In New York City, David Stillwell struggles to recover his memory before the people who are trying to kill him succeed. Who is he, who are they, and why is he surrounded by murder?
Gregory Peck
David Stillwell
Diane Baker
Shela
Walter Matthau
Ted Caselle
Robert H. Harris
Dr. Broden
Kevin McCarthy
Sylvester Josephson
Leif Erickson
The Major
Walter Abel
Charles Stewart Calvin
George Kennedy
Willard
Jack Weston
Lester
Anne Seymour
Frances Calvin
House Jameson
Bo
Hari Rhodes
Lt. Franken
Syl Lamont
Benny
Eileen Baral
Irene
Neil Fitzgerald
Joe Turtle
Franklin Cover
Group Leader
Don Anderson
Bill Baldwin
Al Beaudine
Roxane Berard
Robert Brubaker
Toni Covington
John Crowther
Robert Dahdah
Ann Doran
Jerry Dunphy
Douglas Evans
Harry Fleer
Rian Garrick
Gerald Gordon
Damian O'Flynn
John Pedrini
Barbara Perry
Murray Pollack
Bill Quinn
Allan Ray
Walter Reed
Victor Romito
George Simmons
Ann Staunton
Bert Stevens
Robert Swan
Aline Towne
Howard Wendell
Director
Edward Dmytryk
Novel
Howard Fast
Screenplay
Peter Stone
October 4, 2015
6
Myriad Maze of Mental Mirages.
Mirage is directed by Edward Dmytryk and adapted by Peter Stone from a book written by Howard Fast. It stars Gregory Peck, Diane Baker, Walter Matthau, Kevin McCarthy, Leif Erickson and George Kennedy. Music is scored by Quincy Jones and cinematography by Joseph MacDonald.
David Stillwell (Peck) finds he is suffering from Unconscious Amnesia and that he has blacked out the events of the previous two years. That's rare, but Stillwell must find out what happened because he might have a lover, has shifty characters after him and he may even have committed murder?.
20 years after appearing in the tricksy and turny psychological thriller "Spellbound" for Alfred Hitchcock, Gregory Peck jumps into the same type of shoes with a modicum of success. It's a little too contrived for its own good, with the odd character serving to the plot as god knows what? Seriously, what is Baker doing here? While the weak ending doesn't pay off on the suspense and mystery that had previously been well orchestrated by Dmytryk. On the plus side is the shadowy black and white photography by MacDonald, giving the film an edge, and the use of real New York locations lend the film some serio worth.
Matthau slips in and steals the film from an efficient Peck, and Kennedy and McCarthy score well as muscle and shifty respectively. It's not essential as a Peck or Dmytryk piece, or as a politico/mystery thriller, but enough interest within to keep it above average and Matthau more than makes it worth while. 6/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00