannot be refuted. But her certainty of it is equally unverifiable.

The murderer (Seeing her from the point of view of a subjective camera) stalks her humming "Pop goes the weasel" (A biting statement upon the predictable and simplistic direction bad soap opera narratives often take?). It could be that he just can't believe his luck at how lax security is and how easy his prey appears to want to make his killing spree. The nonsensical conclusion makes it seem like they decided on the killer by drawing from a hat full of names.

The idea of having a TV movie about a soap opera featuring the roster of soap opera stars of leading soap network ABC (All My Children, General Hospital, Ryan's Hope etc) which broadcast it was very clever advertising. Coinciding with the popularity of soap operas in the 1980s were, of course, slasher films. A hybrid of that could have been enticing for some audiences. But it doesn't look they got enough beyond that conceptual framework to do anything with it that makes sense.

Attempting to combine elements of mystery, suspense, horror, family comedy and romance it comes off like a grab-bag of bits gleaned from unused screenplays. It also looks like a rushed job.

It is also really regrettable that such an appealing cast goes wasted here. Any TV production in the early 1980s that could boast Suzanne Pleshette and Barry Newman as leads was, theoretically, on pretty solid footing. There is in fact not a single bad actor in the entire cast. The same thing that happened with this production happened far too often with even the best of soap operas that have great casts. They wrote themselves into a corner.
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4/10
It was supposed to be Daytime's shot at Primetime
richard.fuller127 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
And Lord knows they had enough chances at that.

The angle here, or the promotion, was that 'your favorite daytime stars were going to be appearing in primetime'.

This was after all the Luke and Laura brouhaha from General Hospital, and suddenly soap operas were popular amongst teen agers out of school during the summer.

Before cable is all I can add.

Plot generally was the cast of a popular soap are being killed off, one by one.

Who could be doing it? Was it the sexy producer of the show (Pleshette) and we get a detective as well (Barry Newman).

Now it didn't help (or maybe it didn't hurt) that I hadnt a clue who Pleshette or Newman were at that time either, as actors go.

But the clincher was our soap cast.

Our soap cast.

John Gabriel from Ryan's Hope.

Stuart Damon and Robin Mattson from General Hospital.

Peter Bergman from All My Children.

Robert S. Woods from One Life To Live.

Let's see, the movie began with Bergman being thrown out a window.

We only briefly glimpse Woods on a TV set.

Was Gabriel stabbed? Or poisoned? Doesn't matter.

There was quite a bit of dialogue from Mattson, giving the impression she was a nutcase (she played the villianess Heather Webber on GH back then) and cant recall what happened to her either. Stabbed or fell thru a glass coffee table, it seems.

Damon was playing up the ultimate sinister role. Was he the killer or was he just afraid. I think he was shot.

In the end, the killer was the last person you would expect it to be. Basically what soaps do; a major league cop out.

Would I want to see this again? Oh no.

ONce was enough.
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8/10
Another missing piece of TV
mancalleddog15 November 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Man, just to see this again..Suzanne Pleshette was great as the producer of a typically trashy soap that gets beset by a series of murders that begin to decimate the cast of her bread and butter show. The shadowy freak that stalks the cast has an unnerving sort of broken hum after each dispatch and there is a nice scare or two within the proceedings. If you pay VERY close attention you can spot the killer early on but since I suck at guessing who the maniac is, I lucked out by looking at the T.v. guide ad: shadowy lunatic standing in a doorway over a terrified female victim (The killer's hair only matched ONE of the actors in the film so I was able to pay attention to that one's motives). Anyhow, this is good stuff and is definitely T.v.'s entry into the stalk & slash subgenre of terror flicks. Very hard to come by and almost no-one knows of it or its whereabouts. It would be very cool if someone out there comes across this and starts to circulate it. also..VERY VERY HUGE MOMENTOUS SPOILER ALERT..STOP READING RIGHT HERE IF YOU HAVEN'T SEEN OR KNOW NOTHING OF THIS FILM: the standout ending will either alienate or please those who have seen 'April Fool's Day' in the fact that when all is said and done it turns out to be a staged ploy (in this film though, it was the wrapping up of principal filming of the proceeding events)..At the time of its broadcast, I thought 'Fantasies' was a great stalker flick with a fantastic ending..
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A Killer Script...
azathothpwiggins13 September 2022
Television screenwriter, Carla Webber (Suzanne Pleschette) must quickly re-write a script for her nighttime soap opera after one of its stars is brutally murdered. Unfortunately, the killing doesn't stop there. If that's not bad enough, someone is stalking Carla, while humming "Pop Goes The Weasel"!

FANTASIES is a different sort of made-for-TV, madman-on-the-loose movie. It seems pretty obvious what's going on, until it's not. This movie defies some of the conventions of its genre, especially at the end. It's a true jaw-dropper that just might confuse some, while pi$$ing others off! Either way, it's a novel conclusion to say the least.

The stunning Ms. Pleschette is very good in her harried role. Barry Newman plays the dedicated cop on the case. Patrick O'Neal is Carla's useless ex-husband. Watch for Robert Vaughn in what amounts to a cameo appearance as Carla's boss...
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