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Nowhere to Run

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Nowhere to Run

Harry's married to Marian and things are not going all that well, so he wants out but somehow feels that a divorce is not the answer. After developing a winning blackjack system, he hatches a plan that takes years of preparation: to fake his death, assume a new identity and win $500,000 at blackjack.

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Release : 1978
Rating : 6.7
Studio : MTM Enterprises, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Set Decoration, 
Cast : David Janssen Allen Garfield Linda Evans John Randolph Neva Patterson
Genre : Drama TV Movie

Cast List

Reviews

SpuffyWeb
2018/08/30

Sadly Over-hyped

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GazerRise
2018/08/30

Fantastic!

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Console
2018/08/30

best movie i've ever seen.

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BelSports
2018/08/30

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

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Leofwine_draca
2018/05/18

NOWHERE TO RUN is an odd little character study TV movie from 1978. The presence of David Janssen as the protagonist is appropriate given the title and his fame for appearing in THE FUGITIVE. Janssen plays a miserable character, downtrodden by his wife, who decides to fake his own death and disappear in order to begin a new life; much like in THE FALL AND RISE OF REGINALD PERRIN. The astonishing thing is that Janssen's plan takes no less than 15 years to achieve fruition! That this works at all is down to the unusual nature of the story, which explores a kind of situation you don't normally see play out on screen, alongside Janssen's hugely sympathetic chief performance.

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filmklassik
2018/05/08

Possibly the most abysmally plotted melodrama I have ever seen. It plays like three separate movies all stitched together. In the first movie, an SF-based structural engineer and JFK-aficionado (David Janssen), married to cold fish Stephanie Powers, embarks on a 12 year plan to win half a million dollars using his foolproof blackjack system, fake his own death, and start a new life overseas. Or something. Along the way, Janssen's wife hires a loser PI to keep tabs on Jannsen. Janssen and the loser PI become fast friends (don't ask), and Jannsen uses his cardsharp skills to help the loser PI get out of debt to the mob. That's movie #2.In movie #3, Jannsen successfully fakes his own death and disappears, after which his "widow" Powers goes on to marry her longtime boyfriend (yep, all this time, Powers was cheating on Jannsen) and in the final 15 minutes, Jannsen and his new love, Linda Evans, board a plane to Israel THAT IS IMMEDIATELY OVERTAKEN BY HIJACKERS.You read that right.So, insane, disjointed plotting. Good actors spouting okay lines under the guidance of a skilled director. But the story lets everyone down. Including the viewer.

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veggiecook
2007/11/11

I am so glad to actually own a copy of this great movie, starring the late great David Janssen. Allen Garfield and Stephanie Powers are also superb in this believable (perhaps based on truth?) adaptation of Charles Einstein's novel, The Blackjack Hijack. The movie is much better than the book,much better ending in the film version. Usually I enjoy the book better than the movie, not the case this time.I loved everything about this movie. I was always a big fan of David Janssen, this is probably my favorite movie that he starred in, shortly before his very untimely and tragic death.They don't make movies of this quality any more it seems, good from start to finish!Do take the time to view this one, should it show up on your late night TV lineup.

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lrcdmnhd72
2007/09/22

David Janssen seems about the best choice for playing Harry Adams, a lonely, but brilliant structural engineer in a loveless marriage. It might be possible to accumulate $500,000 in high-stakes black jack playing, being able to do it in 15 years or less. In fact, a BJ card counting team went into Resorts International Casino, around 1978, in Atlantic City and won $145,000 in a period of ~8-9 days and was barred.The only thing is, I don't think any BJ player would be allowed to bring a notepad to a BJ table. This might be construed as a form of card-counting, yet was necessary for the plot.When Herbie, the Private Investigator, needed $10,000 to pay off his gambling debts, why didn't Harry (Janssen) simply remove the $10,000 from the nearly $500,000 in BJ winnings that he had already amassed, instead of getting involved in a rather dangerous, high-stakes, back room poker game? Much simpler. To me, $490,000 would be close enough.

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