Amy Martin (Claudia Christian), an attractive married woman and a member of the 'Country Club Tennis Set', is being neglected by her workaholic doctor husband, Jerry (Corbin Bernsen). Lonely... Read allAmy Martin (Claudia Christian), an attractive married woman and a member of the 'Country Club Tennis Set', is being neglected by her workaholic doctor husband, Jerry (Corbin Bernsen). Lonely and insecure, Amy foolishly falls for the seductive charms of a much younger man, Steve S... Read allAmy Martin (Claudia Christian), an attractive married woman and a member of the 'Country Club Tennis Set', is being neglected by her workaholic doctor husband, Jerry (Corbin Bernsen). Lonely and insecure, Amy foolishly falls for the seductive charms of a much younger man, Steve Sterns (Nicholas Celozzi) who is introduced to Amy by her good friend, Sheila. The love aff... Read all
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- Detective Jackson
- (as Jimmy Van Patton)
- Jeremy
- (as James Larson)
- Miss Forbes
- (as Barrow Davis)
- Delivery Man
- (as Danny Leonard)
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Featured reviews
Things get messy, there's guilt & suspense & it all looks & feels very 90's late-night Sleezy Slasher & i liked that about it as i love many B-movies & old slasher flicks, now I'm not saying this is a great film or even a particularly good film but for an easy watching late-night Thriller i didn't mind it & it's above average because we have one of my all time favourite actors in this, the great & legendary RON PERLMAN!!!! Now i know he probably took this role just for the cash because this is a low-budget sleezy DTV flick but his presence lifts it in quality right away, he is even good in his small role as one of the local Detective's investigating these bloody murders & the film is always interesting whenever he's on screen. I mean PERLMAN is always good in anything even if the movie isn't great & here he gives his small but decent enough role as Detective Perry, some character traits & gives him enough life to be an interesting character that i liked to follow through this cheap standard Slasher Thriller.
I've given a longer review than really needed but that's because Ron Perlman deserves some recognition for being a hard working underrated & undervalued actor but The Perl has his fans & I'm one.
The look of this small production is actually decent with that cheap lighting that they always used in these straight to video films, the glow of blue, green & red & i liked the sleezy 90's & Early 2000's feel & its a fine little flick really just nothing special or great but like i said an easy watching little Thriller best watched late at night, oh & the beginning with the funky rap music as it started with the films title & the scenes of people dancing, smoking & wondering about a sleezy motel place was hilarious!!! I laughed lots, good 'ol Perlman for taking this job & making it atleast watchable trash.
The narrative centers on Amy Martin, a sexually frustrated California housewife who succumbs to the seduction of tennis teacher Steve (Nicholas Celozzi), apparently blind to his obvious baggage. When Amy rejects Steve after a night of passion, he turns stalker.
Mixing the serial killer genre with the betrayed lover, we get steals from Psycho and Shadow of a Doubt, with the requisite ineffectual police investigation. Suspicion is also placed on Amy's husband Jerry (Corbin Bernsen) since he never wants to sleep with her. There is a double nightmare, and at the end we are given a Brian de Palma-ish twist.
The treatment provides some comedy - "Nail one ba****d" is noted after the police chief yells "We gotta nail this ba****d", "Motherf**ker" is given a clever use, and someone accused of over-using the telephone ends with a cell phone jammed in their mouth. Steve is given a chopsticks musical motif which at one point allows him to play on a toy piano, Amy is very particular about how she is spoken to as her repeated cry is "Don't speak to me like that", and there is plenty of lightning.
Director Mark Jones goes for the standard subjective, expressionist and lurking camera-work, with minimal use of slow motion, and uses glass for silhouette, refraction and distortion. He cross-cuts between two seductions, stages an argument on the beach with screaming seagulls in the background ending with a long tracking shot, and exposes the bare breasts of prostitute victims.
Ron Perlman has a small role as a Detective and gives his character some nice quirks (it wouldn't surprise me if they weren't scripted and he did them simply to entertain himself).
Rental.
Did you know
- GoofsWhen Amy comes running out of the house in a panic to her car parked in the street, the cameraman (wearing tan shorts) is reflected in the car door.
- SoundtracksNightmare Boulevard
Music and Lyrics by Geoff Levin and Aaron Edson
Sung by Carrie Jo Crosby (as Carrie Jo Hubrich)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Color