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  • Warning: Spoilers
    Roger Moore rates his performance in The Man Who Haunted Himself as the best of his career. It makes for a rather interesting insight when actors or directors or composers reveal what they consider their finest work. While the film itself in this case may not be the best that the actor has ever appeared in, Moore is probably right about his performance in it. He gets to register hitherto unseen emotions and nuances as the title character, and the script demands more "genuine" acting than he ever had to produce in the days of The Saint, The Persuaders, James Bond, or indeed any of his other movies.

    A dull and conservative business man named Harold Pelham (Roger Moore) is driving home from work one day when he does something extremely uncharacteristic. Almost as if possessed, he removes his seatbelt and drives terrifyingly fast, ultimately crashing his car. Later, while the unconscious Pelham is on an operating table his heart temporarily stops and it is only thanks to the speedy reactions of the doctors that he is revived. For a moment after his revival, something very strange happens – TWO heartbeats are briefly detected on the heart monitor. The operating doctors simply assume that their equipment is faulty. A while later, the fully healed Pelham returns to his usual routines – family life, work, social life, etc. But soon weird events start to plague him – people claim to have spoken to him the week before even though he has been on holiday; people turn up for lunch at his house when he swears he hasn't invited them; one man even pays up for losing a snooker match against him at the club, when in actual fact Pelham has no memory of playing the game. At work, a business opportunity involving a new electronic device is beset with problems as an alleged "mole" leaks details of the product to a rival company. Pelham begins to suspect that an impostor is trying to sabotage his life. Gradually, the awful truth becomes clear. When he died on the operating table and had to be resuscitated, a doppelganger (or "alter ego") was released…. and now the real Pelham and his sinister double are locked in a life-and-death struggle against each other.

    The Man Who Haunted Himself is an intriguing "thinking-man's" bloodcurdler. The story (by Anthony Armstrong) had already seen light as a 30-minute short on Alfred Hitchcock Presents. This extended version fleshes things out a bit more, and spends more time philosophising about the definition of identity, with Moore giving a riveting turn both as the bewildered hero and his evil double. In some ways the extra details inadvertently weaken the story, distracting audience attention from the teasing plot by dragging in too many characters and subplots. But it is worth persevering with the film through its periodic lulls, especially so that one can enjoy the absolutely terrific final scene – a thrilling car chase in which the real Pelham and the doppelganger pursue each until one of them plunges to his death over the side of a bridge. The ending is wonderfully unsettling and thought-provoking. On the whole, The Man Who Haunted Himself is a worthwhile audience teaser, a little drawn-out and heavy-handed in parts, but generally an enjoyable excursion into the supernatural for those who like such things.
  • A collector's item this one - you very rarely see a film as absurd yet enthralling as this. The plot is fabulously illogical, but it provides an opportunity to see Roger Moore in a role far more interesting than James Bond, as pin-striped executive Harold Pelham. Except that he plays TWO Harold Pelham's - one nice, dull, and sexually inadequate; the other a cavalier and sinister Romeo. This means a lot of Moore chasing round London insisting "I'm Harold Pelham!", and a climactic and weirdly psychedelic car-chase involving nice Pelham and nasty Pelham. If this hasn't yet acquired a cult following, it ought to.
  • gridoon15 July 2002
    A fascinating story - a man haunted by his doppelganger - and Roger Moore's excellent performance(s) make this film worth seeing, even though it overelaborates its point somewhat (the situation becomes clear to us long before Moore figures it out). Still, what we have here is an example of how a good movie can be produced on a relatively low budget, as long as it has a strong script and dependable actors. (***)
  • I'm a big Roger Moore fan (the REAL 007) but I only heard about this film recently. I finally got a copy and I think it's a dynamite film. Not because I'm a big Moore fan - if a film sucks, I turn it off. But this movie is far better than all the reviews Ive ever read on it.

    I don't believe it drags at all - the pacing is great, especially where Moore keeps on discovering more and more people have seen "him" when it really was his double. Seeing hoe much deeper and deeper Moores double intergrates himself into Moore's life - his work, his liesure, his wife and home - is done extremely well. The inevitable confrontation between the two Pelhams is also done very well, and the ending is a kicker.

