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Carnival Magic
Overlook Pick

Carnival Magic

29
User Score38 ratings
TMDB 2.916+19831h 26mEnglish
DramaFantasyFamily

Synopsis

A magician in a carnival--who actually can read minds and levitate people and objects--works with a superintelligent chimp named Alex, who can also talk. The magician and the chimp soon become the stars of the carnival, drawing in big crowds. However, the wild-animal trainer, who has been displaced by the team as the carnival's top act, decides to kidnap Alex and sell him to a medical laboratory for experimentation, thereby getting rid of his competition.

Director
Al AdamsonFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Krypton Productions1 production companies
Release
March 4, 1983Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 9
Don Stewart
Markow
Jennifer Houlton
Ellen
Howard Segal
David
Regina Carrol
Regina Carrol
Kate (as Gina Carrol)
Joe Cirillo
Kirk
Mark Weston
Stoney
Charles Reynolds
Dr. Poole
Diane Kettering
Kim

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
Wuchak
Jun 11, 2025

**_A small traveling carnival in the Carolinas with a remarkable chimp_** This was shot in the summer of 1980, but not released until three years later. So, while it’s listed as a 1983 film, there’s a lot of late 70s’ residue. Regina Carrol as Kate is one of the main highlights. She was 37 during shooting in the summer of 1980, but still very beautiful (physically and inwardly), even stunning. There's a good scene that specifically explains why she was a little long in the tooth as the magician's assistant. She happened to be director Al Adamson's wife from 1972-1992 when she died of cancer at the too-young age of 49. Al passed away three years later. There are other points of interest, like Don Stewart (known for his ten-year stint in Guiding Light) as the brooding-yet-principled magician with mesmerizing powers learned in Nepal, as well as the setting of the traveling carnival itself. I realize it's a 'B' production with some third-rate acting (e.g. Stoney), but the flick works mostly because it fleshes out the characters and you care about them and their story. Anyone who appreciates low-budget movies involving circuses, like "When the Circus Came to Town," "Roustabout," "Circus of Horrors" or "Circus of Fear," aka "Psycho-Circus," should find something to like. It runs 1 hour, 25 minutes, and was shot in Shelby, North Carolina, which is almost an hour’s drive west of Charlotte; as well as Gaffney, which is a half-hour drive south of there, across the border in South Carolina. GRADE: B

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