Linbeymusol
Wonderful character development!
Humaira Grant
It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
Yvonne Jodi
Unshakable, witty and deeply felt, the film will be paying emotional dividends for a long, long time.
Yazmin
Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
bkoganbing
Famous Stephen King like novelist Matthew Faison invites several people whom he's crossed in the past to an evening at a hotel owned by young Kim Delaney and purportedly haunted by the ghost of her father. Her father committed suicide by jumping off a tower and later on she sees Faison doing the same thing.Two things happen, someone starts out to frighten Delaney with all kinds of spooky tricks. The second is that publisher Robert Stack one of the guests is charged with Faison's murder and gets his lawyer Perry Mason to defend him.In the films and on the TV series Raymond Burr is an omnicompetent attorney. As often as not his clients are people like Stack who have retained him already for other legal matters.William Katt as Paul Drake, Jr. gives Delaney his personal attention. In effect he solves the case when he discovers who's been trying to frighten her. Katt provides the ammunition that Burr fires in court.This one was not a bad Mason film, but one that was easy to predict. Still the performances were good by the whole cast.
sol1218
***SPOILERS**** The very out of shape, with him using a cane, and overweight, between 250 to 275 pounds, Raymond Burr as defense attorney Perry Mason has some workout in this movie dodging falling chandeliers as well as ghosts and goblins in trying to get his client, the former Elliot Ness of the Untouchables, Robert Stack as book publisher Jordan White off on a trumped up murder charge. White was set up to take the fall for the murder of mystery writer David Hall, Matthew Faison, who fell or was pushed to his death off the top of the Briarcliff Hotel outside Denver Colorado.In fact White who was threatening to sue Hall was one of a number of persons who hated Hall's guts who were invited for dinner at the Briarcliff to talk things over about his new book "The Resort". It's in the book that Hall is to bring out all the dirty laundry about White as well as famed astrologist and psychic Michael Light, Dennis Lipscomb, and Donald Sayer, Jack Bannon, and floozy movie scream queen Maura McGuire, Leigh Taylor-Young. with all four angry as hell in what Hall is planning to do anyone of them had a real good reason to knock him off! But it was only Jordan White who was at the scene of his "downfall", some ten floors to his death from the tower of the Briarcliff Hotel, who was charged with Hall's murder!As all this is going on at the hotel the place's assistant manager Susan Warrenfield, Kim Delaney, is being driven insane by the strange events that she encounters there. This includes her ghostly grandfather who founder the Briarcliff and has been haunting it ever since some 70 years after his death! Kim who happened to be an eye witness in Hall's death can prove, under hypnosis, that White didn't really push him off the edge, or hotel tower, to is death. That's why the real killer of David Hall is tying to drive her nuts so she wouldn't be a creditable whiteness at White's upcoming murder trial!****SPOILERS**** Perry for once seems to be up against it in finding Hall's killer and just about gives up on the whole thing as well as his client Jordan White until he checks out the late David Hall's private secretary Andrew Lloyd, Dwight Schultz. Lloyd is something right out of one of the mystery novels that the late David Hall wrote in his weirdness and fanatical devotion to his former boss!Perry never encountering any one close to someone like Llyod in his entire legal career knows that there's something about him that just isn't quite right but can't put his finger on it! It's not in that he may have murdered Hall but certainly knows who did but doesn't want the world as well as Perry Mason to know who that person is! ***MAJOR SPOILER ALERT***like in one of his murder mystery novels Hall was literately killed off to make room for another character to take his place! Someone conjured up by the very imaginative mind of David Hall himself!
bob the moo
Jordan White is in the process of consulting his lawyer Perry Mason about the potential to sue writer David Hall over similarities to him in Hall's new book when he is called to visit Hall's mansion. When he arrives White finds he is just one of several guests but still there is no Hall. Each guest is given a copy of Hall's new book which apparently has characters very closely modelled on all of them and secrets in their pasts. That night each guest gets a sinister practical joke played on them and they confront White, full of threats and anger. At midnight that night White is called to the building's tower by Hall but just before he gets there someone seems to throw Hall off the building and the witnesses to the fall only see White in the tower. The police arrest White, who immediately turns to Perry Mason for defence and, while Perry starts the trial, Paul Drake investigates strange goings-on within the hotel.It has been some time since I have watched a Perry Mason film simply because I have seen almost all of them. So when this one came onto television I moved quickly to take the chance to see one of the few I have yet to watch. Having seen so many of them I knew just what I was getting into and, aside from a ghostly element to Drake's thread, this pretty much sticks to the formula that made the series achieve an uninspiring if enjoyable standard. The set up to the mystery is slightly different and it does use the ghost element well to make the investigation side more interesting (Drake almost always teams up with a young woman and gets punched at least this time it feels a bit different). The court case does the usual thing with some nice "objections" etc and the usual last minute revelations; it is never anything that special but it is on formula for the series and as such Perry Mason fans should enjoy it.The cast are pretty good. Burr hardly sets the screen alight but I always liked him as Mason and he has a good presence in the court scenes. Hale has a small role but is comfortable with it while Katt does his usual stuff to introduce a bit of action into the story. Stack is solid enough but I cannot hear his voice without seeing him in his Airplane character so that undermined the early scenes a bit for me. The support include Schultz, Delaney, Lipscomb and a few others turn in good performances, or at least good for this type of film.Overall an enjoyable Perry Mason film that takes a slightly different tact but generally sticks closely to formula and will please fans as a result. Nothing too special or dramatic and will certainly not win over those viewers left cold by the series in other films but it is worth a look if you like this sort of thing.
aesgaard41
I am not a big Perry Mason fan, but this is the movie that got me hooked more on the movie series than the tv series. It starts out with a pretty good ghost story which I wanted to know a lot more about than the murder. We don't even see much of this spooky old edifice that the plot revolves around, but what we do see has a wonderful shadowy "Dark Shadows" Collinwood kind of feel. The murder mystery, don't get me wrong, is excellant; it has more twists and turns than a politician in a confessional booth. Raymond Burr and Barbera Hale fit into their old roles very well, but William Katt will always remind me of "The Greatest American Hero." Robert Stack emotes a great character just a few shades away from his character of Elliot Ness and Dwight Schultz plays a nervous and slightly shady character not that far unlike Lt. Barclay of Star Trek. Kim Delaney's acting reminds me too much of too many other actresses, particularly that of Joanna Going, but it may be because of too many Dark Shadows parallels: the spooky location, the ghosts, the painting, hidden rooms and the squirrely maintenance man who is almost too similar to John Karlen's Willie Loomis. In short, if it hadn't been for my fondness for ghosts and that series, I might never have seen this movie at all.