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All the Kind Strangers Poster

All the Kind Strangers

There's Nothing More Dangerous Than a Kind Face.
1974 | 73m | English

(1030 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Director: Burt Kennedy
Writer: Clyde Ware
Staring:
Details

An LA photographer, driving through backwoods country, spots a young boy walking on the side of the road and offers him a ride home. After reaching the isolated house, he discovers that the boy and his siblings are keeping a woman prisoner as their "mom" and now he is expected to be their "dad"...or else.
Release Date: Nov 12, 1974
Director: Burt Kennedy
Writer: Clyde Ware
Genres: Horror, Thriller, TV Movie
Keywords vietnam veteran, dog, held captive, lost in the woods
Production Companies Cinemation Industries
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 15, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Stacy Keach James "Jimmy" Wheeler
Samantha Eggar Carol Ann
John Savage Peter
Robby Benson John
Arlene Farber Martha
Tim Parkison Gilbert
Patti Parkison Rita
Brent Campbell James
John Connell Baby
Name Job
Clyde Ware Writer
Burt Kennedy Director
Lynn Stalmaster Casting
Gene Polito Director of Photography
Folmar Blangsted Editor
Ray Marsh Assistant Director
Paul Helmick Production Manager
Ronald Frangipane Original Music Composer
Clay Pitts Music Supervisor
Richard Briggs Administration
Lloyd Ahern II Camera Operator
Richard Overton Production Sound Mixer
O.T. Henderson Key Grip
Rich Harrison Sound Effects
Vincent Saizis Second Unit Director of Photography
Ray Summers Costumer
Ernie Sawyers Property Master
Thomas L. Fisher Special Effects
Robert B. Hauser Director of Photography
Robert Norin Makeup Artist
Karen Hale Wookey Script Supervisor
Joseph A. August Jr. Camera Operator
Dale Henry Production Manager
Gaylene Sagona Production Assistant
Larry Whitehead Gaffer
Name Title
Roger H. Lewis Producer
Thor Arngrim Co-Executive Producer
Jerry Gross Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 5 8 3
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2024 7 5 11 2
2024 8 5 12 3
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2024 12 3 6 1
2025 1 3 9 1
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2025 7 1 2 0
2025 8 0 2 0
2025 9 1 3 0
2025 10 1 2 1

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Reviews

talisencrw
8.0

Growing up, my introduction to the great hard-boiled work of Mickey Spillane was the TV series 'Mike Hammer', in which Stacy Keach was the ninth of the 11--so far--to portray the private eye. I was sad when the series was cancelled because he had been jailed for smuggling cocaine, but I always kept ... an eye out for his fine acting in the realm of cinema. This led to my great enjoyment of his work in 'The Ninth Configuration', 'W.', and 'Escape from L.A.', and when I saw that he was in this TV-movie, found in my 50-film Mill Creek pack, 'Nightmare Worlds', I was extremely enthused, though I had never seen any films by director Burt Kennedy, though I had heard of him. Keach is definitely one of my favourite character actors in contemporary or recent (post-1970) cinema. Though on a very low budget, with seven children and two adults, a car and a farmhouse, this 'Children of the Corn'-meets-'Deliverance'-meets-'Lord of the Flies' is really worth your time. It brings mood, despair and desperation together in a bewitching concoction, and is suspenseful, without resorting to gore or other gimmickry (judging from the lurid glances Keach's Jimmy got from the oldest girl, Martha, I think I can assume any modern-day remakes wouldn't pass up that plot-possibility, or possible incest between the coming-of-age characters), and at the same time, without resorting to cheesy, Hallmark-movie-of-the-week pat easy solutions to the crisis that not only the two kidnapped adults face, but the seven children, in their bleak, desperate, no-future situations do as well. Heartily recommended for the whole family. This is one film that parents and their children could watch together and talk about afterwards, for such questions as, 'Why did the children feel it was necessary for parent-type people to be around?' I wish more self-obsessed teenagers and young adults of today could watch this and think about how blessed they really are to have the parents and family that they do have. It might make an important difference in their lives. THAT is one of the beautiful and compelling mysteries of cinema.

Jun 23, 2021