Happy Mother's Day, Love George (1973) Poster

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7/10
Impressive effort from director Darren McGavin
kevinolzak13 February 2016
Darren McGavin enjoyed a lengthy career as one of Hollywood's most likable and dependable performers, best remembered as intrepid reporter Carl Kolchak in the film and TV series of THE NIGHT STALKER. It may be a surprise to learn that he, like Larry Hagman, directed a single horror film in his heyday, and never did a second (in Hagman's case it was "Son of Blob"). 1973's "Happy Mother's Day, Love George" was of course a torturous title, soon reissued as "Run Stranger Run," under which it was seen far more often. McGavin proves to have a fine visual sense, and allows his powerhouse cast to bring their characters to vivid life, from a script by Robert Clouse, who had previously written McGavin's 1972 Steven Spielberg telefeature "Something Evil," soon to graduate to director himself with Bruce Lee's final film "Enter the Dragon." Fifth billed Ron Howard, after "American Graffiti" but before HAPPY DAYS (his name now shortened from 'Ronny'), actually stars as drifter Johnny Hanson, journeying from Los Angeles to the New England town of Malone Bay (location filming in Nova Scotia in October 1972) to discover the truth about his parents, who gave him up for adoption right after he was born. Cloris Leachman's café owner, Ronda Carlson, recognizes the young man as her son the moment he walks in, driving her cook, Eddie Malone (Bobby Darin), into fits of jealousy. From there, Johnny locates the home of Ronda's estranged sister, Cara Perry (Patricia Neal), and especially Cara's nubile teenage daughter Celia (played by Neal's real life daughter Tessa Dahl), who admits to her cousin her instant attraction and unbearable loneliness. The film moves at a leisurely pace, McGavin happy to indulge his cast in maintaining intrigue despite the more familiar elements. As things escalate into full on horror during the final half hour, only the final encounter between Johnny and the killer rings false, the director seemingly losing interest in a clear denouement. Still, the atmosphere, the banjo-led folksy music score, and the believable performances make up for any shortcomings in the script. Simon Oakland, soon to join McGavin in the KOLCHAK series, makes his final screen appearance as the sheriff, who seems to know everything about everyone, even the identity of Johnny's father, while Bobby Darin would pass away only months after the picture's sparse release. The director's comely wife, Kathie Browne, shows up briefly to become a murder victim, while Gale Garnett, nearly 10 years after her big hit "We'll Sing in the Sunshine," also comes to a bad end by pushing the desperate culprit into a corner (she had another horror film still ahead, 1980's "The Children"). The greatest impression is left by the lovely Tessa Dahl, only 16 at the time, making it a shame that she forsook her mother's profession of acting to follow that of her father, author Roald Dahl (her daughter is gorgeous model Sophie Dahl). After 30 years of performing in Hollywood, Darren McGavin had what it took to be a director of great promise, but like so many before him left audiences wondering what kind of impact he might have had behind the camera had this initial film found proper distribution, admittedly a tough film to market. Lastly, he does make an uncredited appearance on screen, unrecognizable wearing a mustache in photographs depicting the title character of George Perry, Cara's long dead husband.
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7/10
Slow for the first hour but worth a look
udar5511 March 2006
Warning: Spoilers
I took in this early 70s TV thriller last night. A young man (Ron Howard) arrives in a seaside town searching for his real mother and solve the mystery of who his father is. What he doesn't expect is to uncover a series of bizarre disappearances and murders. While the film is a bit slow (the first murder doesn't occur until over an hour in), RUN STRANGER RUN is worth a look. The script by Robert Clouse jumps from initially mysterious to predictable in the end but does carry that PLAY MISTY FOR ME (1971) psycho-sexual vibe. What makes RUN interesting is it is the only film directed by actor Darren McGavin. He has a good eye and the last half hour, which includes a great scene in an empty house, is pretty tense. And McGavin fills the film with great supporting performances from Cloris Leachman, Patrica Neal, Bobby Darin and NIGHT STALKER co-star Simon Oakland. Ron Howard gives a wonderful performance as the impish kid but the best work is done by Tessa Dahl, daughter of Roald Dahl, as the psycho killer teen.
