
Color, 1978, 95 mins. 17 secs.
Directed by Michael Anderson
Starring Jean Simmons, Cliff Robertson, Jenny Agutter, Simon Ward, Ron Moody, Judy Geeson, Michael Jayston, Flora Robson, David Tomlinson, Jack Warner
Vinegar Syndrome (Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9)
film that seemed to haunt
the shelves of every single mom and pop video store in the '80s without anyone ever talking about it, Dominique (a.k.a. Dominique Is Dead) somehow did its best to hide the remarkable caliber of its talent in front of and behind the camera. That may be because the film is something of a tough sell in general, an old-fashioned spooky thriller that doesn't firmly decide on a genre (horror? suspense film? arty mood piece?) until the last few minutes. It also gets away with its wildly overqualified cast by only using most of them for a scene or two, even keeping star Jean Simmons in a mostly supporting role with less than half of the film actually on screen. Released in 1979, this was a very late entry in the '70s wave of post-"horror hag" classy all-star thrillers like Night Watch and the remake of The Spiral Staircase designed to provide an alternative to the more violent horror hits that were flourishing throughout the decade. None of them took off at the box office, but on VHS they found more of an audience where their cozy chills could work more effectively.
is up to something fishy and could be trying to drive her mad, which eventually culminates in Dominique hanging herself and being
buried. But is she really gone? The family doctor (Oliver's Moody) signed off on the death certificate, Dominique's sister Ann (Agutter) doesn't seem to be able to contest anything, and family chauffeur Tony (The Monster Club's Ward) is trying to keep things under control as the will reading approaches. Soon questions arise. Did David drive her to suicide? Is Dominique really dead, since her ghost seems to be haunting him at night in their house? And what's the final end game behind the whole thing?
shopworn source material invigorated a bit more than expected by everyone involved. 