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IMDbPro

La proie des ombres

Original title: Out of Darkness
  • TV Movie
  • 1994
  • PG-13
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
430
YOUR RATING
La proie des ombres (1994)
BiographyDrama

A paranoid schizophrenic woman finds treatment to her mental illness after 18 years of suffering.A paranoid schizophrenic woman finds treatment to her mental illness after 18 years of suffering.A paranoid schizophrenic woman finds treatment to her mental illness after 18 years of suffering.

  • Director
    • Larry Elikann
  • Writer
    • Barbara Turner
  • Stars
    • Diana Ross
    • Ann Weldon
    • Rhonda Stubbins White
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    430
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Larry Elikann
    • Writer
      • Barbara Turner
    • Stars
      • Diana Ross
      • Ann Weldon
      • Rhonda Stubbins White
    • 19User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast34

    Edit
    Diana Ross
    Diana Ross
    • Paulie Cooper
    Ann Weldon
    • Virginia Cooper
    Rhonda Stubbins White
    • Zoe
    Beah Richards
    Beah Richards
    • Mrs. Cooper
    Carl Lumbly
    Carl Lumbly
    • Addison
    Chasiti Hampton
    Chasiti Hampton
    • Ashley
    John Marshall Jones
    John Marshall Jones
    • Albert Price
    Juanita Jennings
    Juanita Jennings
    • Inez
    Maura Tierney
    Maura Tierney
    • Meg
    Lindsay Crouse
    Lindsay Crouse
    • Kim Donaldson
    Rusty Gray
    Rusty Gray
    • Bartender
    • (as Rusty Schmidt)
    Patricia Idlette
    • Policewoman
    Barbara Howard
    • Triage Officer
    Cathy Raymond
    • Leola
    Angelina Fiordellisi
    Angelina Fiordellisi
    • Social Worker
    Stack Pierce
    Stack Pierce
    • Dr. Brook
    Donzaleigh Abernathy
    Donzaleigh Abernathy
    • MHA
    Annie Waterman
    • Woman #1
    • Director
      • Larry Elikann
    • Writer
      • Barbara Turner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    7.5430
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9MarieGabrielle

    For anyone interested in realistic portrayal of schizophrenia; very well done...

    This film was very well presented, with good performances. It is sad, and does not distort or exaggerate as many other films have, regarding mental and/or emotional disorders.

    Diana Ross is very good as Paulie, a once brilliant pre-med student, who can no longer function due to paranoid schizophrenia.

    Rhonda Stubbins-White is also very good as the sister, who wishes everything would just "get back to normal". The actress who portrays Ross' mother is also very good. There is also a cameo with Lindsay Crouse, who attempts to help Paulie in a new day treatment program.

    Some of the scenes are disturbing, and anyone who may have experienced situations like this in real life may find it close to the truth. Ross gives the audience an excellent portrayal of the disorder, living in her own world, and enduring many medications and hospitalizations.

    Finally, she is given a new medication which actually works. The scenes are very well-done, as she is sitting outside the medical school, suddenly feeling like she wants to live life again.

    What I particularly appreciated about the message in this film was that, Paulie recovers in her own time; at age 44, she must learn to re-live the rest of her life, even though she lost 18 years in the hospital, due to the illness. The film does not condescend or fault the patient, she is merely doing the best she can to cope with a destructive illness.

    At the conclusion, we see Paulie as she is functioning, ready to finish school. On the way, she sees a homeless woman. She leaves her some food, reflecting on how alienated some people are, and how fortunate she was, to have received effective treatment. 9/10.
    stevelaughton@hotmail.com

    Very true to life

    Having just retired from working in a forensic psychiatric facility, I can attest that the performance I saw last evening on the Lifetime Movie Network, Out Of Darkness, is about as real as it gets. Most patients are very much aware of their illness and very aware of their treatment and the drugs they take for this illness - Paranoid Schizophrenia. Their auditory and visual hallucinations are truly real to them and control their everyday life. Clozoril, which is the drug Paulie took to experience normality, is the miracle drug used in the battle against this mental condition when other drugs fail. Although very effective, it has many, many adverse side affects.