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6/10
Dysfunctional Family; - Level 1.000!
Coventry7 November 2016
At first I only wanted to watch "Happy Mother's Day, Love George" because it was in my personal top three of 70s movies with the coolest sounding titles (alongside "Sometimes Aunt Martha Does Dreadful Things" and "Whoever Slew Aunte Roo?"), but as soon as I got a good look at the names involved in the cast & crew I got even more intrigued by this curious mixture between mystery, melodrama and raw horror! The film was directed (and produced) by none other than Darren McGavin; the one and only lead star of the cult series "Kolchak: The Night Stalker" and several other TV hits. This was the only long-feature film that Carl Kolchak directed, which is a bit of a shame since he doesn't do such a bad job at all. The script was penned down by Robert Clouse, who made a few legendary Kung-Fu classics starring Bruce Lee ("Enter the Dragon", "Game of Death") but also a handful of severely underrated horror and thriller flicks like "The Pack", "The Ultimate Warrior" and "Deadly Eyes". The cast is possibly even more dazzling, with the pairing of movie queens Cloris Leachman and Patricia Neal, but also Simon Oakland, writer Roald Dahl's daughter Tessa, pop-singer Bobby Darin (in one of his last appearances before his untimely death) and a still very young Ron Howard (decades before he became one of Hollywood's most acclaimed directors himself). So, in case you're even just remotely interested in versatile ensemble casts, this film is worth tracking down! But there's more, as "Happy Mother's Day, Love George" is also a compelling and pleasantly deranged '70s shocker. Admittedly the first full hour is slow-paced and rather uneventful, but I guarantee that your patience will be rewarded with a virulent – albeit easy to predict – finale. Ron Howard plays the timid young stranger Johnny Hanson who arrives at a small fisherman's town in search of his long lost parents. From the very first moment he sets foot into Ronda Carlson's diner restaurant, she knows that Johnny is her son but she keeps her mouth shut. For you see, Johnny's conception led to a giant family feud, as the father was the husband of Ronda's sister Cara and he – George – died shortly after in mysterious circumstances. Whilst wandering around town, Johnny also meets Cara's daughter Celia and she promptly gets a crush on him, not knowing he's her half-brother. Meanwhile, the little town is also plagued by several mysterious disappearances of male inhabitants. Is there a connection? Well, sure there is! As far as I was concerned, the totally bonkers finale more than enough compensated for the slow and dullish start. Besides, the slow start gives you the opportunity to enjoy the acting performances. It's too bad that Bobby Darin's role is small and insignificant, because a more outrageous role so close before his death would have made him even more immortal. The denouement (as in: the revelation of the killer's identity) is fairly obvious and not at all surprising, but don't let this ruin the fun.
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Solid suspenser with excellent performances by a superb all-star cast.
chad47825 February 2001
Actor Darren McGavin made a stunning directorial debut with this suspenseful chiller about a series of gruesome murders in a small New England fishing village that end up having a bizarre connection to an adopted teen(Ron Howard) who is searching for his biological parents. The marvellous cast includes Cloris Leachman(as Howard's mother), Patricia Neal(as Howard's aunt), Bobby Darin, and Simon Oakland. The most memorable performance is given by Tessa Dahl, who not only plays Neal's daughter in the film, but is, in fact, her daughter in real life. Released to theatres as HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY, LOVE GEORGE, the film was retitled RUN, STRANGER, RUN for home video release.
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5/10
Quite a disappointment
jjnxn-121 September 2015
Three Oscar winners-Patricia Neal, Cloris Leachman and Ron Howard are stuck in this strange mishmash of a movie.

