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The Promise

  • 1979
  • PG
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
881
YOUR RATING
Kathleen Quinlan and Stephen Collins in The Promise (1979)
A corporate heir's mother pays for his disfigured girlfriend's plastic surgery, on one condition.
Play trailer1:04
1 Video
4 Photos
DramaRomance

A corporate heir's mother pays for his disfigured girlfriend's plastic surgery, on one condition.A corporate heir's mother pays for his disfigured girlfriend's plastic surgery, on one condition.A corporate heir's mother pays for his disfigured girlfriend's plastic surgery, on one condition.

  • Director
    • Gilbert Cates
  • Writers
    • Fred Weintraub
    • Paul M. Heller
    • Garry Michael White
  • Stars
    • Kathleen Quinlan
    • Stephen Collins
    • Beatrice Straight
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    881
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gilbert Cates
    • Writers
      • Fred Weintraub
      • Paul M. Heller
      • Garry Michael White
    • Stars
      • Kathleen Quinlan
      • Stephen Collins
      • Beatrice Straight
    • 37User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
    • 42Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:04
    Trailer

    Photos3

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast21

    Edit
    Kathleen Quinlan
    Kathleen Quinlan
    • Nancy McAllister…
    Stephen Collins
    Stephen Collins
    • Michael Hillyard
    Beatrice Straight
    Beatrice Straight
    • Marion Hillyard
    Laurence Luckinbill
    Laurence Luckinbill
    • Dr. Peter Gregson
    William Prince
    William Prince
    • George Calloway
    Michael O'Hare
    Michael O'Hare
    • Ben Avery
    Bibi Besch
    Bibi Besch
    • Dr. Faye Allison
    Robin Gammell
    Robin Gammell
    • Doctor Wickfield
    Katherine De Hetre
    Katherine De Hetre
    • Wendy Lester
    Paul Ryan
    Paul Ryan
    • Doctor Fenton
    Tom O'Neill
    • Painter
    Kirchy Prescott
    • Nurse
    John Vick
    • First Cab Driver
    • (as John Allen Vick)
    Dan Leegant
    Dan Leegant
    • Second Cab Driver
    Jerry Walter
    • Cal
    Robert Hirschfeld
    • Doctor Sidney Meisner
    Alan Newman
    • Barker
    Carey Loftin
    Carey Loftin
    • Truck Driver
    • Director
      • Gilbert Cates
    • Writers
      • Fred Weintraub
      • Paul M. Heller
      • Garry Michael White
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    6.4881
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    Featured reviews

    Deepollack26-1

    Excellent

    The book of "The Promise" was so wonderful, I just couldn't wait to see the movie. I can't imagine if I would have enjoyed the movie as much if I hadn't read the book. Remembering the book while watching the movie made me enjoy it more. I thought it was very good. I only wish the ending had been longer. The music was great and the actors played the parts very well. It was an endearing love story. While women may love the movie more than gentlemen, I have two sons in their 40's that are trying to get copies of this movie as it was one of their favorites growing up. I wish it would come out on DVD. It was one of Danielle Steele's best stories - by far.
    itswindee

    The meaning of true love....

    This is one of the best true love stories I have ever seen. It is one of my favorites. The plot summary is much more than what the fellow above wrote. While yes a girl & boy fall in love and the girl gets her face torn off in a car accident, the real core of the film is that true love, pure love doesn't come along everyday. It is very rare, very precious and it should be valued and not taken for granted. The plot synopsis is this: the boy comes from a very wealthy influential family with a very dominering mother who forbids her son from marrying the girl who doesn't have 2 cents to rub together but is a struggling artist trying to make it. The boy trying to break free from the tight grip his mother has on him wisks the girl away and plan to elope. On the way to a chapel tragedy strikes and they are involved in a horrible car accident. Both are taken to the hospital, the boy is injured and the girl's face is terrible disfigured. While they lie in their hospital beds in different rooms, his mother decides to pay the girl a visit. The girl's entire head & face is bandaged, all you recognize is her voice. His mother expresses how sorry she is that this has happened to her and offers the girl a chance to have reconstructive surgery, all paid for by her with all of the necessary therapy needed physically and emotionally. While this sounds to good to be true, the catch is, if she agrees to have this done she must promise to NEVER see her son again. The devious and controlling mother continues by saying, if she doesn't have the surgery done her son wouldn't want her anyway with her grotesque face. At least this way, her son can move on and have a life and she too can move on and have a life. With a heavy heart, the girl agrees to his mothers terms. I don't want to ruin the rest of the film so I won't say anymore. For those of you who might not believe in love, this movie might change your mind. It is worth seeing.
    8susan7

    This one will engage your emotions

    I first saw this movie on TV about 15 years ago. It has haunted me ever since, in part because of the story itself, and in part because the editors bungled their job and nearly destroyed what could have been a truly great film. What they gave us instead is a good film with a great story line. It is that story, along with the acting ability of Kathleen Quinlan and Steven Collins, that saves the film. If you have not read Danielle Steele's adaptation of the original screen play, do so. It will fill in some of the answers to the questions left open by the insensitivity of the film's editors.

    This is a love story, and a good one, about two individuals whose love for each other is pure and true and ultimately stands the test of both time and tragedy. If that makes it syrup, then so be it. I like it. I wish I could get a DVD edition of this movie.

    A movie does not have to be full of vulgar language and gratuitous sex to be good; it doesn't have to be filled with blood and guts and action sequences; and thank God this one has none of the above. Without resorting to the seamer side of life, this story will engage your emotions and embed itself in your mind and your soul, leaving an impression that can last a lifetime. This alone is enough to make it a movie worth two hours of your time.

