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  • There's a scene where Lynda Day asks Chris George why he can't speak. He "charades" it to her, i.e., he acts it out with his hands and face. Halfway through it, I couldn't help thinking of similar scenes in Marx Brothers movies! I was expecting it to conclude with Day saying, "And that's how you became Harpo Marx!"

    I'm a fan of Lynda Day's from her Mission:Impossible years. I was curious to see her in something else. She does very well here with a fairly silly script. Her motivation seems plausible enough.

    The problem, as others have said, is that it's hard to buy Chris George as an emotional cripple. He comes across as too macho, too strong for the part. Other than his lack of speech, there are no signs of weakness of any kind.
  • Prim young miss from New York arrives in Rio de Janeiro, ostensibly to escape her wealthy, overpowering parents, yet there's something else going on with her: she's bristles with tension every time a man comes near her. This frigid Gidget meets her match in a brooding American architect-turned-draftsman still grieving the car-related death of his fiancée. Seems he's a somewhat-elective mute hiding out from civilization (with his telephone hidden in a desk drawer!) and communicates with the girl using "his eyes and his hands". Despite the boastful credit that the film was produced entirely in Brazil, all we really get of Rio are Viewmaster-like shots of the landmarks, a pretty waterfall and rainbow combination, also some beaches crowded with overly-tanned bodies. Glossy-lipped, strawberry-blonde Lynda Day (who looks a bit like Joey Heatherton) is obviously not a skilled dramatic actress, but she's passable here; she manages well with some inane dialogue including a silly, lengthy monologue about why her recently-annulled marriage was never consummated. Christopher George (a ringer for Paul Burke, and later Day's real-life husband) has a more intricate problem: he's terribly miscast as a sensitive outcast, turning silent anguish and conflicted emotions into constipation. A highlight of their affair is a playful scene where he pulls Day into the bathtub with him--there's also a good dramatic moment at a party where he longs to sing with the guests--but George is too granite-solid and "macho" for a tortured role like this. The music by Luiz Bonfa and Eumir Deodato is pretty, if repetitive, and the pacing is quick enough. Still, only die-hard romanticists will fall for this sudsy plot--and even they should balk at the ending, which is terribly unfair to the audience. ** from ****
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I remember watching this movie a long, long time ago. It was one day when I was an 11 or 12 year-old kid (I'm 35 now) and my sister, mother, and I had nothing better to do. We thought we were wasting an afternoon, but by the end of the movie we were totally hooked. Christopher George's mute character was such a wounded soul -- he'd lost his ability to speak. I don't remember anything about his love-interest other than their love was tentative and gentle, but she eventually grew impatient with George's recovery. She truly loved him, but he knew he was too wounded to recover.

    The final scene where George's phone rings (it's her!) and he knows he's unable to answer -- is both gut-wrenching and haunting. It's been some 23 years since I saw the movie and I still remember the frantic, freeze-frame ending! And I was a silly pre-teen boy then.

    A powerful tale that sneaks up on the viewer and rips out the soul. Christopher George portrayed the vast levels of an intelligent, but hurting man without uttering a sound. He was truly an intense actor who never really got a fair shake in Hollywood.

    Christopher George was the sole reason I watched this seemingly slow-moving movie one day in 1979 or 1980, and I'm a better person for it.