Strategy of Terror: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:1960s American films]]

[[Category:1960s American films]]

[[Category:English-language mystery films]]

[[Category:English-language mystery films]]

[[Category:Universal Pictures films]]

{{mystery-film-stub}}

{{mystery-film-stub}}

[[Category:Universal Pictures films]]

Latest revision as of 00:58, 7 October 2025

1969 American film

Strategy of Terror is a 1969 American mystery film directed by Jack Smight, re-edited from a two-part 1965 Kraft Suspense Theatre episode, “In Darkness, Waiting”.

A reporter (Barbara Rush) uncovers a plan to assassinate four United Nations (UN) representatives by a right-wing extremist (Neil Hamilton), but no one will believe her, until one New York City cop (Hugh O’Brian teams up with her to uncover the conspiracy.

A review by Hal Erickson at AllMovie.com notes that “Frederick O’Neal, a leading light of African American theatre, is superb as a loquacious African UN delegate”, and that “Neil Hamilton, onetime silent screen star and future Commissioner Gordon on TV’s Batman, is surprisingly sinister as a pompous right-wing fanatic”.[1]

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