IMDb RATING
4.5/10
414
YOUR RATING
A bride-to-be becomes suspicious of her fiancee's family while planning their wedding at his remote countryside estate.A bride-to-be becomes suspicious of her fiancee's family while planning their wedding at his remote countryside estate.A bride-to-be becomes suspicious of her fiancee's family while planning their wedding at his remote countryside estate.
Anna Hutchison
- Deanna
- (as Anna Hutchinson)
Nicholas David King
- Chauffeur
- (as Nick King)
Sarah Cleveland
- Vivica
- (uncredited)
Karl Licht
- Wedding Guest
- (uncredited)
Benjamin Worth Bingham Miller
- Detective
- (uncredited)
Michelle Peter
- Rehersal Dinner and Wedding guest
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
We caught this on Lifetime last night. The movie wasn't terrible but it was anything to write home about, either! Engaged couple meets rich groom's family and friends and bad stuff starts happening! Audrey Landers could have done way better but I suppose a weak script really doesn't help! Other actors are pretty unknown. Skip it.
This could actually have been a rather good movie. The actors aren't half bad, and the movie "looks" good. But how the people react and what they do in this movie is just ridiculous. First, the main man, who is supposed to be the man of the house, very straightforward, very dominating, someone that everybody relies on, he just freezes or even cries when anything happens. Then they happily go on boat rides even when the bride-to-be has made it clear that she can't swim. And why not enter a sauna that has a lock on the outside of the door? Like most saunas do, right? Not. And allergy to coconut? Yes, we show the cabinet where all coconut of the house has been put. And the final nail in the coffin, for me, was when the bride-to-be and her sister sits on the edge of the boat by the dock to talk about the bad or strange things that have happened, and they don't even see the clearly floating corpse of the murdered ex-fiancee right below them. I mean, you couldn't miss her even in the corner of your eye. Sigh. No, this has to get 1/10 from me, even less if I could give it. How did they even get this thing published? Doesn't anybody question anything in the movie making business, or do they actually think that most people who will watch it are totally stupid. What a total waste of time and money.
I agree with ALL of the negative comments on here, but I would like to include the set, clothing and the groom to be!!! The set is SO TACKY!!! EVERYTHING is HORRIBLE! ! A tiger rug with the head and everything?!!! Come on! SO 70's! The brides dress?!! The dress is off white and the veil is bright white?!! The dress looks all used and abused like from a thrift store! TACKY! Audrey Landers dress and CLEAR heels?! SO 80's! She needs to go back to the set of Knott's Landing or what ever show she used to be on!!! And hubby to be Karl? He looks EXTREMELY sickly! It was VERY distracting! JUST SAY NO!
Borrowing some text from another reviewr.
As soon as the female protagonist reveals her coconut allergy, it is clear that this is going to be used to advance the plot. When her Epipen is found in the rubbish, no one really questions it.{ END }
So many of these thriller plots rely on a victim having A fatal reaction to one allergy or other. Yet the affected person keeps the antidote in their luggage, in their purse even a car. Why not on their person always at hand and less likely to be stolen ?
Am I the only one who finds this strange ?
Commenting on the story. The identity of the killer is telegraphed almost at the beginning of the film. So no surprise by the end
As soon as the female protagonist reveals her coconut allergy, it is clear that this is going to be used to advance the plot. When her Epipen is found in the rubbish, no one really questions it.{ END }
So many of these thriller plots rely on a victim having A fatal reaction to one allergy or other. Yet the affected person keeps the antidote in their luggage, in their purse even a car. Why not on their person always at hand and less likely to be stolen ?
Am I the only one who finds this strange ?
Commenting on the story. The identity of the killer is telegraphed almost at the beginning of the film. So no surprise by the end
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Engaged to a Psycho
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content