Dancing In The Dark
Dancing In The Dark
| 05 July 1995 (USA)
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Anna Forbes suffers an attack and sexual abuse by her father-in-law. But when she overcomes her fear and tells her husband Mark what happened he does not believe her, choosing instead to believe his father who denies everything. As Anna becomes increasingly desperate to be believed and her actions become more erratic, Mark has her committed to a mental institution for psychiatric treatment.

Reviews
Cathardincu

Surprisingly incoherent and boring

Tacticalin

An absolute waste of money

Rio Hayward

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

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Billy Ollie

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

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Raven J.

I seldom write movie reviews but this one made me so angry that I had no choice. First off, the synopsis is way off! The main character is not raped but attacked by her father-in-law and she doesn't wait to tell what happen. The wife tells her husband immediately after it happens! The husband doesn't believe his wife and instead of dealing with the reality of it, he takes her to see a psychiatrist that his dad of all people recommends. This psychiatrist is a complete jerk and prescribes her with depression pills and after 30 minutes into the movie, she's taking like four different kinds of medicine. The husband goes so far as having his wife committed! This is the part that I had to fast-forward through because this part of the storyline seemed so far off track to what the movie is actually about. The wife is pumped with all kinds of injections and pills and treated with so much disregard that it made me more angry and frustrated about how the movie is playing out. I love TV movies and do have a few I like which stars Victoria Principal. This is not one of them!! This movie has been in my Watchlist with Amazon Prime for a year or so and I decided to watch it early this morning. Big mistake. I would strongly encourage anyone to stay away from this film.It takes the last 15 minutes of the film for the husband to "see the light". I would've divorced him after I got released from the mental institution. SMH

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filmsfan38

I liked this movie very much.I just finished watching it tonight, but had seen half of it on TV before, so I got the DVD copy of it. I don't think Victoria Principal gets much credit for her acting and I hadn't seen her in a movie before and I was surprised how good she was in this movie. The movie is based on a true story and its hard to believe that such things can happen. Principal plays the part of Anna, the wife of a lawyer who won't believe what she tells him about someone else (can't give the plot away). I could identify with Anna's total frustration with her husband not believing her. It would drive me crazy too. Anna ends up having a breakdown and is forced into a psychiatric ward where she is treated badly and being there makes her more ill than when she first went in. Nicholas Campbell (Da Vinci's Inquest on Canadian TV) plays the part of the sympathetic and compassionate husband but in the beginning he is not supportive of his wife because he doesn't want to believe her. His acting is top rate and he is convincing. plays his part very well.Robert Vaughn and Kenneth Welsh also show some excellent acting. An under-rated movie. If you like this kind of movie, get it if you can.

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Robert J. Maxwell

Back in the 1970s a study by the sociologist Rosenhans and his students (under the above title) made headlines. Rosenhans had his students, all perfectly sane, go to the admissions offices of a couple of psychiatric hospitals, complaining of (fake) symptoms, like hearing voices. All the "pseudopatients" were admitted and immediately dropped their symptoms and acted sane. They sat around the ward taking notes of their experiences, which, at one institution, was described as "engaging in writing behavior." After varying periods of time all the pseudopatients were released, most with a diagnosis of "schizophrenia, in remission." The reason the study made headlines is that it seemed to blame mental illness on society, a hip and fashionable radical idea at the time. It's been pretty thoroughly discredited by now because of various methodological flaws, except among some die-hards. But this movie could have been written in five minutes by one of those die-hards.The whole story is rigged. Victoria Principal, a paragon of sanity, is assaulted by her father-in-law, the greedy drunk snobbish grasping goaty Robert Vaughan. She tells her somewhat dullish husband and, on the advice of a distracted but smarmy quack, she admits herself to a psychiatric hospital that thrives on patients who are covered by medical insurance. The staff have reassured her that she can leave whenever she wants, make phone calls, receive visitors, or whatever, but -- you know what? They're lying. They get rid of her husband pronto, then take her behind locked doors where they shoot her full of drugs and keep her in a bare room with no toilet and no chocolates on the pillow. Not even a pillow. Not even a bed, come to think of it. The staff are a lot of ogres. They refuse to provide her with sanitary napkins, won't allow visitors, tear her away from the phone when she tries to call for help. She -- this is just terrible -- she even loses her baby. A walking zombie. Her husband is a lawyer. When he again visits and insists on seeing her they demand to know who he is. "I'm her lawyer!" he claims. Then, upon further inquiry, he admits, "Well, I'm her husband." Nurse Diesel tells Victoria that her husband is here but he's delusional and dangerous so she shouldn't see him. Once again hubby is given the bum's rush while he helpfully flails about like a raving lunatic shouting, "I'm her husband! I'm her lawyer! I'm her husband AND her lawyer! I have rights!" Finally she gets out and is admitted to a kindlier gentler institution where the head shrink gives her a baseball bat and tells her to whup this mattress while shouting accusations at her husband as if it were he instead of a rolled-up mattress she was belaboring. Of course, after such catharsis, she recovers but has to come to terms with the fact that her husband is blind to her needs and to his own father's flaws. But why go on? The heroes are heroes and the villains are villains and the husband is the "good German" of the piece who finally sees what a blind weakling he's been. I haven't warned about spoilers because I didn't think any warnings were needed. You can see the end coming a mile away. It's hard to imagine anyone sitting back and taking this retrograde garbage at all seriously, except maybe Rosenhans, who may have leaped up and clapped all the way through it. It -- how do the kiddies put it? -- it "sux". I don't want to waste anything resembling eloquence on this claptrap. It isn't bad enough to be amusing, but it's easily bad enough to make one ashamed of being a TV viewer.

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robin.smith

A very much underrated film, I found myself absolutely glued to the television set. Funnily enough, although I am a man, I found myself identifying with the woman, beautifully portrayed by Victoria Principle. Maybe this is because I have suffered from mental illness myself and know some of the hideous things that can go on in mental institutions. This is not a film made simply to entertain, so if that's all you're after you'd be better off watching Tom & Jerry. The story might seem implausible but is supposed to be based on true events. There is a very strong message that the film delivers, namely that however inconceivable a person's story, sometimes it may be true, and that the person that you most admire may in fact be a liar. To disbelieve someone who is telling the truth, simply because it goes against the grain, is a terrible injustice. A deep but brilliant and highly moving film.

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