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Magic

 
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Magic

  • Director: Richard Attenborough
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Psychological Thriller, Supernatural Horror
  • Themes: Toys Come to Life, Rise and Fall Stories, Mind Games
  • Main Cast: Anthony Hopkins, Ann-Margret, Burgess Meredith, Ed Lauter, E.J. Andre
  • Release Year: 1978
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 106 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Anthony Hopkins is a ventriloquist psychologically tormented by his dummy in the Richard Attenborough thriller Magic (a film with a story that may seem familiar to those who have seen the Michael Redgrave segment of Dead of Night, or the Cliff Robertson episode "The Dummy" from The Twilight Zone television series). William Goldman based his screenplay on his best-selling novel. Hopkins plays Corky, a seedy magician who is hooted off the stage in the low-rent clubs that will stoop to hire him. But when he comes across a dummy named Fats, his career is energized. Corky sees in Fats everything he lacks himself -- confidence, creativity, and verbal agility. With the help of his agent Ben Greene (Burgess Meredith), Corky rises to the top of the nightclub circuit. But with Corky's success comes an increased paranoia, and he turns down a TV contract, believing that it would mean taking a medical examination and that rumors of his mental instability might leak out. Corky takes off to a Catskills resort, run by Peggy Ann Snow (Ann-Margret), an old girlfriend now unhappily married to a volatile hick (Ed Lauter). While a frustrated Ben high tails it to the Catskills to find Corky, Corky discovers that he still has feelings for Peggy, but lands in the middle of a love triangle between the woman and her husband, where his schizophrenic personality manifests itself and additional murders occur. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

Review

Anthony Hopkins has claimed that playing Hannibal Lecter was simple once he nailed down the character's distinctive voice. Over a decade earlier, Hopkins delivered another great vocal performance as Fats. Before Corky becomes a ventriloquist, he is already a sweaty jumble of neuroses. Anybody who saw this man walking down the street would realize he is in need of professional help. Once Fats enters the picture, his nasal but forceful voice is both insistent and grating. The voice is a great piece of acting because it is easy to imagine oneself looking as disturbed as Corky if this voice were inside you all the time and had no way to release itself. Magic's suspense plot is overwrought and unoriginal, but Hopkins' performance gives the film a freshness and an energy it would otherwise lack. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Cast

Jerry Houser - Cab Driver; Brad Beesley - Young Corky; Scott Garrett - Corky's brother; Robert Hackman - Father; Joe Lowry - Club M.C.; Patrick McCullough - Doorman; Mary Munday - Mother; Lillian Randolph - Sadie; Beverly Sanders - Laughing Lady; David Ogden Stiers - George Hudson Todson; Michael Harte - Minister

Credit

Richard J. Lawrence - Art Director, Ruth Myers - Costume Designer, Arne Schmidt - First Assistant Director, Richard Attenborough - Director, C.O. Erickson - Executive Producer, Jerry Goldsmith - Composer (Music Score), Lee C. Harman - Makeup, Hallie Smith-Simmons - Makeup, Terence Marsh - Production Designer, Victor J. Kemper - Cinematographer, C.O. Erickson - Producer, Joseph E. Levine - Producer, Richard P. Levine - Producer, John Franco, Jr. - Set Designer, Larry Jost - Sound/Sound Designer, William Goldman - Screenwriter, William Goldman - Book Author

Similar Movies

The Dark Half; Devil Doll; The Great Gabbo; Trilogy of Terror; Making Contact; Dead Silence; Triloquist
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Wikipedia: Magic (film)
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Magic

poster
Directed by Richard Attenborough
Produced by Joseph E. Levine
Richard P. Levine
Written by William Goldman (novel)
William Goldman (screenplay)
Starring Anthony Hopkins
Ann-Margret
Burgess Meredith
Ed Lauter
David Ogden Stiers
Music by Jerry Goldsmith
Cinematography Victor J. Kemper
Editing by John Bloom
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) November 8, 1978 (USA)
Running time 107 min
Language English
Budget US $7,000,000
Gross revenue Unknown

Magic is a 1978 film starring Anthony Hopkins and Ann-Margret. It was written by William Goldman, who also wrote the novel on which it was based.

Contents

Plot

Charles "Corky" Withers has just failed in his first attempt at professional magic. His mentor says that he needs to have a better show business gimmick. A year later, Corky comes back as a combination magician and ventriloquist with a foul-mouthed dummy named Fats and is a huge success.

