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The Nightmare Man Details

Certificate 15
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 432 members

Based on the 'Child Of Vodyanoi' novel by David Wiltshire. This drama centres on the arrival of a woman and the effect on the inhabitants of Inverdee. Read more

Starring James Warwick, Maurice Roeves
Director Douglas Camfield
Genres Drama

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The Nightmare Man

Based on the 'Child Of Vodyanoi' novel by David Wiltshire. This drama centres on the arrival of a woman and the effect on the inhabitants of Inverdee.

Starring James Warwick, Maurice Roeves
Director Douglas Camfield
Studio 2 ENTERTAIN VIDEO
Run time DVD: 1 hr 50 mins
Certificate Certificate 15
Genres Drama
Language DVD: English
Released DVD: 04 Apr 2005
Format DVD
  • Most helpful member's review of The Nightmare Man

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  • 8 out of 8 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    A good period piece...

    The Nightmare Man is a spooky thriller from 1981, adapted for television by Robert Holmes and directed by Douglas Camfield (both names being very familiar to followers of Doctor Who). It is near-impossible to say anything about the story without giving away its twist. Let's just say that the drama is at its strongest for the first three episodes before the true nature of the threat is known and we are simply presented with a stylishly told tale of a killer at large in a closed community (whose attacks we witness through a series of point-of-view camera shots). When the revelation comes in episode four, it is both welcome and disturbing, although not at the supernatural level that you were invited to consider. The performances are engaging enough, with James Warwick as a suitably square-jawed hero, Celia Imrie as his feisty fianc?e and Maurice Ro?ves as the cynical yet dependable face of the local constabulary. The Cornish coast doubles very nicely for the remote Scottish isle upon which the drama unfolds and, violence wise, the production pushes at the boundaries of what could acceptably be shown in its era (which isn't very much). Indeed, a comment that I often read in other reviews is how vintage television now seems 'dated' by today's standards. The simple fact is that The Nightmare Man is a solid story, well told enough for this reviewer to give a qualified recommendation in respect of this DVD?

      • Vengeful Hedgehog from London, England
  • Most recent members' review of The Nightmare Man

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  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 3 stars

    Has Weathered Pretty Well

    Despite some godawful special effects (never a strong point of old BBC shows) this creepy drama from 1981 has weathered well.

    There's a nice build up, with generally good performances from solid character actors like James Cosmo and Celia Imrie, and a suitably grim atmosphere. Of course it looks very dated by today's standards, but there is a nice and rather unexpected pay-off and it is certainly recommended for fans of spooky television - now if only ITV would give a general release to the grandaddy of all television horror, 'The Woman In Black'...

      • bobbyperu from Merseyside
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Rating breakdown

432 Member ratings
  • 100
34
  • 90
23
  • 80
67
  • 70
55
  • 60
96
  • 50
45
  • 40
48
  • 30
27
  • 20
27
  • 10
10

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    • Based on the 'Child Of Vodyanoi' novel by David Wiltshire. This drama centres on the arrival of a woman and the effect on the inhabitants of Inverdee....