Eyes of Terror

Eyes of Terror (also known as Visions of Murder II and Visions of Terror) is a 1994 American made-for-television thriller film and a sequel to Visions of Murder (1993) starring Barbara Eden reprising her role as psychic psychologist Dr. Jesse Newman.[1]

Eyes of Terror
Also known asVisions of Terror
Visions of Murder II
GenreThriller
Written byDuane Poole
Directed bySam Pillsbury
StarringBarbara Eden
Michael Nouri
Ted Marcoux
Missy Crider
Joan Pringle
Steve Anthony Jones
David Marciano
Music byMichael Hoenig
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
Production
Executive producer(s)Freyda Rothstein
Gene Schwam
Producer(s)James R. McGee
Angela Bromstad
Production location(s)San Jose, California
CinematographyDaryn Okada
Editor(s)Pam Malouf-Cundy
Running time92 minutes
Production company(s)Bar-Gene Productions
Freyda Rothstein Productions
Hearst Entertainment
DistributorNBC
Release
Original networkNBC
Picture formatColor
Audio formatStereo
Original releaseMarch 18, 1994 (1994-03-18)
Chronology
Preceded byVisions of Murder

Directed by Sam Pillsbury from a teleplay written by Duane Poole, Eyes of Terror was shot on location in San Jose, California and premiered as part of The NBC Friday Night Mystery on March 18, 1994.

Synopsis

Dr. Jesse Newman (Barbara Eden) is now counselling members of the San Francisco Police Department and assigned to treating David Zaccariah (Michael Nouri), a grieving policeman who lost his partner of ten years in a shootout. Days later, it seems that the case is wrapped up when the perfect suspect is apprehended. But David has inadvertently given the most important clue of all to the person he should have most avoided: Jesse Newman. It's a lucky coin that belonged to his partner, and it triggers a revealing series of psychic visions for Jesse. The visions implicate much more than just the killer; they reveal the sordid habits of San Francisco's business and political elite.[2]

Cast

DVD release

The film was released twice on Region 1 DVD under the title Visions of Terror on November 16, 2006 by Sterling Home Entertainment[3] and March 27, 2012 by Fisher Klingenstein Films.[4]

gollark: Your function WILL be transformed into irrelevancy.
gollark: Deploying countermatrices.
gollark: Actually, our functions are shielded and merely reflect incoming lasers in the line y = 10 + |x|.
gollark: If it worked, of course; the function is filled with embedded contraapioforms.
gollark: That would just give you an apiaristic version of the original function.

References

  1. McCook Daily Gazette, retrieved January 21, 2015
  2. Amazon.com, retrieved January 21, 2015
  3. Sterling Home Entertainment, retrieved January 21, 2015
  4. Fisher Klingenstein Films, retrieved January 21, 2015
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