Lying Eyes
Lying Eyes | |
---|---|
Genre | Thriller |
Written by | Paul B. Margolis |
Directed by | Marina Sargenti |
Starring | Cassidy Rae Vincent Irizarry Jamie Rose Allison Smith |
Theme music composer | Dennis McCarthy |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producers | Suzy Beugen Chuck McLain (executive producer) Charles Morales (executive producer) |
Editor | Nancy Morrison |
Running time | 97 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | National Broadcasting Company (NBC) |
Release |
|
Lying Eyes is a 1996 American made-for-television thriller film starring Cassidy Rae, Vincent Irizarry, Allison Smith and Jamie Rose. It was directed by Marina Sargenti. The film first aired on the National Broadcasting Company network on 9 December 1996.[1]
Background
The film stars Cassidy Rae as Amy Miller, Vincent Irizarry as Derek Bradshaw, Jamie Rose as Elizabeth Bradshaw and Allison Smith as Jennifer.[2] The film had a working title of Bed of Lies.[1] It was filmed in California at Cupertino, Palo Alto, San Jose and the Los Gatos High School.[3] Lying Eyes was produced by C.M. Two Production and Hearst Entertainment Productions.[4]
In Sweden, the film debuted on 10 January 1999 whilst in the UK, the film wouldn't debut until 19 November 2004, although it was not actually released on VHS or DVD in the country.[1] The film was originally released on VHS in America through Uav Corporation in 2001,[5] with a DVD following in 2006 by Allumination, which used the same artwork as the VHS version.[6] In April 2012, a new DVD version was issued by Fisher Klingenstein Films.[7] In May 2012, the film was included on a "Mystery and Suspense" 4 DVD Collection set, also released by Fisher Klingenstein Films. This set included Lying Eyes as the first film, along with 1994's Visions of Terror, 1991's Face Value and 1986's Thompson's Last Run.[8] In Brazil, the film was distributed by PlayArte Filmes.[4]
Plot
A 33-year-old lawyer, Derek Bradshaw courts and wins Amy Miller, an 18-year-old young and lively high school cheerleader. The slick lawyer is the epitome of creepiness: a straight-faced liar, a sneaky philanderer, and magnetically charismatic. He seduces Amy with romantic evenings and extravagant gifts much too adult for an 18-year-old. Amy's support system falters as she withdraws from her friends and her hard-working single mother, while a mystery stalker repeatedly threatens Amy's life. Is it Derek's suspicious wife Elizabeth, Amy's best friend Dana, a jealous ex-boyfriend, or some other anonymous competitor? When Amy finally acknowledges Derek's duplicity and attempts to end the affair, he won't let her off that easily, and the threats escalate as she becomes the victim of vicious pranks and ultimately, life-threatening attacks.[9][10]
Cast
- Cassidy Rae as Amy Miller
- Vincent Irizarry as Derek Bradshaw
- Allison Smith as Jennifer
- Jamie Rose as Elizabeth Bradshaw
- Ashlee Levitch as Dana
- Sherry Hursey as Ruth Miller
- Nancy Carlin as History teacher
- Richard Conti as Husband in Mansion
- James Coulter as Yuppie in Bar
- Katie Davis as Christie
- Kandeyce Jorden as Erin
- Lisa Rodríguez as Lauren
- Howard Swain as Detective Meyers
- Amber Van Lent as Derek's secretary
- Steve Zad as Andy
Reception
Allmovie gave the film two out of five stars, where the reviewer Lisa Kropiewnicki described the film as a "romantic thriller", and stated "Director Marina Sargenti, who has a penchant for horror thrillers such as "Child of Darkness", "Child of Light" (1991) and "Mirror, Mirror" (1990), succeeds in building tension and creating some titillation in this "woman in jeopardy" thriller. However, while leads Cassidy Rae and Vincent Irizarry are blessed in the genes department, their story line is cliche-ridden trash. Trite dialogue, frustratingly stupid character decisions, an outdated soundtrack, and camera direction that's intended to be voyeuristic but comes off more like a spastic puppy-cam are just a few of the film's sins. Satisfaction is denied as the villain (skillfully played by Irizarry) never truly gets what he deserves, a hallowed hallmark of this benighted genre. For a more successful cheerleader fantasy, see the Academy Award-winning "American Beauty" (1999)."[11]
On July 23, 1997, Fort Worth Star-Telegram described the film as "one of NBC's dozens of tossaway women-in-jeopardy dramas."[12]
References
- ^ a b c "Lying Eyes (TV Movie 1996) - IMDb". IMDb.
- ^ "Lying Eyes". IMDb. 9 December 1996.
- ^ "Lying Eyes (TV Movie 1996) - IMDb". IMDb.
- ^ a b "Lying Eyes (TV Movie 1996) - IMDb". IMDb.
- ^ "Lying Eyes [VHS]: Cassidy Rae, Vincent Irizarry, Allison Smith, Jamie Rose, Ashlee Levitch, Sherry Hursey, Nancy Carlin, Richard Conti, James Coulter, Katie Davis, Paul Ghiringhelli, Kandeyce Jorden, Alan Caso, Marina Sargenti, Nancy Morrison, Charles Morales, Chuck McLain, Suzy Beugen, Paul B. Margolis: Movies & TV". Amazon. 2 October 2001. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ^ "Lying Eyes: Sherry Hursey, Vincent Irizarry, Jamie Rose, Allison Smith, Ashlee Levitch, Cassidy Rae, Vince Irizarry, Marina Sargenti: Movies & TV". Amazon. 16 November 2006. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ^ "Lying Eyes: Cassidy Rae, Marina Sargenti: Movies & TV". Amazon. 2 April 2012. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ^ "Lying Eyes / Visions of Terror / Face Value / Thompson's Last Run - 4 DVD Collection: Robert Mitchum, Wilford Brimley, Vincent Irizarry, Barbara Eden, Marina Sargenti, Sam Pillsbury, John Gray, Jerrold Freeman, Paul B. Margolis, Duane Poole, John Carlen: Movies & TV". Amazon. 17 May 2012. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ^ "Lying Eyes (TV Movie 1996) - IMDb". IMDb.
- ^ Ashlee Levitch. "Lying Eyes (1996) - Trailers, Reviews, Synopsis, Showtimes and Cast". AllMovie. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ^ "Lying Eyes (1996) - Review". AllMovie. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ^ [1] [dead link ]
External links
- Lying Eyes at IMDb