    Diana Ross should definitely have been given an Emmy award, at the very least, for her portrayal of an individual stricken with this disease. She played a Paranoid-Schizo to a tee. I don't know how I missed seeing this movie all these years. A truly remarkable performance from an individual who is a multi-faceted entertainer. A singer/actress who has had to fight her own demons and I'm sure drew on those experiences to portray Paulie Cooper. Does anyone know if this movie was in part based on a true story?
    9dlcarraw

    the real deal

    I didn't realize I was watching Diana Ross when I saw this. She is very good.

    The movie does an extraordinary job of conveying what psychosis is like. Been there, done that. What's even better is that it shows, in realistic ways, what it is like to cope with psychosis.

    Too many films romanticize psychosis - madness is enticing if horrifying, a voyeuristic thrill for the presumably sane. In this film, it is humanized. Paulie struggles to "ride it out", to have a plan to cope, to cope, and to go beyond coping to living a full life, while managing her own condition. Tremendously empowering.

    This film lacks syrup, and while it is dramatic it is not generally melodramatic. Paulie's work to trust others so that she can heal, to rebuild relationships with her family as she does, to face the real, irreparable changes that 18 years of poorly controlled schizophrenia have had on her child, her family & herself is so well portrayed that it merits a run-on sentence.

    9 stars.
    6moonspinner55

    Ross is the reason to watch

    Diana Ross is gripping as a 42-year-old woman just finished with her third year of medical school who is sidelined by a particularly destructive bout of paranoid schizophrenia, a condition she's aware of and has lived with since her mid-20s. The delusions and voices come and go, but when a kindly doctor intervenes with a new drug, Ross has a chance to actually rebuild her life. A sensitive, educational TV-film that strives--and perhaps stresses a might too hard--to teach the viewer something about mental illness (as well as the shame family members feel about the disease, and their eventual acceptance of it). It's a heady acting vehicle for La Ross: she takes on this highly dramatic, unglamorous (and some may say well-trodden) role and gives it bitterness, rage, confusion and, finally, hope. The narrative is engineered to relay the overall goodness of our medical community (which may seem like a stretch to Ross' character, having been hospitalized over 40 times), while the writing is occasionally too flowery. Still, a disturbing and moving effort, with a gem of an ending.
    10Scoval71

    Compelling, Brilliant and Very Realistic

    Diana Ross gives an incredible and very realistic portrait of a woman who lives with mental illness and apparently seems to defeat it. I found the movie well acted--by all its cast members---both informative and entertainingly educational in a good sense---that the educational aspects are subtle and not like a documentary. This is a dramatic and excellent movie that shows Diana Ross as a talented convincing actress. It shows that not everyone is accepting of mental illness--she gets dumped by a boyfriend who cannot handle the fact that she has survived mental illness. Highly recommended for the entire family and for those who have family members who are afflicted with mental illness, not to mention the many fans of Diana Ross, the actress in this case.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      In an attempt to improvise the "walk" of a homeless indigent, Diana Ross discreetly placed an orange between her skirted thighs and proceeded to hobble along on cue. The effort required to keep the concealed orange in place without using her hands, effected a gait so uncanny that Ross's director, Larry Elikann, later quizzed her about how she walked the "walk." According to Ross, herself, as related to the audience on Actors Studio (1994) (19 February 2006), she never did disclose the simplicity of her little ruse.
    • Quotes

      Paulie Cooper: Well, it feels like being in a dream... and it feels like a really important dream. But it's not a dream, because you're not asleep. And because you're not asleep you can't wake up.

    • Connections
      Featured in The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (1995)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 16, 1994 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Out of Darkness
    • Production companies
      • Anaid Film Productions Inc.
      • Andrew Adelson Company
      • Capital Cities/ABC Video Enterprises Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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