Journey to Midnight
Journey to Midnight
| 01 January 1968 (USA)
Journey to Midnight Trailers

Two episodes of the UK tv show 'Journey to the Unknown'. The episodes are 'Poor Butterfly' and 'The Indian Spirit Guide'.

Reviews
blanche-2

Probably thanks to "The Twilight Zone," there were a few of this kind of show around in the '60s and '70s, including the British series "Thriller," which, like this British series, used American actors as the stars."Journey to Midnight" is hosted by Sebastian Cabot (I understand Joan Crawford also hosted but was cut out of this edit) and contains two episodes from the show: "Poor Butterfly" and "The Indian Spirit Guide." The first one, "Poor Butterfly" stars Chad Everett and is fairly easy to figure out. A young man is invited to a costume party taking place on an estate, but he doesn't know the host. While there, he meets a woman in a butterfly costume; some of the other guests think he is trying to steal her from her fiancé, who is not present. When he wants to leave, she begs him to take her to London, but she is warned that she can't go.The second one, "The Indian Spirit Guide" is far superior, with a couple of neat twists. Julie Harris stars as Leona Gillings, a widow anxious to communicate with her late husband as he wanted her to do. She hires a detective Jerry Crown (Tom Adams) whom she has been told by her secretary (his girlfriend) is an expert in routing out fake mediums. At one point, to his girlfriend's surprise and anger, Jerry decides that rather than go for the easy money for a few weeks, it would be better if he married Leona. Then Leona is approached by a medium who says she has a message from her husband.I basically gave a 7 to this combo because of "The Indian Spirit Guide" because it should really make you gasp at the end. Enjoy.

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ctomvelu1

Don't be deceived by the seemingly leisurely pace of "The Indian Spirit Guide," written by Rober Bloch and the second of two episodes strung together from an old UK anthology series. It ends with a bang, and when I say a bang, I mean just that. Over. Finis. Shock time. Fade to black, ;eaving the viewer stunned. A widow (the marvelous Julie Harris of "The Haunting" fame) wants to contact her dead husband, and enlists the aid of a suave detective (Tom Adams, best known for playing James Bond-types from time to time). She pays him to attend various seances and visit various mediums and psychics, to determine if they are legit. Of course, they're all fake. Or are they? Adams decides he might as well marry the old girl and take her for all she's worth. If only he hadn't been so greedy. The final seance, where the detective gets more than he bargained for, is a a doozy and quite suspenseful. This is classic 1960s television. clearly inspired by "The Twilight Zone" and "Night Gallery."

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moonspinner55

Two episodes of the UK television serial "Journey to the Unknown", with Sebastian Cabot as our host (Joan Crawford's aid as co-hostess was either edited from the original telecast or has simply been deleted from the syndicated version). "Poor Butterfly" has Chad Everett being invited to a costume party where he knows no one but everyone knows him; it's an anticlimactic story mounted with such leisurely precision that it's enough to drive one batty. Episode 2, "The Indian Spirit Guide", is much better, with Julie Harris hoping to contact her dead husband, turning to impossibly handsome, impossibly masculine detective Tom Adams, who exposes fake mediums with alarming regularity; the short story is well-written and acted and has a twist or two. Neither presentation is particularly memorable, but the cynical edge in both is an amusing sign-of-the-times (these days, TV-movies have to establish their tone right from the start, driving all points home in the first act). Cabot, who later played host in the 1972 series "Ghost Story" (a.k.a. "Circle of Fear"), is a charming trickster himself, with a touch of playful foreboding in his delivery.

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capkronos

Hammer's short-lived supernatural series Journey to the Unknown (produced by Anthony Hinds) only lasted about four months. 20th Century Fox acquired the hour-long episodes for American release and paired several of the episodes together and released them to both theaters and later to TV. This one contains "Poor Butterfly," directed by Alan Gibson, and "The Indian Spirit Guide," directed by Roy Ward Baker. For some reason original series hostess Joan Crawford has been dropped from the proceedings and instead we get pudgy, bearded charmer Sebastian Cabot, who briefly pops in to warn us, "You'll pray for morning!" In "Poor Butterfly," Steven Miller (Chad Everett), an American businessman in London, receives an invitation for an unknown source for a costume party out in the county. He can't figure out who invited him or why, but travels to Measham House, a secluded manor that seems to be stuck in some kind of time freeze. There he falls for Rose (Susan Broderick), a young, frightened beauty dressed in a butterfly costume. She wants him to take her back to London with him, but various guests say "I don't think they'll let her come with you." The next morning, Steve discovers why. The highly predictable story involves romance, jealousy, an attack with a croquet mallet, ghosts and reincarnation.The better segment is Roy Ward Baker's "The Indian Spirit Guide," which was scripted by Robert Bloch. Jerry Crown (Tom Adams), a hard up private eye having a hard time paying the bills, gets hooked up with wealthy, grieving widow Leona Gillings (Julie Harris), who wants to contact Howard, her late husband of fifteen years. Jerry specializes in uncovering bogus psychics, such as a man in drag (!) using tape recorders and lighting tricks and a turban-wearing Oriental mystic at "The House of Chandu," who uses a floating trumpet on strings gimmick. Seeing an easy, vulnerable target in Leona, Jerry decides to romance, marry and then kill her for her money. But there's one more psychic that needs to be defrauded; Sarah Prinn (Catherine Lacey), one of Howard's close friends, who works through an Indian spirit guide called Bright Arrow (Julian Sherrier). Will Bright Arrow be able to warn Leona in time that she's in grave danger? Both tales are just mildly entertaining and received a TV-G rating on cable (suitable for children).

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