His powerful agent Ben Greene is on the verge of signing Corky for his own television show, but Corky bails out for the Catskills, claiming to be afraid of success. In truth, he doesn't want to take the required psychological testing because doctors might find out that he suffers from multiple personality disorder, and that even off-stage he hears Fats talking to him.

In the Catskills, he meets with his high-school crush, Peggy Ann Snow, who is stuck in a passionless marriage. Corky performs a feat of magic with a deck of cards that charms Peg into thinking they are soul mates. They make love, which sparks the jealousy not only of Peggy's tough-guy husband, Duke, but the dummy Fats.

Greene has tracked Corky down. After a tense confrontation where Greene discovers the truth about Corky's mental state, the agent demands that Corky get help.

Fats, however, convinces Corky to kill Greene. Corky does this by using Fats' hard, wooden head. He then removes all of Greene's identification and drags the corpse to the lake.

The next morning Fats becomes even more possessive and jealous when Corky says that he plans to leave Fats behind so that he and Peggy can go away together.

Duke returns from his trip earlier than expected. He suspects she cheated on him with Corky. After a heated argument, Peggy storms off and Duke decides to have a talk with Corky on the lake. Rather than confront him, Duke awkwardly confides to Corky that he loves Peggy and is worried about losing her. Duke suddenly spots Greene's dead body on the edge of the lake.

They row toward the body. Duke, believing it could still be alive, sends Corky to get help. Duke finds that the man is indeed dead. Curious, he decides to search Corky's cabin.

Fats kills him with "help" from Corky. (The dummy stabs Duke while Corky is covered by a curtain behind him.)

An increasingly deranged Corky manages to pull himself together and persuade Peg to run away with him. But she insists on waiting to tell Duke face to face. She thinks everything is fine until Fats "comes alive" and reveals that Corky's card trick is only a ruse he uses to seduce women, and that Peg is only the latest of his conquests. Repulsed, she rejects Corky and locks herself in her bedroom.

Fats says that, from this point on, he will make the decisions in Corky's life. He immediately asserts this new authority by ordering Corky to kill Peg.

Corky, turning on the charm and using Fats' voice, apologizes to Peggy from in front of her locked door. A short while later, Corky returns with a bloodstained knife, Fats seems pleased — until it is revealed that the blood on the knife is Corky's, having committed suicide so that he won't kill anyone else. As a result Fats also feels "faint." They wonder which of them will die first.

Moments later, Peggy returns to their cabin, happily calling out that she has changed her mind and has decided to run away with Corky after all.

Cast

Reception

The film received mixed reviews when released.

Vincent Canby for the New York Times wrote that "Magic is neither eerie nor effective. It is, however, very heavy of hand." [1]

Gene Siskel, film critic from the television show Siskel & Ebert, gave the film a very positive review, and ranked it at #9 on his list of the 10 best films of 1978.

"The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review" 1990 writeup of the film remarks that Hopkins appears stiff in the lead role, but praised the supporting cast: "Ann-Margaret... invests her role with a considerable sparkle. Particularly good is the great and underrated Burgess Meredith whose sharp and alert Hollywood agent is a real plum of a performance. Jerry Goldsmith also adds a fine nervy carnivalesque score." [2]

Goldman received a 1979 Edgar Award, from the Mystery Writers of America, for Best Motion Picture Screenplay.

Hopkins received each a Golden Globe and BAFTA nomination for his role as the tragically disturbed Corky.

The trailer for this film was pulled from TV due to calls from parents who claimed that it gave their children nightmares.[citation needed] The trailer in question is less than 30 seconds in length. It features Fats reciting the tagline, after which his eyeballs roll into the back of his head. This is followed by a cast reading, then Fats opens his eyes and gazes to his left.

Legal issues with the film

As 20th Century Fox never owned complete rights to this film (they did and still do own the theatrical distribution and music rights), other companies have released home video versions of Magic over succeeding years under different licenses. In the meantime, the film continued to play on broadcast television in edited versions. However, subsequent legal complications kept the film from being formally reissued on VHS and DVD in the last decade due in part to Embassy Pictures' corporate holdings being divided amongst different entities. Recently, the rights to this film were acquired by American Movie Classics and its parent company, Rainbow Media Holdings, LLC (while television rights now reside with CBS Paramount Television), and now the uncut version is once again available on widescreen DVD.

Tagline

Abracadabra, I sit on his knee.
Presto, change-o, and now he is me!
Hocus Pocus, we take her to bed,
Magic is fun...we're dead.

Footnotes

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