Diary of the Dead (1976 film)

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Diary of the Dead
Diary of the Dead FilmPoster.jpeg
Directed by Arvin Brown
Written by I.C. Rapoport
Robert L. Fish
Ruth Rendell (novel One Across, Two Down )
Produced byCharles B. Moss Jr.
Starring Geraldine Fitzgerald
Hector Elizondo
Salome Jens
Joseph Maher
Austin Pendleton
Kate Wilkinson
Cinematography Robert M. Baldwin, Jr.
Edited byMurray Solomon
Music by Jacques Urbont
Distributed byB.S. Moss Enterprises
Release date
  • 1976 (1976)
Running time
93 min
Country Flag of the United States.svg
Language English

Diary of the Dead is a 1976 neo-noir film directed by Arvin Brown, based on the 1971 novel One Across, Two Down by Ruth Rendell. [1] It was produced by Charles B. Moss. Robert L. Fish, author of Mute Witness, the basis of Bullitt , contributed to the screenplay.

Contents

Plot

Stan (Hector Elizondo) and Vera (Salome Jens), a childless couple, live with Vera's wealthy mother, Maud Kennaway (Geraldine Fitzgerald), who has already suffered a stroke. Maud dislikes and is openly contemptuous of her infertile son-in-law.

Stan dumps Kennaway's nitroglycerine pills down the toilet and replace them with worthless sugar substitutes. Maud Kennaway's friend (and Vera's godmother), Ethel Dean (Kate Wilkinson), comes to visit, but Mrs. Patterson (Joyce Ebert)'s boarding house is not ready. Unable to find her own pills, Ethel Dean uses some of Maud's now worthless ones, and dies on Stan's couch following a cardiac incident. Stan tells the 911 operator that the deceased is Maud Kennaway, and Dr. Klein (Austin Pendleton) provides the necessary paperwork for her remains to be taken away for cremation. Maud wakes up, finds the body, and accuses him of murder. Stan manages to dodge all her blows with her cane, which causes her to stumble and cut her head on the radiator. He buries his mother-in-law in the backyard and plants the new tree he purchased some time earlier on top of her remains.

Stan goes to Mrs. Patterson's boarding house to collect Ethel's things. After Maud Kennaway's will is read, in which Vera's portion is to be held in trust for any natural-born children, an investigation is opened to find Ethel Dean, also a beneficiary of Maud's will.

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