- Cast & crew
- User reviews
A ventriloquist is at the mercy of his vicious dummy while he tries to renew a romance with his high school sweetheart. A ventriloquist is at the mercy of his vicious dummy while he tries to renew a romance with his high school sweetheart. A ventriloquist is at the mercy of his vicious dummy while he tries to renew a romance with his high school sweetheart.
- Richard Attenborough
- William Goldman
- Anthony Hopkins
- Ann-Margret
- Burgess Meredith
- 155 User reviews
- 97 Critic reviews
- 49 Metascore
- 2 wins & 5 nominations total
Top cast 21
- Peggy Ann Snow
- Laughing Lady
- Maitre D'
- (as Stephen Hart)
- (as Bob Hackman)
- Corky's Brother
- Young Corky
- (as Michael Harte)
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
More like this
Did you know
- Trivia Gene Wilder was the original choice for Corky, and director Richard Attenborough and writer William Goldman wanted him, but producer Joseph E. Levine refused, on the grounds he wanted no comedians in the movie to distract from the serious nature of the story.
- Goofs Members of the crew are reflected in the cabin window when Corky gets his jacket before going out in the boat with Duke.
Ben Greene : Hey kid. I'm gonna ask you to do something. It's a little something anybody oughta be able to do. Now if you can do it fine, we'll forget this whole thing, but if you can't we'll think about getting you to see somebody fast. Is it a deal?
Corky : Name it!
Ben Greene : Make Fats shut up for five minutes.
Corky : [awkward pause] Five minutes? I can make him shut up for five years.
Ben Greene : Wonderful.
[looks at watch]
Corky : [puts Fats aside] I feel like the village idiot, if you want to know the truth. Can we talk, or is it going to be strictly semaphore?
Corky : How long so far?
Ben Greene : [readying a cigar] It's uh... Thirty seconds.
Corky : Gosh, that's uh... four-and-a-half minutes to go! Think I'll make it? Don't happen to have another of those, do you?
[receives a cigar]
Corky : Thanks. "Take two, they're big." Remember when you said that, Ben?
Ben Greene : A pro never forgets his good lines, kid.
Corky : How long now?
Ben Greene : Comin' up two minutes.
Corky : You think we'll laugh about this someday?
Corky : Might.
Corky : [starting to talk nervously faster] Make a terrific scene if you ever decide to write your autobiography. Hey, I know what you should call it! "Failing Upwards", or "How to Succeed in Show Business by Outliving Everybody".
Corky : Two minutes yet?
Ben Greene : A minute forty-five.
Corky : This is very cruel of you, you know that?
Ben Greene : I don't mean it to be.
Corky : I don't know if I'll ever be able to forgive you.
Ben Greene : Well that would be sad.
Corky : Time?
Ben Greene : It's two-and-a-half minutes to go.
Corky : [pause] I can't make it.
Ben Greene : Well, I didn't think you could.
Fats : [snatched by Corky, and talking rapidly] Hello everybody! This is Mister Norman Maine! My mother thanks you, my father thanks you, my sister thanks you, and I thank you! You have nothing to fear but fear itself, nothing to give but blood, sweat, and tears, nothing to lose but your change! Here he is boys, here he is world - heeeeeere's FATS!
- Crazy credits Credits: Fats Anthony Hopkins
- Alternate versions Most commercial TV broadcasts of "Magic," strongly censor "Fats's" R-rated dialogue completely, or replace it with PG rated content.
- Connections Featured in Sneak Previews: Paradise Alley, Magic, Midnight Express, Watership Down, Comes a Horseman (1978)
- Soundtracks Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life (uncredited) Music by Victor Herbert Lyrics by Rida Johnson Young Portion sung by Anthony Hopkins
User reviews 155
Still creepy after all these years.
- Sep 24, 2002
- How long is Magic? Powered by Alexa
- List: Ventriloquists who have disturbing relationships with their dummies
- Is Fats alive, like Chucky?
- Can I watch the trailer online?
- November 8, 1978 (United States)
- United States
- Blue Lakes, California, USA (Le Trianon Family Resort)
- Joseph E. Levine Productions
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- $7,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime 1 hour 47 minutes
Related news
Contribute to this page.
- See more gaps
- Learn more about contributing
More to explore
Recently viewed.
Magic (1978)
The virtuoso camera skill of Richard Attenborough helps to make Magic outstanding, Attenborough proving himself to be a master of suspense. In one outstanding scene, Corky is trying to read Peggy’s mind through playing cards. At first, it almost seems like a cute little game, and it is shot from a relatively high angle adding levity to the situation. However, when Corky fails in his attempt to discover Peggy’s card, he becomes very aggressive. The camera begins to film things from below, accenting both Corky’s anger and Peggy’s fear. Attenborough then mixes in some intense close-ups of Corky’s and Peggy’s eyes, making the scene intensely personal. When Corky finally divines Peggy’s card, the camera backs off, and returns to its elevated position. Using nothing but camera work, Attenborough poignantly illustrates that Corky is both very sweet and very dangerous, all the while leaving us on the edge of our seats.
