Seven in Darkness
Seven in Darkness
NR | 23 September 1969 (USA)
Seven in Darkness Trailers

A plane carrying seven blind people to a convention for the blind in Seattle crashes in the mountains due to severe weather. Only the blind survive the crash and they must make their way back through the wilderness to civilization.

Reviews
Inclubabu

Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.

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Gurlyndrobb

While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.

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Teddie Blake

The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.

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Staci Frederick

Blistering performances.

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Woodyanders

A motley assortment of blind folks are forced to fend for themselves in the hostile wilderness after they are the sole survivors of a plane crash. Director Michael Caffey keeps the gripping story moving along at a brisk pace, takes some time to develop the characters, maintains a tough serious tone throughout, and generates a good deal of tension. John W. Bloch's tight script not only offers a touching message about the resiliency of disabled people and the need for our protagonists to set aside their differences in order to work together as a team so they can all survive, but also sets up assorted forms of cruel peril that include the bitter cold, a pack of vicious wolves, and a rickety old wooden bridge. The sound acting from the able cast rates as another substantial asset: Milton Berle as sour grouch Sam Fuller, Sean Garrison as troubled Vietnam veteran Mark Larson, Dina Merrill as the sweet Emily Garth, Barry Nelson as the selfish and deceitful Alex Swain, Lesley Ann Warren as the fragile Deborah Cabot, Alejandro Rey as the concerned Ramon Rahos, Tippy Walker as Ramon's pregnant wife Christine, and Arthur O'Connell as the amiable Larry Wise. Howard Schwartz's sharp cinematography provides lots of nice shots of the beautiful sylvan scenery. Mark Bucci's robust score hits the stirring spot. A nifty little nail-biter.

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kapelusznik18

****SPOILERS**** One of the first and best made for TV movie ever made that has to do with a plane of blind people on their way to a seeing eye or blind persons convention in Seattle that goes off course and crashes in the wilds of Northern Canada with the seven blind survivors having to find their way back to civilization before the cold weather as well as wolf packs finishes them all off. Lead by blind Vietnam Veteran Mark Larson, Sean Garrison, the group find their way to an old abandoned railroad track that they hope can show them the way out. Only for one of them Larry Wise, Arthur O'Connell, who ends up falling through the cracks and to his death into the rushing stream below when he made a wrong step.The blind people's attempt to get rescued was sabotaged by one of them Alex Swain, Barry Nelson, who stole their supply of food and water and tried to blame Mark for it as well as revealing that he chickened out in Vietnam and left six of his comrades or GI's to get slaughtered by the Viet Cong which he felt he'll do to him and his fellow blind men & women lost in the woods. There's also the I'm all for me and no one else Sam Fuller, Milton Berle,who feels that Alex is nothing but a lowlife rat and tries to have him fall to his death off a cranky wooden bridge by leading him , with his walking cane, the wrong way. Only to have Mark,whom Alex was trying to screw and blame for all the trouble the blind survivor found themselves in, to save his sorry a** making up for his cowardice that he showed back in Vietnam.***SPOILERS*** Almost too emotionally drained to watch ending with the blind survivors after surviving the cold and a wolf attack find their way to safety by a friendly Rin Rin Tin like dog, not a wild and dangerous 150 pound Timber Wolf, coming to their rescue and having both his master the little boy and his pop leading them back to their home as well as civilization! Great performances by everyone in the cast with Milton Berle a real standout in him playing both a bad as well as good guy part. That by him finally "seeing" the light and realizes that by just trying to save himself he'll not only jeopardize everyone else's lives but if he in some way survives he'll also have to live with their deaths, like Mark in what he did in Vietnam, on his conscious for the rest of his life.

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Michael_Elliott

Seven in Darkness (1969) *** (out of 4) A plane full of blind people are being taken to Seattle during a very bad storm when it crashes into the wilderness. Naturally, everyone on the plane who could see are now dead and it's up to seven people, including a pregnant woman, to try and make it out of the woods even though they can't see.This here was the first ABC Movie of the Week and it's pretty funny to see how much all future TV movies can pretty much be seen here. You've got a very interesting story to grab your attention. You've got famous faces like Milton Berle, Barry Nelson, Leslie Ann Warren and Arthur O'Connell. You've got a short running time that goes by very quickly. And you've got the cliffhanger moments that build into a commercial. SEVEN IN DARKNESS has several flaws but there's no question that it holds your attention from the opening moments until the closing credits and it's certainly worth viewing.If you're into disaster movies then you're going to enjoy this as the idea because it is quite good. How would seven blind people make it down off a mountain? With a running time of just 73 minutes nothing is given to us in great detail. In fact, I would have liked to have seen the "how" a tad bit more because it seems their journey was just a tad bit too easy for the most part. Still, there are some tense scenes including one where a couple members are attacked by wolves and another where they must try to find a way to cross a river. The performances for the most part are good and on the whole SEVEN IN DARKNESS is a good little film.

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Isaac5855

I have fond memories of this minor classic as the very first ABC Tuesday Movie of the Week. SEVEN IN DARKNESS was the premiere installment of these 90-minute films made for TV that appeared on Tuesday and Wednesday nights on ABC between 1969 and 1975. This film was an unsettling adventure about seven blind people, flying to some kind of convention for blind people and what happens when the plane crashes and they are the only survivors. Sean Garrison, Barry Nelson, Milton Berle, Dina Merrill, Alejandro Rey, Lesley Ann Warren, and Elizabeth (Tippy) Walker grope their way through the title roles. I remember finding it very unsettling to watching blind people stumbling in around in dark forests and tripping over things, but it definitely held my attention. The performances are OK, with Berle and Merrill doing standout work, but it is the plight of these survivors that sustains viewer interest here. No masterpiece, but a guilty pleasure of mine.

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