    Moore is great as usual and plays both roles with style and class.
  • Pre 007 Roger Moore plays a City businessman who finds himself being haunted by his doppelganger following a near fatal car crash. Very well made supernatural thriller which proves that you do not need gore or jump scares to make a film scary. It moves at a fast pace & kept me enthralled throughout. Good cast including a fine performance by Moore. Love the old Lamborghini that his duplicate drives around in!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Despite I was a child when I watched it, I didn't manage to be scared. And I tried.

    The opening sequence says all. There's this proper gentleman driving his dignified car along the highway, the sun shines in the sky and everything is jolly good when all of a sudden for no apparent reason he pulls out a kind of "evil" face, pushes the throttle down and starts driving like a madman.

    Then he has an accident, obviously. A bit strange accident, truth be told. We see him squeezing his tyres from side to side for something like five minutes without hitting any other car and finally pulling down some cones and a wooden fence. This must be a serious accident in England though, because next thing he's struggling for his life in the emergency room.

    Which is notable since his body shows no injuries and there isn't the smallest trace of blood round there. But this is only the beginning. During the surgery (don't ask me what kind of surgery, there were doctors doing stuff and yelling to each other) his heartbeat literally splits in two and becomes "double". I'm not kidding you. There are two different lines doing beep beep now on the monitor of the machinery whereas there was only one moments before. And nobody there seem to notice that.

    Now, you would expect these unusual events being explained along the movie. I don't know, the devil, reincarnation, something.

    No way.

    You are only allowed to know that now there's a second Mr. Pelham in town, dating girls and driving sports cars dressed like a buffoon (Where does he sleep? Where does he get his money? Does he have a driving license to show to the police in case they stop him?).

    We can understand this movie only if we consider it not a horror but a goofy social satire on middle-class dullness. An "American beauty" ante litteram. And even so...

    I loved the very English background and the seventies atmosphere.

    Not actually a movie, rather a good laugh.
  • That's what Roger Moore says in this film before he even became James Bond. Ha ha. It's a classic film moment. In this film, Moore has a high-powered job but he's a little dull in his bowler hat life routine. However, after he has a car crash, there seems to be a second Moore living a parallel life to him, meeting with people he knows and even his wife and children. We mainly watch the film from the perspective of the dulloid Moore and follow his descent into paranoia.

    His doppelganger is a more cunning version of himself – jumping in to bed with the ladies (of course) and craftily manipulating business deals. His servant is that bloke from "Mind Your Language" – you know, "Max" the Greek guy. We don't see much of the doppelganger but are aware of his presence throughout the film and this keeps the mystery going. The music is fun but the actual story is complete nonsense with no attempt to tie up the ludicrous plot. It doesn't matter – just approach it with an awareness that this isn't realistic and go with the flow.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This intriguing chiller has an original premise for once - a man is haunted, not by a ghost, but by his own double! This clever idea manages to carry the entire film, which is in itself quite slow-moving but nonetheless gripping thanks to a solid central performance from a pre-Bond Roger Moore. Moore has never been regarded as much of an actor but I think he does admirably well here, conveying the frustration and fear at a life slowly falling apart extremely well.

    For once this film fully explores the central theme, and never explains whether Moore is ill or is really being haunted until the end of the film. Until then, the tension is gradually wracked up with events becoming stranger and stranger until it seems that there is no escape for the poor, harassed Moore. He starts off as an immaculately dressed businessman and ends up as an unkempt wreck, a transformation with devastating consequences. Moore provokes sympathy in some pivotal sequences, especially the final confrontation, a heartbreaking moment.

    Lots of familiar British character actors pop up in minor roles. Thorley Walters is his usual bumbling self, while familiar hammer players Gerald Sim, John Carson, and even Charles Lloyd-Pack flesh out small parts. But it's Freddie Jones and Kevork Malikyan who stand out as a psychiatrist (inevitably loopier than his patients) and Spanish manservant respectively - both giving their hammy best in over-the-top parts. This is a fun, engaging and totally unique film which is a delight to watch and doesn't require any brain work whatsoever. Thus it's an extremely easy and enjoyable film to have on, although I'm not too sure of the repeat potential - once you know what happens, there's not much point sitting through it all again. For the most part, though, this is an unfairly forgotten gem of British cinema, dated, yes, but miles better than you would probably imagine and than reviews would have you think.
  • With its 1970s chic cheese and swagger and Roger Moore's excellent performance, The Man Who Haunted Himself has a considerable cult fan base. Directed by British legend Basil Dearden, plot finds Moore as Harold Pelham, who after being involved in a serious car accident, comes around from the trauma to find that his life is being turned upside down. It seems that somebody is impersonating him, people he knows swear he was in places he hasn't been, that he has been making decisions at work that he knows nothing about, and that he has a sexy mistress that threatens to destroy his marriage. Is he going mad? A victim of a collective practical joke? Or is there really something more sinister going on?