Attenborough's gift for characterization and tension in direction is further exemplified later in the film. Ben challenges Corky to make Fats “shut up for five minutes.” As soon as Ben says this, it is obvious from the look on Corky’s face that he won’t be able to do it, but he sets Fats next to him and begins the challenge anyway. Attenborough begins changing the camera focus from Corky to Ben, switching back and forth between the two. The one exception a single, slow shot that rotates around Corky and Fats until the are both almost in profile with each other, accentuating that they are two halves of one person. When Corky finally acknowledges he can’t do it, he grabs Fats, who begins talking fast and loud. Attenborough tops this off with a tight close-up of Fats screaming “Here’s FATS!” It is a marvelous scene, and a great example of how Attenborough can squeeze tons of tension from very few elements.
Attenborough’s camera skills are complemented by a superb cast. While the direction may highlight and accentuate the characterizations that drive Magic, it is the acting that really brings these characters to life. Ann-Margret does an excellent job of portraying Peggy. This is a role that could easily have been nothing more than a token “love interest,” but Ann-Margret never performs her as such. In Ann-Margret's hands, Peggy becomes a quirky, independent woman that has needs apart from the other characters in the film. She plays Peggy with a fun loving zest that contrasts sharply with both the intense Corky and her laconic husband, Duke. Even when faced with trite dialog (especially the line “If I’m a prize, then you’re the winner,”), Ann-Margaret still manages to hold her own, making Peggy a worthy counterpart to the unbalanced Corky.
This excellent performance is matched by the one and only Burgess Meredith, who is magnificent as Corky’s manager, Ben Greene. Speaking in a slick, silky voice, one can almost hear all of his years of experience managing unstable stars like Corky. Meredith plays Ben as someone who has seen it all. Even though he is always full of wise one-liners and wisecracks, he portrays a real concern for Corky, becoming Corky’s only anchor to reality. It is because of Meredith's acting that, when Corky murders him later in the film, we can really understand how Corky loses any shred of hope he might have had. Not only is Ben a character, because of the outstanding performance, he is also a very potent plot device. Meredith is indispensable to this film, despite being only a supporting character..
Neither of them, however, can hold a candle to the dual performance of Anthony Hopkins, who plays both Corky and Fats. He performs Corky as a shy and intense man who has been defeated by life. A deeply troubled person, Corky has found a way to manage some of his problems through the use of Fats, a foul-mouthed outlet for his own inherent violence. Hopkins usually talks softly as Corky, except when he is pushed, and often has a nervous laugh that gives the impression of covering for hidden fear. In one scene, when Fats is mentally tormenting him, Hopkins spins around the room, crawls across the floor, and finally screams in pain against a mirror. A lesser actor might have made this scene seem ridiculous or unintentionally funny, but in Hopkins hands, its heart-wrenching cry of pain makes us understand how such an otherwise gentle person could take to murder.
Hopkins is equally good when performing Fats. Prior to filming, he studied ventriloquism with ventriloquist Dennis Alwood, and the research shows. Hopkins creates a truly frightening character in Fats, despite him not being a physical person. Fats is full of obscene, Borscht-Belt humor, but he has a viciousness that is downright chilling. Hopkins performs the voice of Fats in his head, and also does Fats’ ventriloquism. His voice sounds childish at first, but it soon transforms into something sadistic and dangerous. The Fats dummy only adds to Hopkins performance. It has the appearance of a vicious Anthony Hopkins, with an unsettling smile always on its face. Overall, Anthony Hopkins makes this film both a superior horror film and tragic character study, all by means of one wonderful performance.
The only weakness of the film (and it is a minor one) is that about a third of the way through it jumps plot lines. From the beginning, we had been following Corky’s rise to fame and how the possibility of being on television was causing his already shaky personality to crack. He then runs away to the country and just happens to run into his high school love whose own marriage just happens to be collapsing. Stories that have to hinge upon some very improbable coincidences always seem weak, or at best rushed, and this is true Magic Rather than have Corky early on express a longing for his old flame, the script cuts corners by having him unexpectedly find her, which then forces us to sit through a great deal of exposition explaining who Peggy is and why Corky loves her. However, it's only a small problem and does not significantly harm the story.
Magic is one of the unsung gems of 1970s horror cinema. It boasts a potent if not original story, superb direction, and a cast rarely equaled by its contemporaries. The evil smile and malevolent voice of Fats and the pathetic story of Corky are frightening and not easily forgotten.
i collect 70s/80s horror
i collect 70s/80s horror movies and i ordered magic because it looked so interesting. i just got done watching it and i have to say it is without a doubt, now one of my favorites! its kind of a cross between the dummy twilite zone episode and torist trap.
Can't disagree with this
Can't disagree with this review. Hopkins early talent shining through.
Random Review
Popular reviews, latest posts.
Donations Accepted
Support Classic-Horror.com and keep it ad-free by making a small donation via PayPal.
Primary links
- By Release Year
- By Publication Date
- Effects Artists
- Horror News
- Comment Policy
Classic-Horror is © by Answer 42 Media, 1999-present ( Contact Form , RSS Feed ). All Rights Reserved. Other materials are owned by their respective copyright holders, and will not be infringed upon herein.
IMAGES