Body of Evidence | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama Thriller |
Written by | Cynthia Whitcomb |
Directed by | Roy Campanella II |
Starring | Margot Kidder Barry Bostwick Tony Lo Bianco |
Music by | Roy Campanella II |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | Cynthia Whitcomb |
Cinematography | Frank Beascoechea |
Editor | Ray Daniels |
Running time | 108 minutes |
Production company | CBS Entertainment Production |
Original release | |
Network | CBS |
Release | January 22, 1988 |
Body of Evidence is a psychological thriller film directed by Roy Campanella II and starring Margot Kidder and Barry Bostwick. It premiered on CBS Network in January 1988. It was filmed in Alberta, Canada
An unsuspecting nurse (Margot Kidder) fears her forensic pathologist second-husband (Barry Bostwick) may be the psychotic serial strangler behind a recent rash of grisly murders. A local police detective (Tony LoBianco) does his best to unravel clues that may prevent future slayings. [1]
There is a serial killer loose in the area. He is killing young girls by garrotting them with a wire noose. The motive is unknown and therein lies the danger because it is then almost impossible to find out who is behind the crimes. The pathologist involved in most of the murder investigations, discovers a number of clues. He knows that the murderer is Afro-American, left-handed and sterile. He deducted all this from his examinations of the bodies. His wife, Carol (Margot Kidder), a nurse, organizes a neighborhood watch protection group because of the shocking slayings.
As the police detective delves deeper and deeper into the murders, he keeps coming up against a brick wall. Every advantage he gets is lost because as the list of victims grows, the composite sketch changes with each new witness, as if the killer had the gift of always keeping one step ahead of the detective's investigation. [2]
As the intensity of the killing increases, the need to catch the killer becomes more and more important. [3] This is because Carol - who is working closely with the police - finds reasons to fear for her own safety. All the victims resemble her, and the clues appear to point to her second husband, the forensic police pathologist involved in the investigation whose increasingly bizarre behaviour seems to implicate him even further. [4]
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