    Don't be a slave to convention!

    So yeah! A cult gem waiting to be rediscovered is The Man Who Haunted Himself, it has a plot that positively bristles with intrigue. As the doppleganger motif is tightly wound by Dearden, who smartly sticks to understated scene constructions as opposed to supernatural excess, there's a realistic and human feel to the story. The makers are not going for jolt shocks, but taking a considered approach that has the pertinent mystery elements lurking in the background, waiting for their chance to reveal themselves for the utterly thrilling finale. A finale that is bold and special, obvious but not, and definitely tinged with cunning ambiguity.

    With Moore drawing on talent from his acting pool that many thought he didn't have (two different characterisations smartly realised here), and Dearden pulling the technical strings (love those off-kilter angles and multi mirrored images), this is a film that has surprises in store all across the board. 8/10
  • martin_humble27 September 2000
    You are in for a first really slow 30 minutes. Then it goes on the rest 56 in just a slow pace. But except from that the movie is really great. The story is fascinating and keeps you awake despite the slow tempo. Roger Moore does his best effort as an actor and he really plays marvelous. Just to see his acting is enough for seeing this movie.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Could have been good but an indifferent climax spoils it.

    *** This review may contain spoilers *** The Man Who Haunted Himself is set in London where electronics company executive Harold Pelham (Roger Moore) lives with his wife Eve (Hildegard Neil) & two young children, while driving home one evening Pelham crashes his car after losing control & is seriously injured. Pelham is rushed to hospital where he is operated, during surgery Pelham clinically dies for a couple of minutes but the doctor's manage to revive him. After recovering from the accident & returning from a holiday in Spain Pelham is eager to get back to work but learns that a rival electronics firm is trying to buy his company, strange things start to happen as well with various people saying that they saw Pelham several times the previous week even though he was in Spain on holiday. Pelham at first shrugs it off but soon realises that someone claiming to be him has been interfering in his affairs including having an affair, leaking sensitive company secrets & meddling in his life. Pelham has no explanation as the truth when revealed is beyond belief...

    This British production was directed by Basil Dearden who ironically died in a car himself about a year after The Man Who Haunted Himself was released & could have been a great supernatural mystery thriller but for the whole ambiguity of it which I personally didn't like, I have nothing against films leaving certain things for the audience to work for themselves but I didn't think The Man Who Haunted Himself made much sense. In particular the start when Pelham crashes his car during what looks like him being possessed even though the climax has Pelham's double claim he was set free during the time he was dead on the operating table, it's never really explained what Pelham's double is or why they can't just live happily together. Why does no-one question why the two Pelham's look identical? Why take one Pelham's word over the other when they both look & sound exactly the same? Don't give me the 'because he's wearing a different tie' rubbish either, the whole plot & the plan of the evil Pelham revolves around the fact that the original Pelham decides to wear a pink tie. Right. It's not all bad news though, until the Pelham double is revealed at the end The Man Who Haunted Himself is a fairly gripping mystery thriller as the original Pelham has to solve the mystery of his double but this set-up is wasted as the climax is a disappointment with no great twist & some surreal touches which are not in keeping with the rest of the film. I just would have liked a clever ending that tied everything together better, that's all. At just under an hour & a half The Man Who Haunted Himself has enough intrigue & mystery to keep you interested although it has a fairly sedate pace. Character's are alright if a little flat, everyone except Pelham is very one-dimensional from his housebound wife to his secretary to his snooker playing friends no-one here is fleshed out to any satisfaction or distinction.

    Very much a product of it's time The Man Who Haunted Himself has dated badly & screams late 60's early 70's with some shocking fashion choices, hairstyles & interior decorating on display. Although considered a horror film of sorts there's nothing that scary or gory here, there are a few scenes which try to generate tension & suspense but there's no outright explicit horror or scares on show. Based on the television episode Alfred Hitchcock Presents: The Case of Mr. Pelham (1955) this was apparently Roger Moore's favourite role & there's even a line of dialogue in which he talks about James Bond in reference to company espionage several years before he actually landed the part of Bond himself.

