IMDb RATING
4.9/10
8.5K
YOUR RATING
A mother desperately races against time to save her child as authorities place her small town on lockdown.A mother desperately races against time to save her child as authorities place her small town on lockdown.A mother desperately races against time to save her child as authorities place her small town on lockdown.
Michelle Johnston
- Heather
- (voice)
David Reale
- CJ
- (voice)
Jason Clarke
- Greg Minor
- (voice)
Debra Wilson
- Dedra Wilkinson
- (voice)
Christopher Marren
- Peter
- (as Chris Marren)
Edie Mirman
- Amy's Mother
- (voice)
Ellen Dubin
- Sergeant Brandt
- (voice)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is not a bad film. From reading the reviews I was expecting it to be very weak, but it's not. I think the problem that the reviewers have is that this is NOT an action film. If you watch it not expecting action, shooting and chases, it is actually a very good film. Its true that 80% of it is the main character on a jog in the woods, but that doesn't mean there is no suspense. The acting is good, the scenery is beautiful and the plot is strong and believable. Well worth watching if you're not expecting high octane action or CGI nonsense.
When a mother learns that a shooter has targeted her son's high school (and discovers that her son is one of the 5 students that the shooter is holding hostage) she finds herself in a desperate race against time to try and reach her son before it's too late...
Whilst the concept is good and had the potential to be a good social commentary (particularly in the world that we live in at the moment) The Desperate Hour/Lakewood just never quite hit the mark for me.
The simple truth is that one woman jogging around and making several frantic phone calls to try to reach her son and find out what is going on at his school is a tricky role of the dice (particularly for around 85 minutes). Added to that several implausibilities such as police allowing a civilian to talk to a shooter as a distraction for them to send in a SWAT team? What???? A repair shop that can seemingly access personal information from all and sundry from their car number plates? I'm not sure how things work in America, but I'm pretty sure in the UK that only the police and the DVLA can access that sort of information. To me it was one of those films that presented lots of unlikely events in order to make the film more exciting, but for me, these gaping flaws were simply too difficult to overlook.
On the plus side Naomi Watts gives a great performance, but there's only so much that can be done with such a threadbare screenplay. I personally feel that this would have made a good 45-60 minute crime drama episode, but the material isn't suited to a feature length film. This is self-evident by its struggle to stretch itself out over its 85 minute run time.
It has its moments, but it's one note and is spread far too thinly to be truly enjoyable or involving.
Whilst the concept is good and had the potential to be a good social commentary (particularly in the world that we live in at the moment) The Desperate Hour/Lakewood just never quite hit the mark for me.
The simple truth is that one woman jogging around and making several frantic phone calls to try to reach her son and find out what is going on at his school is a tricky role of the dice (particularly for around 85 minutes). Added to that several implausibilities such as police allowing a civilian to talk to a shooter as a distraction for them to send in a SWAT team? What???? A repair shop that can seemingly access personal information from all and sundry from their car number plates? I'm not sure how things work in America, but I'm pretty sure in the UK that only the police and the DVLA can access that sort of information. To me it was one of those films that presented lots of unlikely events in order to make the film more exciting, but for me, these gaping flaws were simply too difficult to overlook.
On the plus side Naomi Watts gives a great performance, but there's only so much that can be done with such a threadbare screenplay. I personally feel that this would have made a good 45-60 minute crime drama episode, but the material isn't suited to a feature length film. This is self-evident by its struggle to stretch itself out over its 85 minute run time.
It has its moments, but it's one note and is spread far too thinly to be truly enjoyable or involving.
As a Canadian it bothers me that I only have to watch a half hour of a movie in order to recognize it as second rate Canadian-made, regardless of the actors. This is an example.
A solid hour of watching Naomi Watts making and receiving telephone calls while running in a forest. I kept wishing her battery would die!
A solid hour of watching Naomi Watts making and receiving telephone calls while running in a forest. I kept wishing her battery would die!
This movie was just Watts the whole time. In the spirt of movies like this The Guilty and that flight movie where the guy is on the phone the WHOLE time. This movie was nothing new or special. I was a bit annoyed with the whole movie to be completely honest. I think the more ppl in the movie the better the movie. See I loved The Guilty but I did not like this one. Not saying you won't enjoy this one but it was just not interesting to me. I will also not be recommending it to anyone I know. As always be your own judge!
And that's the film. Jogging for one hour straight, must of lost loads of weight. Also her phone bill must be high this month, overall a lockdown film.
Did you know
- TriviaFilmed in North Bay, Ontario.
- GoofsGreg's cellphone number was stored in Amy's phone when he calls her back. If she wanted to speak to him specifically on his cellphone, she should have just called it (rather than calling the office landline, being patched through to him, and then requesting that he call her back on his cell).
[While not referenced in the dialogue, it is entirely possible that Greg routinely turns his personal cell phone off at work to avoid interruptions.]
- ConnectionsReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 837: Scream + Clerk (2022)
- SoundtracksWe'll All Be Alright
Written by Adrianne Gonzalez, Amy Stroup and Mary Hooper
Performed by Amy Stroup x Adrianne Gonzalez (as AG)
Courtesy of Milkglass, LLC and Adrianne Gonzalez
By arrangement with Secret Road Music Services, Inc.
- How long is The Desperate Hour?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Desesperada
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $1,791,800
- Runtime1 hour 24 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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