Lively, entertaining reviews of, and essays on, old and newer films and everything relating to them, written by professional author William Schoell.

Thursday, October 17, 2019

MURDER IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

Hank Stratton and Helen Hunt
MURDER IN NEW HAMPSHIRE: THE PAMELA WOJAS SMART STORY (1991 telefilm). Director: Joyce Chopra.

Pamela Smart (Helen Hunt) is the media director of a high school in New Hampshire. She begins work on a project with several teens, and begins an affair with one of them, 15-year-old Billy Flynn (Chad Allen). Pamela assures Billy that her love for him is genuine, but that her supposedly abusive husband, Gregg (Hank Stratton) will make her life miserable if she divorces him. Pamela importunes Billy, with the help of some friends, to murder Gregg, and after some agonizing, he does. Pam is sure that the police will never figure out her involvement, but people, after all, will talk ...

Chad Allen as killer Billy
Murder in New Hampshire is based on real-life events, some of which were later fictionalized in the film To Die For. This is a fairly standard TV movie with some good acting, but it is never what you could call riveting film-making. Allen, who was 17 at the time, probably makes the best impression as the gullible Billy, although there is good work from Stratton and from Ken Howard and Michael Learned as Gregg's parents. Hunt is also good, but she doesn't get across the hardness and sheer dumb dead-commonness of Pamela Smart. Chad Allen, who is openly gay, later appeared in the film Save Me (along with many others), and again proved what a fine actor he is.

Hank Stratton  as Gregg Smart
Smart, who is serving a life sentence, was recently interviewed on Dateline. She maintains her innocence to this day, and refuses to show remorse or admit her guilt, two things she must do if she ever wishes to be paroled. (Flynn and the other boys have all been paroled.) She downplays the fact that she had an affair with a minor, a fact that might well have sealed her fate even if she were, improbably, innocent. The point was made, as it should be, that the true victim in this is Gregg Smart, who by all accounts was a perfectly nice guy. Joyce Chopra later directed a somewhat better telefilm, The Danger of Lovewhich was about another sociopathic lady, Carolyn Warmus, who murdered her boyfriend's wife. Not surprisingly, Smart and Warmus became friends in the penitentiary!

Verdict: Fair-to-middling TV version of a fascinating case. **1/2. 

4 comments:

angelman66 said...

Have not seen this but do like the cast. I am particularly a fan of gay actor Chad Allen, and need to see him with that beautiful long blond hair!!! Gotta love the 80s and 90s...I used to have a hairstyle like that myself!
- C

William said...

I think I had long hair one semester in college. I looked awful, but that was the thing in those days!

Chad Allen is a fine actor. Hope he continues to have a good career.

Anonymous said...

All wrong, all wrong....Billy had long, shaggy dark hair that fell into his eyes...that extreme, comb-back 80s thing, that hairdo, is all wrong for the time, the location,those type of kids, and the person. Billy looked like a vulnerable boy, cute, not like a fashion model. Then the first shot shows him in an expensive, collared shirt when he was definitely a tee-shirt and jeans kid...just all wrong for the part, esp the way they have him made up.

William said...

Interesting, but that doesn't take away from his performance, I think. Details about clothing and the like are often wrong in period pieces like this, so I won't argue with you -- it's been awhile since I saw the film. Anyway, thanks for your comments!