"Alfred Hitchcock Presents" Nightmare in 4-D (TV Episode 1957) Poster

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Good Up to a Point
dougdoepke19 September 2010
Vintage Hitchcock, featuring murder with a light touch and a perfect cast. It's also a good chance to catch two of the quirkier actors around—Jones and Lloyd. Between them, they manage more droll humor than is in the script.

Harry (Jones) is a dull-as-cement husband who jumps at the chance to help coy blonde neighbor (Baxley), even when it means carrying a dead man out of her apartment. So what's going on here since everyone seems so ordinary and incapable of murder.

Those scenes with Jones and Lloyd are delicious. As a cop, Lloyd's eyes roll around more than a bowling ball on Saturday night. The real mystery is what police department he could possibly represent. At the same time, Bassett hound Jones almost drools over Baxley as she wraps him around her little finger. Add the super-strong Virginia Gregg as Jones's long- suffering wife, and we've got a cast that could hold audience interest by reading the proverbial phone book.

With a better upshot, this could be classic Hitchcock. But in my book, there's one twist too many and one that's not very well executed (were the director & the writer communicating?). Otherwise, it's a neat mix of droll humor and lightweight suspense.
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10/10
JUST BEIN' NEIGHBORLY, THAT'S ALL!
tcchelsey26 May 2022
One of Hitchcock's favorite directors, Justus Addiss, directed this gem. Justus handled many tv westerns, later behind VOYAGE TO THE BOTTOM OF THE SEA. He got the very best out of his actors in every type of show.

Case in point. Henry Jones, one of the busiest character actors in Hollywood, is well cast as your average married man who watches too many tv mysteries... One night, his flirtatious neighbor (played by Barbara Baxley) gets him involved in a real adventure involving a dead body, that happens to be lying around her apartment?

Here's the catch. This is obviously a dark comedy variation of THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH, a dark comedy itself --- with a touch of homicide. Think about it. It works!

This is fun (with quirky music) and Henry Jones gives it a good run as does Barbara Baxley, who did so many offbeat roles in her career. She was a natural. Veteran Virginia Gregg (from DRAGNET) plays Jones' down to earth wife. Look for Minerva Urecal, famous as "mother" the nightclub owner in PETER GUNN. Cannot beat this cast, and you can bet Hitch and Justus had a few chuckles behind the scenes.

Can you guess the ending?

SEASON 2 EPISODE 16 remastered Universal 5 dvd box set. 2005.
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4/10
"Very nice apartment. You could hide a body down here."
classicsoncall16 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This episode tries too hard for mis-direction and in doing so, completely misses the mark. It would have been better in my estimation, if after Lieutenant Orsatti (Norman Lloyd) explained how Norma Parker (Virginia Gregg) could have been the killer, she broke down and confessed. That would have been a believable twist, especially after she complained about the lack of attention from her husband Harry (Henry Jones). We almost had that, and to put so much effort into the story only to have Harry get pinned as the murderer simply didn't work. In fact, even after the program was over, I still thought Norma killed the guy in the neighboring apartment. For that matter, even Miss Elliott (Barbara Baxley) seemed like a more likely suspect herself.
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4/10
Just Too Much to Swallow
Hitchcoc12 June 2013
Realizing the low budgets and lack of consistent scripts, I'm generally pretty forgiving of these dramatic forays. This one, however, is lacking badly in just about every aspect. First of all, we are given almost no foundation for the motivations of the characters. We know that Jones is enamored with the sexy actress downstairs. We know he helped her dispose of a body in her apartment. We know the wife is kept knowledgeable of the whole business, so there isn't even anything secretive. So when Norman Lloyd shows up, he leaps to fantastic conclusions for which I was unprepared. The perpetrator had to be one of the principles in the episode. I still don't know what evidence the guy had to reach the conclusion. Other than a good cast, there's not much to work with. I found this one of the weakest of the series.
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2/10
Even after it was over, I found this one confusing and disappointing.
planktonrules20 February 2021
Henry Jones stars in "Nightmare in 4-D"...a very disappointing episode of "Alfred Hitchcock Presents". It started off well enough but then it lost its way and the ending...well...it seemed to come from left field and was hard to believe.

Harry Parker (Jones) is apparently an impressionable man...or so his wife (Virginia Gregg) says. In much of the first portion of the show, you really aren't sure whether it's real or a dream...and ONLY makes sense if it's a dream. You see, Henry recalls going into the neighbor lady's apartment and finding her...and a dead body. For no discernible reason, he helps her dispose of the body. Later, he learns that there really was a dead body and it wasn't a dream...so once again, WHY did he help the woman? Later, when there's an investigation, a detective pulls the solution to the crime out of thin ari with nothing to support it in any way. And so the episode ends.

The best review I see for this one gives it a 4, so the fact I disliked it strongly isn't a major surprise. It's just a poorly written episode and wastes some good acting talent. A confusing mess of a show.
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4/10
Confusing nightmare
TheLittleSongbird1 June 2022
Really wanted to like "Nightmare in 4D" much more. The premise sort of intrigued, despite sounding like it could be silly later. 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' is a fascinating series with many fine episodes, as well as some not so good ones. Justus Addiss directed ten episodes for the series, some not great but others did impress me, did did like the previous three a good deal and it did sound like the sort of episode he could do well. So this did have potential.

Potential that is never really lived up to. Will agree that "Nightmare in 4D" starts off quite well, but rapidly goes downhill and quite badly. It has a few good things, such as the acting, but overall it is a bland, dull and far fetched episode. As far as Season 2 goes, "Nightmare in 4D" is definitely for me one of the weakest and when it comes to 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' overall it is also towards the bottom. Season 2 was uneven but did have some great episodes, but this is the anti-thesis of this.

"Nightmare in 4D" is not all bad. The best aspect is the acting, which is quite good all things considered. Henry Jones and Norman Lloyd are very good in their roles, Jones making a conceptually dull character much more interesting than deserved, and their dynamic together is delicious. Barbara Baxley makes much of relatively little, her role is underwritten but she is a far from bland presence.

The production values, while not exceptional, did have some atmosphere in particularly the way it's shot. Hitchcock's bookending is typically ironic while the theme tune for the series is suitably macabre. The episode does start off well, with some nice intrigue and subtle tension.

However, a lot doesn't work. The story is hugely flawed and at worst a mess. Too much of the time it's pedestrian in pace, suffers badly from a lack of tension and suspense from too much predictability, can be very confusing from too much being too vague and it gets ridiculous in the latter stages. The ending is not believable for a milli-second and even for an episode with a lot of ridiculousness and implausibility it's one of the more far fetched endings of the season.

Despite the efforts of Jones, Lloyd and Baxley, the characters are not very well fleshed out at all, and their motivations are vague at best and at worst downright confusing or not given. Some truly silly character behaviour going on where it is easy to question the character's intelligence. The script lacks tautness and can be too talk heavy. Addiss' direction is disappointingly uninspired.

Overall, very underwhelming episode that fails in too many important categories. 4/10.
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