What starts out as a drama about a young man searching for his roots takes an extreme wrong turn about 3/4 of the way through and becomes a slasher flick for no discernible reason. Up until then it's not a bad little film but that severe shift in tone scuttles the movie completely. How did this ever attach a cast like this to such a messy enterprise? Perhaps old trouper Darren McGavin in the director chair was able to convince his actor friends to join the project but it does none of them any favors.
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4/10
Some families aren't worth finding out about.
mark.waltz25 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This strange titled thriller (no matter how it's credited) has a great cast of award winning actors and a TV star who was one of the most popular of the 60's and 70's, now an acclaimed director. Ron Howard had moved from Mayberry to Milwaukee and finds his mother, Cloris Leachman (who gave him up for adoption), and begins to investigate the truth of his existence which includes a prickly widowed aunt (Patricia Neal) and a lonely seemingly boy crazy cousin (Tessa Dahl) who seems to want to seduce him even after she finds out how their related. The mysterious death of Neal's husband plays into this madness which leads to an obvious conclusion.

Reminding me of Neal's last film ("Cookie's Fortune") where Leachman lookalike Glenn Close played an estranged niece, this is trying hard to be in the Tennessee Williams/William Inge/Eugene O'Neill category of family melodrama (with an unadvised bit of Hitchcock thrown in for horror elements), this flows oddly and seems overloaded with metaphors and hints of incest.

I can see Neal and Leachman's attraction to these parts. On paper, they seem complex and meaty. But there's something really creepy among the glass menagerie like set-up that becomes just far too weird and overly theatrical, twisted too tight to the point where it becomes too much to take after a while. Unfortunately other than a phone conversation, Neal and Leachman do not share any scenes, making them even odder sisters than Jane and Blanche Hudson.
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4/10
A daytime soap slasher.
BA_Harrison25 June 2021
While Clint Howard's creepy features made him a natural for horror villainy, his brother Ron had a much more wholesome look; Happy Mother's Day, Love George (AKA Run Stranger Run), Ron's only foray into the genre, predictably sees the actor cast as the protagonist rather than the antagonist.

Ron plays John, a teenage drifter searching for his biological parents. His journey leads to a small coastal fishing village where he discovers more than he bargained for. The first hour of the film is like a daytime soap opera - a boring daytime soap opera that delivers zero in the way of frights. The final half an hour finally enters scary movie territory, with a deranged killer at work, bumping off several of the characters before setting their sights on John. The scares are tepid and the gore is mediocre.

The plot occasionally touches upon exploitative themes, including adultery and incest, but it remains relatively tasteful throughout; the majority of the film is dreary and uneventful melodrama, with John encountering various folk harboring dark secrets as he wanders aimlessly around the town with a slightly perplexed expression on his face.

The closing song is reminiscent of the theme for The Littlest Hobo.
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5/10
Kolchak directs Frau Blücher, a singer and Opie in a hokey thriller
lee_eisenberg20 August 2013
When I picked up the box and saw who the cast is (and who the director is), "Happy Mother's Day, Love George" (also called "Run Stranger Run") looked very interesting. It turned out to be a pretty hokey movie, with Ron Howard as a teenager given up for adoption looking for his father in a New England town. It was definitely interesting to see Howard play a role very unlike any of the ones for which he's known, and it's not a bad movie or anything, just kind of corny. Also starring are Patricia Neal's daughter Tessa (whom she had with Roald Dahl), and Simon Oakland (the psychiatrist at the end of "Psycho").