    Filmed here in England mainly in London this has decent production values but isn't particularly memorable. The acting is alright, Moore is good & while the supporting cast are decent as well they make little real impression.

    The Man Who Haunted Himself is a decent time waster, it's an odd supernatural mystery thriller that can't quite decide what it wants to be & ends up being a bit bland & I can't forgive the unsatisfying climax which I didn't feel was any sort of adequate pay-off for the long winded set-up. Watchable in a silly dated way but nothing special.
  • if ever a cumulative rating for a movie was insane it is THIS one! 5.3? yeah right. It's a 7 - end of story!

    Long before Moore's incarnation as 007, this is arguably near the top of Moore's filmography. After Harold Pelham has a near-death experience following an auto accident, he makes what appears to be a stoic recovery. It is only with the passage of time that he begins to notice subtle occurrences that don't seem to dovetail with his own personality. Either he is losing his mind or there is something remarkably rotten in the state of Denmark. Friends and business acqaintances swear they have interacted with him, moments BEFORE he arrives at work...his wife notices a radical change in him and ultimately the inescapable truth presents itself - he has a doppelganger!

    Call it far-fetched..its about the only weak point in the flick. Moore is just brilliant as he unravels in the face of his doppelganger's one-upmanship. The final scenes where he confronts his "twin" are riveting and should silence the tidal wave of critics who insist Moore could never act!

    A few years ago it was rumored that the film was to be re-made in New Zealand (Peter Jackson?) as DOPPELGANGER, with no less a personage than Travolta in the lead, and he would certainly do the role justice. Since then, heard nothing.

    This flick is well worth your effort finding somewhere, even on video.
  • While executive Roger Moore finds under critical condition on the operation table later a car crash , his alter-ego emerges and turns his happy, lucky life -along with wife Hildegard Neil , and children- into a real nightmare. As we follow in tension to the unfortunate Moore in his attempt to solve the twisted puzzle, while receiving advises from his psychiatrist : Freddie Jones . His Life is Upset ! . Stalked by fear and terror night and day !. You will live every shattering moment of terror with... The man Who Haunted Himself.

    This one seems to be an expanded rendition of an episode of Rod Serling's "Twilight Zone" or the TV series "Alfred Hitchcock presents" . An exciting picture mixing palm-sweeting intrigue, bizarre events, thrills , chills , plot twists and dull stretches. The plot is plain and simple, recovering from a car wreck , a man starts questioning his sanity when it shows up his exact doppleganger assuming his position in the world. As it appeals primarily to those fascinated for these popular series where mystery matters most . This was Roger Moore's first movie after having starred in the TV series The Saint . Moore provides perhaps his best screen acting in this interesting and attractive film about a wealthy man who finds his life being taken by a double. He is well accompanied by a fine support cast, such as Hildegard Nell , Olga Georges Picot , Anton Rodger , Thorley Walters , Laurence Hardy, Edward Chapman, John Welsh, and special mention for Freddie Jones as a pill-swallowing, switching psychologist, among others

    It displays a thrilling and moving musical score by Michael J. Lewis. As well as appropriate and functional cinematography by Spratling, completely filmed in London. This imaginative Chiller-Thriller picture was compellingly directed by Basil Dearden, being his last film, in fact he died by car accident the following year . He was a good craftsman , directing nice films through a long career, such as : The assassination bureau, Masquerade, The League of Gentlemen, The smallest show on Earth, Karthoum , Sapphire , Dead of night, Captive Heart , The ship that died of Shame, Victim , All night long, Only when I larf, The Square Ring, Train of events , Out of the Clouds , They came to a City , Halfway House, Pool of London, Gentle Gunman and TV series as Persuaders , among others . Rating 6.5/10. Well worth watching due to keep the spectator involved from start to finish .
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The Man Who Haunted Himself, despite having a quality premise and a solid lead performance from Moore, falls short of being memorable.

