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The Morning After (1974 film)

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1974 television film by Richard T. Heffron
The Morning After
GenreDrama
Based onThe Morning After
by Jack B. Weiner (as Jack Weiner)
Teleplay byRichard Matheson
Directed byRichard T. Heffron
StarringDick Van Dyke
Lynn Carlin
Don Porter
Theme music composerPete Carpenter
Mike Post
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producerLawrence Turman
ProducerStan Margulies
CinematographyMichel Hugo
EditorDavid Newhouse
Running time74 minutes
Production companyWolper Productions
Original release
NetworkABC
ReleaseFebruary 13, 1974 (1974-02-13)

The Morning After is a 1974 American made-for-television drama film starring Dick Van Dyke and Lynn Carlin, based on the best selling novel by Jack B. Weiner, and with a screenplay by Richard Matheson.

Production background

Van Dyke played a successful public relations writer who has a serious drinking problem that threatens his marriage and life. Around this time, Van Dyke admitted he himself was an alcoholic and had been seeking treatment (one of the first celebrities to do so). This film also marked Van Dyke's first real attempt to escape his Rob Petrie image. Van Dyke was nominated for an Emmy Award for Best Lead Actor in a Drama but lost to Hal Holbrook. Today, the film is still shown in some treatment centers.

Plot

Charlie Lester is a public relations speech writer for an oil magnate. He is married with two children. As the film opens we see him drinking heavily at an office party and then having an argument with his wife Fran after he tipsily returns home. The song "Yesterday", sung by Joey Scarbury, is played several times in the film as Charlie continues in a downward spiral. He is given a jolting reason to quit drinking after his boss scolds him for appearing half drunk at an important business meeting, then ruining a dinner party at his home and even hitting his wife in a drunken rage. He is shown afterwards literally on his knees, begging her forgiveness.

It is revealed in the film that Charlie's father was an alcoholic and his mother was abusive, ignoring him while lavishing her affections on his younger brother. He breaks down as he tells this story to a therapist. In massive denial and pain, he drops out of therapy and continues to drink, culminating in a physical assault on Fran as she tries to drag him out of a bar. When he returns home, she informs him she is seeing a lawyer and filing assault charges. Charlie then becomes violently ill and vomits blood. His doctor informs him he may be suffering from liver damage and "either you stop drinking or you're going to drink yourself to death!"

In a desperate attempt to stop, Charlie takes a vacation and goes alone to a seaside resort. He winds up passed out on the beach. He suffers a terrifying attack of delirium tremens and wakes up in a mental ward. Even in this desperate circumstance, Fran stays with him and his sympathetic doctor informs him he can be helped, but his recovery is entirely up to him. Shortly afterward, Charlie escapes from the hospital and goes to a bar. He calls Fran and tearfully apologizes for all the pain he has caused her. He tells her he loves her and their children with all his heart but "It's no use...there's just no point...I'm no damn good, I never was...goodbye, my heart." The final scene shows Charlie alone, drunk and hopeless on a deserted beachfront.

Cast

References

  1. The Morning After (1974 TV movie) at IMDb
  2. Utterback, Betty (September 10, 1976). "Van Dyke Can't Stay Serious". El Paso Times. p. 12-C – via newspapers.com.
  3. McKenna, Michael (2013). The ABC Movie of the Week: Big Movies for the Small Screen. Scarecrow Press. p. 131. ISBN 9780810891579.

External links

Films directed by Richard T. Heffron
Richard Matheson
Novels
Short stories
Screenplays
Adaptations
by others
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