Yeah, who would've predicted the "Dream Lover" singer appearing in a thriller? Then again, who would've predicted his ex wife Sandra Dee starring in an adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft's book "The Dunwich Horror"?
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2/10
Run Stranger, Run -AKA- Happy Mother's Day, Love George
dukeakasmudge21 February 2017
I wasn't all that interested in watching Run Stranger, Run -AKA- Happy Mother's Day, Love George at 1st.Knowing Ron Howard was in it, kinda had my curiosity but after seeing Darren McGavin was the director, I definitely had to watch it now.I was really expecting to at least like the movie but after watching it, I don't know what to think.The movie was weird.It starts out (kinda) normal, Ron Howard comes to town, looking for his birth mother in hopes of finding out who his father is.The cast of characters are weird.Everybody has something about them.The movie's vibe is weird & it gets weirder.Towards the end, it turns into a horror flick.Run Stranger, Run -AKA- Happy Mother's Day, Love George was a big, weird mess.I wouldn't recommend anybody watch it anytime soon.It's a movie that if you watch it, you watch it but if you don't then you don't.You're not missing anything at all.Damn, Darren McGavin I was hoping for something way better
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A small New England fishing village is besieged by a series of gruesome murders; these unfortunate events end up having some mysterious connection to an adopted teen who is searching desperately for his natu
verna5514 September 2000
This effectively staged shocker was the directorial debut of veteran character actor Darren McGavin who gained some familiarity with the genre having starred in the brilliant horror teleseries KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER, which he occasionally directed episodes of. McGavin's film is definitely not your typical slasher flick. This chilling little number concentrates more on plot and character instead of piling on old-fashioned buckets of blood and is all the better for it. Walter Lassally's striking photography of the Nova Scotia locations is another one of the film's chief assets. But what separates the film most of all from others of its day is the superb all-star cast. Ron Howard(THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW, HAPPY DAYS) plays the desperate teen searching for his parents, Cloris Leachman(THE LAST PICTURE SHOW, THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW) plays his estranged mother, and the great Patricia Neal(HUD, THE SUBJECT WAS ROSES) plays his eccentric aunt. Also featured in the star-studded cast is director McGavin's former KOLCHAK co-star Simon Oakland as a nosy sheriff, and Bobby Darin(CAPTAIN NEWMAN M.D.) as Leachman's live-in lover. Everyone is excellent, but the most memorable performance is given by Neal's daughter, Tessa Dahl, who plays her daughter in the film as well. Those who wish to seek out this sadly overlooked gem should note that it's available on video under a completely different title: RUN, STRANGER, RUN. It's a little hard to find these days, but should you be fortunate enough to come across it, don't miss it!
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Murder and mayhem in a small New England town!
verna5528 September 2000
Like PEYTON PLACE, this film brings murder, mystery, and scandal to a small New England community. Ron Howard is the new boy in town, an adopted teen who is trying to track down his natural parents. Even after a genuinely touching reunion with his mother(Cloris Leachman), she is still adament about revealing his father's name. As he continues to search for clues to his father's identity, the community is ravaged by a series of bloody knife and cleaver murders which are unfortunately closely connected to Howard's past. Patricia Neal co-stars as Howard's eccentric aunt who has her hands full trying to keep her very disturbed daughter from discovering the bizarre truth about her father's death. Neal's daughter is played by Tessa Dahl, her daughter in real life as well. Former singing idol Bobby Darin also does fine work as Leachman's cook and live-in-lover who wants Howard to leave town and go back to where he came from. The film was the directorial debut of the brilliant character actor Darren McGavin who seems to be just at home behind the camera as he is in front of it. Although there are several scary and suspenseful scenes, the character development, acting, and direction are the three top elements that make this movie click. - CHAD EDWARDS
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Bizarre, but typical, early 70s "psycho-murderer" flick
Ripshin25 October 2004
Following the previous year's "You'll Like My Mother," starring the equally All-American Richard Thomas, this film plays off the boyishness of the lead for added effect. The location filming is great, if only a bit tedious, and we are entertained by Patricia Neal's scenery-chewing. Cloris Leachman actually underplays her role. Bobby Darin is wasted as a throw-away supporting character.

The plot is a bit interesting, although the killer's identity is telegraphed within the first fifteen minutes.

Ron Howard is directed well by Darren McGavin, revealing that the former could have been a much more serious actor, but was instead saddled with the horrendous "Happy Days" series the next year. McGavin sandwiched this between the "The Night Stalker" TV movie in 72, and the subsequent series (as an actor, of course).

Tessa Dahl is tolerable as the disturbed young woman.

Worth a watch, but don't expect, well, "You'll Like My Mother."
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Flawed but interesting movie
lazarillo15 June 2010
This is an interesting film in that it's one of the first cinematic efforts of a TV actor who would go on to become one of Hollywood's most famous directors (Ron Howard) and the sole directorial effort by another (at the time even more famous) TV actor, Darren "The Nightstalker" McGavin.

The interesting cast also includes singer Bobby Darin and McGavin's "Nightstalker" co-star Simon Oakland. But perhaps the two real heavyweights here are Patricia Neal and Cloris Leachman as two feuding sisters living in a small New England town. Howard plays the teenage son of Leachman, who she gave up when he was a baby due to a scandal which might have had something to do with the mysterious death of her sister's husband (the "George" of the title). The small town is also plagued more recently by the disappearances of a number of middle-age men (including later in "Jaws 2"). Howard's character quickly becomes a suspect when he returns to the town after many years, but there's also the two sisters, the mother's jealous boyfriend (Darin), and the aunt/sister's sexually precocious teenage daughter (Tessa Dahl), who speaks in an English accent for no real reason and immediately tries to seduce her own first cousin (who may be even MORE than a cousin).

