Happy Face Murders (1999)

14 day TV guide too small?
Get a head start with a couple of months of advance TV listings.
Click here to get started

Print your own TV guide
Complete control over layout and content - choose your own channels! It's so easy.
Click here to print your own

Written by John Pielmeier

Directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith

Running Time: 100 minutes (approx)

Production Year: 1999

Rating: 18 Certificate

Filmed in Colour

Made for TV

Lorraine Petrovich (Ann-Margret) is an eccentric woman who implicates her brutal & controlling lover in the murder of a young retarded girl.

Absorbed with "Murder She Wrote" and "Matlock", she creates details of the murder from clues she picks up from the detectives Jen Powell (Marg Helgenberger) and Dylan McCarthy (Henry Thomas) on the case.

Implicating herself and sentenced to jail, she then recants her testimony. But no one believes her until clues surface from the real killer that he is still out there, has killed before, and will kill again.

He signs his messages with Happy Faces.

Cast

Ann-MargretLorraine Petrovich
Image for Marg HelgenbergerMarg HelgenbergerJen Powell
Henry ThomasDylan McCarthy
Nicholas CampbellRusty Zuvic
Rick PetersBilly Lee Peterson
David McIlwraithAlan Sanford
Image for Bruce GrayBruce GrayEphraim Quince
J.C. MacKenzieEd Baker
Emily HampshireTracy Billings
Christina CollinsNancy Severn
Sean DickCharlie Severn
Lynne DeragonVirginia Billings
Tami LevittTJ's Bartender
Image for Raoul BhanejaRaoul BhanejaDr. Mike Strong
Katya GardnerRachel

Still looking for more?

 Click here to search the web for Happy Face Murders

Add a comment

(required)
(required but not displayed)
Your e-mail is also used for adding an Avatar image to your comment using the free and very cool Gravatar.com
 
(your personal web site)

Please note we can not guarantee that programme makers will read your comment as we have no direct relationship with them, so requests for application forms will almost certainly be ignored (try searching Google instead). This is merely an opportunity to register opinions, questions or comments about a programme's content.