- A woman seduces a professional golfer, then offers to kill his opponent if the golfer will kill her psychiatrist, who wants her committed.
- Jerry, a Southern California golf pro is the target for Diana a disturbed young woman who desires the death of her shrink, who alone realizes her psychotic potential and seeks to have her committed. She suggests to Jerry that they "swap" murders - she'll kill his golf rival and he'll reciprocate by killing her psychiatrist. When she holds up her half of the bargain, she expects him to follow through with his end.—alfiehitchie
- Diana Granger is a narcissistic young woman with a sense of entitlement. She believes the source of all her problems are her wealthy Aunt Margaret Granger, her guardian since her parents' passed when she was a teenager, and more so her psychiatrist, Dr. David Haggis, whose assessment of Diana, under Aunt Margaret's directive, dictates what Diana can or cannot do. Diana has been institutionalized for long periods of her life, she who believes Dr. Haggis will once again have her committed in diagnosing her as bipolar. Jerry Marshall is a professional golfer coined by the sports media as "Second Place Marshall" in not seemingly being able to finish in the stretch, and seemingly always beaten by Mike Wilson. Jerry's second place finishes are not only emotionally devastating in Mike's easy going big talk versus Jerry's more intense nature, but since Jerry has no one to share that pain with in he and his wife, Lee Marshall, currently separated. Despite still loving each other, Jerry and Lee's current split is due in part to differences in lifestyle - Lee who doesn't want to be a golf wife in constantly being on the tour - and due in part to a past marital indiscretion on Jerry's side, it a moment of weakness in his loneliness on tour. Diana pursues Jerry at the latest tour stop, their meeting not just in her sexual interest in him. In what ends up being their pillow talk in Jerry succumbing to her advances following an argument with Lee, Diana casually suggests that each kills someone problematic in the other's life, such murders which cannot be tied back to them in having no association to the murder victim or to each other. What Jerry assumes is just "talk" ends up being his worst nightmare not only when Mike is subsequently found murdered, but that sociopathic Diana, who did kill him, has manufactured evidence both to kibosh Jerry's marriage to Lee with who he wants to reconcile, and point to Jerry as the murderer if he doesn't fulfill what she considers his end of the bargain, namely to kill Dr. Haggis. Jerry has to figure out how to get out of this mess, but in the process is unaware to what extent Diana will go to reach her end goal, those measures which include disposing those about who Jerry cares, such as Lee.—Huggo
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Top Gap
By what name was Once You Kiss a Stranger... (1969) officially released in Canada in English?
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