Una estudiante de una escuela católica tiene sospechas de una monja que comienza a comportarse de manera espeluznante con su hermano. Pero no puede decírselo a nadie, ¿quién creería que una ... Leer todoUna estudiante de una escuela católica tiene sospechas de una monja que comienza a comportarse de manera espeluznante con su hermano. Pero no puede decírselo a nadie, ¿quién creería que una mujer de Dios haría tal cosa?Una estudiante de una escuela católica tiene sospechas de una monja que comienza a comportarse de manera espeluznante con su hermano. Pero no puede decírselo a nadie, ¿quién creería que una mujer de Dios haría tal cosa?
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Zoe Brady
- (as Ryan Newman)
Reseñas destacadas
No spoilers here, but it is strange that the evil sister is the only young and good looking "nun" at the school.
So strange that she doesn't know the basic conventions of the religion, ie praying before meals?
This bad sister is willing to go to any psychopathic extremes to get her "needs" met.
Overall, this film is a bad taste twist on the Catholic priests of great notoriety, who preyed mostly on little boys.
The film depicts a "relationship" between a "nun" and a young man of indeterminate age, but well past puberty.
Lifetime movies at its' very best, or worst, depending on your point of view.
But I am getting ahead of myself here.
I sat down to watch the 2015 movie "Bad Sister" from writer Barbara Kymlicka and director Doug Campbell without ever having heard about it. And given the fact that I've never seen it was actually sufficient enough to make me sit down to watch it.
And I must admit that I was actually entertained by the movie. Sure, it was predictable and generic, and the storyline was just so far out there and implausible that you just can't help but shrug at it. But the movie, in terms of being entertaining, actually managed to deliver well enough.
The acting in "Bad Sister" was adequate, and I found Alyshia Ochse, playing Laura/Sister Sophia, to actually carry the movie quite well with her performance as a rather deluded and compulsive maniac and stalker. I think I've seen her once or twice before, but she has never really caught my attention, but she did perform well enough in "Bad Sister".
"Bad Sister" is the type of movie that you know exactly what you are getting yourself into, what will happen and how the ending will be. Yeah, the movie was actually that predictable, and writer Barbara Kymlicka was definitely playing it safe by following a very generic formula.
All in all, I was entertained by what "Bad Sister" brought to the table, and I am rating it a six out of ten stars. While not an outstanding moment in cinema history, the movie was watchable and enjoyable enough.
This is salacious cheese. It starts with the Toxic Tramp lip gloss and the red lingerie. Any suspense is dispensed with after the first fifteen minutes as everything is revealed. The story is predictable. The actors are perfectly fine but nothing exceptional. It's a bad Lifetime movie or maybe even worst.
When you make a movie with 1000$ budget, the result will be something like this one ,I think.
There is nothing rational in this movie at all. Low-quality directing and acting. I really don't konw what to say, but whoever wrote the scenario, he has clearly shown us an extremely low experience in his job. I mean, for God sake, a 8 years old child would write a better organized scenario than this one.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesSome versions of the film leave out of the opening-credit sequence the names of Alyshia Ochse, Devon Workheiser, Ryan Newman, and Helen Eigenberg, leaving only the supporting actors starting with Robert Leeshock being listed during the opening scene showing Jason playing a song in an online video announcing that he's been enrolled in St Adeline's.
- PifiasWhen Sara is attacked in the shower, despite her bare back being visible through the shower curtain, as she is pushed against the wall, a view of a bra is briefly visible.
- Citas
Pete: Don't look so nervous. It's okay, no morning after-regrets, are you?
Jason Brady: You're a nun--and my teacher.