Interestingly, despite its predominantly American cast, this movie very much resembles another early 70's Patricia Neal movie, the British film "The Night Digger". Tessa Dahl,who gets an "introducing" credit here, is Neal's real-life daughter and her father is Brit poet/writer Raould Dahl (which would explain the English accent,I guess). Raould Dahl had written the screenplay for "The Night Digger"; according to the credits he had nothing to do with this film, but the two films are strangely similar nevertheless. This film is brilliantly acted, suitably atmospheric, and well-scripted until the very end, which is very abrupt and pretty much non-sensical. The ending is definitely flawed, but this is still an interesting movie. I'd like to know more of the story behind it.
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Acceptable mystery/thriller saved by veteran cast.
EyeAskance16 January 2004
Typically strong performances from Cloris Leachman and Patricia Neal are the spotlight attraction in this mostly-forgettable (and, approppriately mostly-forgotten) protoslasher/mystery about adolescent Ron Howard shaking a rural American town full of well kept secrets to its roots when he arrives to search for his biological parents. Meanwhile, resident country-bumpkins are turning up dead. Coincidence? Probably not.

No big surprises to be had here, as the plot takes many highly predictable twists and turns. Regardless, HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY, LOVE GEORGE is a passable time-waster with a mildly effective low-key atmosphere, and creditable performances by a cast of well-established players offer this project much needed validation.

Neither here nor there...you can certainly live without it.

5.5/10
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Run Away,Video Viewer, Run Away
derekjager28 July 2003
S-L-O-W, poorly scripted 70s junk What a disappointment! Patricia Neal acts like she's Bette Davis in WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? The pace is deadly slow--even for a 70s movie--and the Ron Howard character spends scene after scene just wandering through the town. Staring at a house. Wandering some more. Just awful.

NOTHING happens the first hour. And the Bobby Darin character suddenly is "gone" and the end is too little too late.

Skip it.

Runaway, Video viewer, runaway!
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Badly written, schizoid drama-thriller Warning: Spoilers
Darren McGavin shows that he can direct a movie, and does it without including himself in the cast (except as a photograph). He has plenty of talented professionals in the cast, including Simon Oakland who has a good role as the sheriff -- but he's gone to early, as is Bobby Darin (who would soon be permanently gone, dying early the same year). Tessa Dahl plays Neal's daughter, and being Neal's real-life daughter, and looking very much like her mother, would seem a perfect bit of casting. But Tessa was raised in England and keeps her accent, which is immediately off-setting. The throwaway explanation is absurd. In addition, Gale Garnett plays Neal's daughter-in-law, and she's Australian -- although she only has a few lines so it's not that noticeable -- yet her lack of on-screen time is another example of the actor-waste in this film.

The film is badly written, simple as that. Ron Howard spends too much time hanging around town instead of just simply marching over to his mother and asking the questions he wants answers to. And his stirring up of Tessa's character takes the story away from him in order to turn the film into a wildly violent horror rampage. And within that rampage, Neal is dispatched without an on-screen confrontation that should've been the high moment of the film's climax.

A misfire. Too bad.
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"All That Nonsense 'Bout Togetherness And Love Makes Me Wanna Puke!"...
azathothpwiggins28 July 2021
In HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY, LOVE GEORGE, a young man named Johnny (Ron Howard) arrives in a small, coastal town in search of his biological parents.

What begins as a simple inquiry becomes complicated when we learn that a series of disappearances have taken place in the area. Johnny encounters the locals, including the sheriff (Simon Oakland) who is suspicious of Johnny's sudden appearance in town.

As Johnny continues his quest, evidence of a grisly end for the missing begins to emerge. It seems that there's a serial killer on the prowl.

This is an offbeat, somber film that is pretty typical of the period. It has elements of drama, suspense, mystery, tragedy, and horror. A sense of dread sort of hangs over everything. Some bizarre, unexpected twists help to make the story very interesting!

Howard is excellent in his brooding role, as are co-stars Cloris Leachman as Ronda, and Patricia Neal as the cranky Cara. Also, watch for Bobby Darin as Ronda's loser boyfriend, Eddie.

Directed by Darren "Kolchak" McGavin! This movie is overdue for rediscovery....
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