    The resolution's probably its biggest downfall. They talk it out and then he runs off the road, dies and disappears. Yes it resolved the situation, his life goes on, but what does it do for the viewer? Plus Pelham having those repetitive flashes while driving at the end, was really annoying. Why didn't he enjoy spending time with and want to be intimate with his wife? That was odd. It was also rather sluggish at times. I did like it, it just could of been so much more.
  • Harold Pelham is a steady executive type who drives carefully, wears the same tie everyday and is a thoroughly dependable sort of chap. One day he is driving home when he has a car crash, he is rushed to hospital where his heart stops and he is saved by a medical team. Back at work after recovering he begins to suffer from memory losses – people tell him he played snooker last night but he can't remember etc. He begins to suspect that someone is impersonating him and is starting to live his life – but that's crazy, isn't it?

    Moore of the period will always be remembered for being Bond more than any other role he played. The downside of this is that he is seen as the weaker Bond the one who become more about innuendo and jokes than anything else. This film though, shows that Moore is a great actor – one who is capable of lifting a film and making it better than it was on paper. The plot here could easily have spun wildly out of control and indeed, at times, it comes very close to being unintentionally funny. However the film keeps it's air of mystery well – even when we are sure that there is a doppelganger on the loose the film still won't let us see more than his back or his hand etc. By doing this it actually makes the scene where the two meet to be quite effective. Of course it's all nonsense but it's well played nonsense.

    The main reason it works is Moore's increasingly unhinged performance – as the final hour goes by you can actually see him come apart like he was an old woollen sweater! It is difficult not to buy into the film because he is so convincing. His alter ego is also pretty good but it is the descent into desperation that he undergoes that makes this watchable. As a result I didn't really notice the input of the support cast – they were all quite solid but it was easily Moore's film. However, being a man, I did get distracted by Georges-Picot – waltzing around in sexy underwear in several scenes and I also thought Jones' psychiatrist looked like Dr Strangelove!

    Overall this deserves to have a cult following if it doesn't already, The visual effects are poor and the plot is absurd. Were it not for the brilliant Moore then this film would have been better played for laughs. Happily he carries it and holds the audience in his hand. The only weak point was the ending which, although clever, was a bit of an anticlimax – in fact the final 10 minutes didn't quite match the suspense that had been created in the build up.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I'll begin by saying I'm a Basil Dearden film, and watched this primarily because he directed it. Overall, it is an entertaining film that offers a glimpse of a long-gone world, and of a style of filmmaking that also disappeared with the late 1960s and early 1970s.

    I won't summarize the plot since many others already have, but it turns on the initially uncanny and increasingly creepy appearance of Harold Pelham's (Roger Moore, in one of his best performances) Doppelgänger, though like Pelham himself we don't actually see this double until very late in the film. His strange presence, however, is apparent from the moment early on when Pelham briefly dies on the operating table, only to revive temporarily with two heartbeats.

    My two criticisms, beyond the annoyingly busy score, hinge on the confusing moment at the film's opening when the Doppelgänger seems to overtake the original Pelham, leading to the first accident (or does he?), and on the melodramatic ending, which probably could have been strengthened by jump-cutting straight from the crash through the bridge balustrade to Pelham, one of the two, walking back through the door of his home, without us seeing which one, the original or the double, it was.

    In general, though, I recommend the film, and despite its flaws, it is quite entertaining and a metaphysical and psychological thriller. If it is ever remade, it'll have to be updated for the 21st century, but if done right and not Hollywoodized, it could work well. (It would be interesting to compare this original and a remake to the 2013 Canadian film The Enemy, starring Jake Gyllenhaal, which is based on Nobel Laureate Jose Saramago's 2004 novel The Double.)
  • TurboarrowIII21 August 2017
    7/10
    Good
    Warning: Spoilers
    I thought this was a good film.

    Roger Moore is great as the slightly dull family man Pelham who begins to have a meltdown when strange things start happening to him following a car crash. Apparently when he briefly dies on the operating table his "evil" or more exciting character is released and when he is brought back to life this leads to him having a duplicate. Therefore, his other side starts turning up and doing things opposite to what he would do thus causing him to slowly start to go mad because he was unaware of this.

    The ending is a bit strange though because the other characters don't appear shocked enough when the two Pelhams meet. They seem to accept a bit too easily that the "evil" Pelham is the genuine one and the "real" Pelham is the phoney despite the fact that the "evil" one acts totally differently to the "real" one in that he is more of a daredevil. Despite this I still enjoyed it because it shows the sometimes real struggle of living a possibly dull everyday life and the wish to have a more exciting one.