    If you have not seen this movie, try to find a copy of it. After viewing it, I think you will agree that this movie has been underrated by the IMDB rating system.
    4suessis

    Oh God, I actually sort of like this movie...

    In 1979, I was 14, and I can remember that this was the big movie that all the kids at school wanted to see. I actually remember loving it then. Years later, all I can do at the age of 37 is cringe with embarrassment that I actually still like this thing.

    How unrealistic can you get? With the exception of some make up and hair manipulation, there really is no difference between the Nancy and Marie faces. Most of the change is effected through Quinlin's acting ability (as well suddenly changing her wardrobe to the 70's disco chic that was popular at the time). It's not the only lapse in reality in the film, but it's by far the biggest. It takes a great deal of work on the part of Quinlan, Collins, and Straight to get you to come anywhere near believing the difference exists.

    Laurence Luckinbill plays a truly predictable character as the Pygmalionesque doctor who creates the physical Marie. His character is more or less a plot device (as is Bibi Besch's), and his performance reflects it. On the other hand, Beatrice Straight (who was always one of the most underrated actresses in the business) gives a fantastic performance as Michael's mother. Her face says it all when she runs out of the hospital room and the impact of the lie that she has just told hits her.

    Gibert Cates, who unfortunately has not been able to truly repeat his critical success in "I Never Sang for my Father", at least tries to do something with the script. It is hard, however, when the story is basically formula and schmaltz. In the end, it is Quinlan, Collins, and Straight who succeed in getting the film to rise above it. Their performances get you to continue to watch and find something good even though you really want to hate it.
    Poseidon-3

    Promise not to laugh........

    ***Spoilers Rampant***

    This stupefyingly bad romantic drama deserves a place in the annals of movies that are so bad they become good for all the wrong reasons. In the beginning, Collins and Quinlan go through all the 1970's gum-commercial moments to show us that they are "in love", culminating in their burial of a carnival necklace to signify their love and spouting some of the most ludicrous dialogue ever written. This is played with utter sincerity although Quinlan is decked out in all sorts of face-altering make-up so that she'll look different (and hopefully better) in the last 2/3rds of the film. Smeared with tan pancake make-up, wearing a wig that Marlo Thomas vetoed on "That Girl", donned with eye and nose prosthetics that give her a homely appearance and speaking in a whiny, annoying voice, she is anything but what one would imagine as a dream lover. But that's not all! They also outfitted her with false buck teeth which leave her unable to fully close her lips, so many of her words come out jangled and unintelligible. For example, when confronted by Collins with the prospect of marriage, she replies, "I don't need a feece of fafer..." So she can barely open her eyes and can't close her mouth when she and Collins and his best friend (a total buffoon who rinses toothpaste out of his mouth with BEER!!) are smashed up in a horrific car collision with a truck. From this point on, not one logical thing happens and the story takes on such an orchestra of contrivances that it becomes science fiction. Collins' gorgon of a mother (who viewers know is evil because she smokes cigarettes constantly through a plastic holder) pays to have Quinlan's face put back on, but only if she'll stay away from Collins. The mother (played by Straight) doesn't want a love affair with :::gasp::: an orphan to mess with her plans for Collins' career. So she tells Collins that Quinlan is dead. He apparently takes her word for it without ever once looking into it or even trying to see if there's a grave! A complete set of wild contrivances finally reunite the long lost couple.......and he doesn't even recognize her! You see, she is now the "normal" Quinlan replete with trendy new duds and full on glamour make-up, so he has no clue it's the chipmunk who was in the car crash with him. (And she is quite lovely. She is showcased in a wide variety of hairstyles and outfits.) It all keeps spiralling until they wind up back at the carnival necklace......at almost precisely the same time.....and have a "poignant" reunion. Astonishingly, this film, crazy and as bad as it is, still can manage to draw tears during that final scene from those who have gone along for the (insane!) ride! Collins gives a very heartfelt performance in it (however, Quinlan remains strangely stoic, which hurts the final clinch.) This movie is clearly inspired by such classic tear-jerkers as "Madame X" and "An Affair to Remember" and cribs from both of them. However, by 1979, that type of storytelling had lost all sense of reality....today even more so! It should have been a period piece. Amazingly, the director Cates had previously given audiences the stark and grim "I Never Sang For My Father" before offering up this hoot. Fans of soapy dramas who don't require much reality will love it. Fans of campy, unintentional humor will also eat it up. The only person who will likely hate it is any straight man. He will probably be off the couch and out the door before Melissa Manchester finishes howling the title song!

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This was the last movie to play a regular engagement at Radio City Music Hall in New York City, New York.
    • Goofs
      Set on the East Coast, shows the sun setting over the water.
    • Quotes

      Ben: Mike? Happy Birthday, hooligan!

      Michael: Yeah, that's right, my day all day.

      Ben: Hey, you know who else's birthday it is? I read it in the San Francisco Chronicle. Julius Ceasar!

      Michael: Julius Caesar! How the hell do they know?

      Ben: Because they are fiendishly clever, man!

    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: The Promise, The Prisoner of Zenda, Saint Jack, Alien, Battlestar Galactica, The Brood, The Passage (1979)
    • Soundtracks
      The Promise (I'll Never Say Goodbye)
      Lyrics by Alan Bergman and Marilyn Bergman

      Music by David Shire

      Sung by Melissa Manchester

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 2, 1979 (Argentina)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Söz veriyorum
    • Filming locations
      • Belvedere, California, USA(taking pictures of water & hills)
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $11,606,005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $11,606,005
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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