The Abduction (TV Movie 1996) Poster

(1996 TV Movie)

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6/10
He believes too much in till death do we part.
mark.waltz25 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This is a disturbing view into an irreparable marriage, one where the wife takes all she can until the husband turns violent. She's put up with his disinterest in searching for a new job since he became disabled as a police officer, his public insults and his general unpleasantness. It's a dramatic situation for Victoria Principal, and she is frighteningly real as her torment from soon to be ex-husband Robert Hays becomes all the more dangerous. She avoids make-up in scenes that show her after she's been brutally beaten then cleaned up, necessary for those particular scenes.

This film often is uncomfortable to watch because it delves into subjects that make you feel you're being intrusive even though someone should step in when situations like this occur. The fact that Hays is a former police officer protects him as evidenced in a scene in court where the judge refuses to put him in jail for rape. He has moments where he's very gentle with her after abducting her, yet you fear how he could suddenly switch back to the maniac he's shown that he is.

While the audience is used to Principal in dramatic roles, seeing the star of "Airplane!" in a humourless part like this is quite jolting. You get to see him go from hopeful new husband, kind and spirited, to a boiling angry psychopath, and while he doesn't deserve any sympathy, at least his transition is presented in a believable manner. It's one of the scariest transitions from comedy to drama I've ever seen, and unlike Leslie Nielsen in "Nuts", the urge to laugh is not there.

But there's trouble that exists in this gripping story with a flashback following every scene set in the present. There's also some twists in the last half hour that takes this too far down the path of melodrama with Hays indicating that he intends to kill her before killing himself, after which he takes her clothes shopping then out to a fancy dinner. Certainly the headlines show situations like this having really occured, and this is apparently a true story, but that later twist makes this seem exploitive and more intrusive than before, so the viewer should be warned before that this is not just depressing. It's mega depressing.
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the attentions of Robert Hays
petershelleyau12 February 2003
Kate Findlay (Victoria Principal) is a Boston college assistant who is stalked by her ex-husband Paul Olavsky (Robert Hays). Kate's marriage to Paul began to deteriorate when he injured his back as a policeman and was pensioned off the service. Unwilling to work again he projected all his frustrations onto Kate, before she was driven to a divorce.

As a woman who is `half Sicilian' Principal has black hair which she wears in a short bob and longer for flashbacks to her marriage. Playing a mother is unusual for Principal, and here she is uniformly excellent, particularly with the panting fear she uses in a hospital scene after Paul has raped her. In spite of the sombreness of the material, she also scores a laugh when a judge orders Paul have a psychiatric evaluation - `What's to evaluate? He's stalking me day and night!'

The teleplay by Marshall Goldberg, based on a true story, uses flashbacks through most of the narrative, building consecutively as Kate remembers, so we can see Paul's progressive abuse. As an ex-cop, Kate believes the police are stalling on having Paul arrested, in spite of him violating a protection order sworn against him. Kate's new live-in boyfriend Dan (Christopher Lawford) is also subject to Paul's attention, with harassment and a violent encounter before the titular act against Kate.

Director Larry Peerce presents Hays in a change of image role, so that he is lit unflatteringly, and the bland congeniality has subtext. Despite some bad rear projection when Kate and Paul are in a car, Peerce relies upon Principal's reactions to keep the narrative moving, and has an effective edit from a memory of Kate being cold in her house because Paul has turned down the heat to save money, to Kate freezing in the snow where she has run to escape Paul.
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"Don't Start With That Therapist Crap Again!"...
azathothpwiggins8 September 2021
Poor Kate. Her life with her two kids and new boyfriend would be absolutely perfect if it weren't for her ruthless, psychopathic ex-husband Paul (Robert Hays). Paul's been stalking Kate ever since their bitter divorce two years earlier. He's been using his history of being a cop to skirt the law.

Now, his efforts are increasingly intense and violent. Soon enough the movie's title comes into play.

THE ABDUCTION is a decent made-for-TV thriller. Ms. Principal is stellar, especially when she turns the tables on old Paul! Hays is fairly convincing as the maniacal stalker. The emergence of his dark side is shown through flashbacks of the early days of the marriage. He becomes more dangerous and surprisingly whiney, making us want to ring his neck!

Mostly for the legions of Victoria fans...
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