    Good performances make up for the slightly disappointing ending and overall this is a film worth seeing I think.
  • Prismark1019 August 2016
    Roger Moore has always taken his acting lightly. However you do not build a successful career in both UK and USA television and become a successful international film star without a modicum of talent.

    In The Man Who Haunted Himself, Moore plays a wealthy business executive Harold Pelham whose company is considering getting involved in a merger. We initially see Pelham dressed conservatively and driving home carefully. Somewhere along the road he seems to have become possessed, he speeds up his car and gets involved in a terrible car accident.

    As he recovers from his injuries, an alter ego is unleashed, more cavalier, risk taking, dashing and begins to live Pelham's life. This Pelham uses cunning to make his company's share sale to be even more profitable. He has a casual affair and even has a perked up sex life with his wife.

    The real Pelham slowly realises that a doppelganger is on the loose and tries to get his life back on track.

    Not a raised eyebrow in sight in this film. This is regarded as Moore's favourite film and he really shows his acting chops, Moore even gets to make a reference to James Bond, a role he would next play.

    The film is really an updated version of Jekyll & Hyde but there is a sense of eeriness as the film concentrates on the real, more dull Pelham when he hears reports of the other double's activities such as thrashing someone in snooker, dabbling in some industrial espionage or being in some swanky club leaving him confused.

    Director Basil Dearden might have shown a dated view of London for even the early 1970s but he gets a uniformly excellent performance from his cast and you genuinely wonder how the film will end as to which Pelham will win out.
  • The Man Who Haunted Himself is a good movie with a reasonably well developed storyline and a terrific cast. For a ninety minute film, it's quite slow to begin, but once the story properly kicks off it is very intriguing, as we follow a man who suspects someone may be impersonating him, a situation which ends up being even more insane than he expected. Roger Moore's performance in this film is astounding, and it's a shame he will never get the recognition he deserves for the hard work he put in to this role, long before James Bond he proved that he was well able to play deranged men, but due to poor marketing, this film never took off. The budget was clearly very low and because of that it does fail to deliver its complete potential, there are limited locations, Pelham's office building and house being where the majority of the scenes take place, and some parts felt very thrown together, as if they did it in one take, not trying to perfect it. The ending is the main reason I am giving this a seven instead of an eight, the build up and tension of the two Pelham's finally meeting is well executed, the scene when they finally meet is the highlight of the entire movie, and suddenly it felt as if they could not think of how to end it, it's ridiculously anti-climatic, leaving so many unanswered questions, you could not help but feel frustrated. Roger Moore certainly brings in a fantastic performance that adds to the thrills, and though it may have many flaws, The Man Who Haunted Himself is still worth the watch if you are looking for a good thriller.

    A man suspects a duplicate of him may be roaming about and living his life in a more luxurious fashion.

    Best Performance: Roger Moore
  • Harold Pelham gets in a freaky car accident, but survives.After that he believes there's a duplicate of himself messing up his life.The Man Who Haunted Himself (1970) is directed by Basil Dearden.This was actually his last movie and he died in a car accident near the spot Pelham is supposed to have crashed his car in the beginning of the film.Roger Moore proves here he really is a great actor.All those James Bond films may not give the biggest challenge as an actor, but here he really has to act.His wife Eve is played brilliantly by Hildegard Neil.Olga Georges-Picot is fantastic as the doppelgänger's lover Julie Anderson.Freddie Jones is terrific as Dr. Harris- Psychiatrist.Also great job by people like Gerald Sim (Morrison) and John Carson (Ashton).This is a really fascinating film.It has been called underrated, and that is very true.There's that psychedelic feeling going there.Like when Pelham is escaping his duplicate and he breaks the mirror and we see many Pelhams laughing there.The music is one element that helps create the atmosphere.And it is really a joy to see two Roger Moores in the same room.
  • athanasiosze16 February 2024
    I've watched recently some other movies dealing with the same "Doppelgagger" motive. Some of them were great (BLACK SWAN, DEAD RINGERS, MULHOLAND DRIVE). Some, not so much (ENEMY, THE DOUBLE). THE MAN WHO HAUNTED HIMSELF is probably a pioneer, being made in 1970. To whom it may concern, there is a fine short story by Edgar Allan Poe with the same theme (William Wilson).

