Gary Mark Gilmore
Tommy Lee Jones
Gary Mark Gilmore

“The story of two people who fell in love.....and kept on falling.”
In this fact-based made-for TV film, Gary Gilmore, an Indiana man who just finished serving a lengthy stay in prison, tries to start anew by moving to Utah. Before long, Gary begins an ill-advised romance with the troubled Nicole Baker, a teenage single mother. As their relationship quickly deteriorates, Gary goes on a murderous rampage, leaving two dead. During his trial, he demands capital punishment; a media circus ensues and outsiders look to profit from his story.
THE EXECUTIONER'S SONG. 1982 VHS PREVIEW
Gary Mark Gilmore
Tommy Lee Jones
Gary Mark Gilmore
Brenda Nicol
Christine Lahti
Brenda Nicol
Nicole Baker
Rosanna Arquette
Nicole Baker
Vern Damico
Eli Wallach
Vern Damico
Larry Samuels
Steven Keats
Larry Samuels
Johnny Nicol
Jordan Clarke
Johnny Nicol
Earl Dorius
Richard Venture
Earl Dorius
April Baker
Jenny Wright
April Baker
Spencer McGrath
Kenneth O'Brien
Spencer McGrath
Jimmy Poker-Game
John Dennis Johnston
Jimmy Poker-Game
Ida Damico
Mary Ethel Gregory
Ida Damico
Val Conlan
Pat Corley
Val Conlan
t was always going to be a challenge to dramatise this Norman Mailer book. It is a complex and intricate story of ex-con "Gary Gilmore" (Tommy Lee Jones) who is released back into society after serving a sentence for armed robbery. He quickly meets Nicole (Rosanna Arquette) with whom he has a child, before that all goes wrong and his life spirals out of control again. Determined to buy a white pick up truck from a local dealer, he turns to robbery to fund this - needlessly killing two men as he goes. He is easily identified, arrested and sentenced to death by firing squad (his choice) after insisting that all appeals be abandoned. It is clear, to me anyway, that "Gilmore" is ill - psychopathic, perhaps, and TLJ manages the role with some skill. Arquette also shines , she portrays the teenage mother vacillating from terror of the man to adoration in a convincing, earthy, manner. It's the pace of the thing that got me; it all takes far too long to get anywhere. It simply doesn't need to be 2¼ hours long and the last twenty minutes drag out the inevitable conclusion unnecessarily. Eli Wallach features all to sparingly as does Christine Lahti and though Jones delivers a powerful performance that does much to sustain this depiction of this very flawed human being, I found myself actually just a little bit bored by it all.
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