    Now, about this : This is a good drama mystery movie that kept my attention until the ending. It's not a mindblowing experience and the whole explanation about what happened is somewhat weak and it doesn't make much sense. But still, it's more plausible than other movies with a similar plot. In any case, anyone who read the synopsis and wants to watch it, is not expecting much i guess. Just a good character study movie with good acting performances and some intense moments. That's exactly what you get here. Moore does his best, movie is getting better by the minute and it's watchable, at worst. For me, it's better than a just watchable movie because i was very curious to see where it goes. Some interesting twists and turns and an obscure but not dissatisfying ending. For sure, its better than this Villeneuve movie (ENEMY, 2013) and way better than THE DOUBLE (2013).
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Having read the other glowing reviews of this film I tracked down a copy. Boy, what a disappointment! Roger Moore undoubtedly enjoyed playing both good and evil characters, what actor doesn't. But the plot, which was apparently used several times before in half-hour TV shows, is really lame. The movie really drags mid-way because they only have that little half-hour plot to stretch out. The plot introduces a large number of contradictory and impossible events, which you initially hope will be explained cleverly. But as the movie drags on your hopes begin to sink as (like "X-Files") they have introduced too many plot elements to be able to resolve. And guess what? They don't resolve any of them! The brief plot synopsis in IMDb tells you ALL you're going to learn about the plot and it's resolution. Poor Roger wears a hideous mustache and spends most of the movie channeling John Cleese with a business suit, cane and bowler hat. But he does a good job of portraying the slow melt-down of a man caught in a movie with a terrible plot. Don't waste your time on this movie, especially if you're a Roger Moore fan. It's just awful.
  • Loved the film,Roger Moore does one of his best performances I have seen and an interesting little B picture
  • Pairic6 February 2024
    The Man Who Haunted Himself (1970): A bit dated in attitudes to societal roles something it shares with it's contemporaneous film No Blade Of Grass but it's not as good or influential as Blade. Harold Pelham (Roger Moore) an upper middle c;ass businessman is involved in a near fatal car accident which appears to have set a doppelganger loose after he briefly "dies" on the operating table. The double is his dark side, taking on corporeal form, appearing at his club when he's out of the country, womanising, getting involved in dodgy business deals. An interesting portrait of a man descending into existential despair and paranoia, doubting his own sanity. Good (double) performance by Moore but a few too many stiff upper lips about. It's based om an Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode, it was perhaps overextended and might worked netter with a 45 minute running time. Written and directed by Basil Dearden (who died in a car accident shortly after completing the film, cur Twilight Zone theme), 6/10.
  • Anthony Armstrong's novel, The Case of Mr. Pelham, revolves around an evil doppelganger trying to take over a man's life; it's an intriguing idea, but the story isn't strong enough to sustain a whole movie, being far better suited to either an anthology or an episode of a TV show (indeed, before becoming a full length feature, The Case of Mr. Pelham was filmed for '50s series Alfred Hitchcock Presents).

    Roger Moore, fresh from success of TV show The Saint, plays uptight bowler-hatted businessman Pelham, who, whilst travelling home from work, is gripped by an inexplicable urge to release his seatbelt and drive like a maniac (this scene using some truly awful back projection). After crashing his car, he is taken to hospital for an operation, during which he momentarily flat-lines and then returns to life with two heartbeats. From this point onwards, Pelham's life becomes decidedly strange: he's apparently been places and done things that he cannot remember, which seriously affects both his professional and working life. Eventually, Pelham comes to believe that an imposter - an exact double with a more outgoing personality - is trying to take his place.

    Moore, so often lambasted for his expressionless acting (a raised eyebrow to suit all occasions), is actually very impressive here, convincingly portraying a man being pushed to the edge by uncanny experiences out of his control. Unfortunately, it's clear from the outset that poor Pelham is being plagued by a doppelganger, so there is little genuine mystery or suspense to be had, and director Basil Dearden struggles to keep the momentum going for the duration. Thankfully, things do pick up for the finalé, when Dearden gets with the groovy times, employing some wonderfully psychedelic visuals as both Pelhams battle it out on the road, driving dangerously at speed with only one possible survivor.
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