Rosewood Lane
Rosewood Lane | |
---|---|
Directed by | Victor Salva |
Written by | Victor Salva |
Produced by | Nadine DeBarros Don E. FauntLeRoy Phillip B. Goldfine Victor Salva |
Starring | Rose McGowan Lauren Vélez Lesley-Anne Down Ray Wise |
Cinematography | Don E. FauntLeRoy |
Edited by | Ed Marx |
Music by | Bennett Salvay |
Production company | Hollywood Media Bridge |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $600,000 |
Rosewood Lane is a 2011 American thriller-horror film written and directed by Victor Salva, and stars Rose McGowan.[1] The film's story revolves around a radio talk show psychiatrist who moves back to her hometown and notices her neighborhood paper boy's unusual behavior. The official trailer of the film was released on the October 14, 2011.
Plot
The story follows Dr. Sonny Blake (McGowan), a radio talk show psychiatrist, when she moves back to her childhood home after her alcoholic father dies. Once back in her old neighborhood, she meets the local paperboy, a cunning, depraved sociopath who targeted her father and now targets her. When the boy starts calling her show and reciting eerie nursery rhymes, an unnerving game of cat-and-mouse begins. When the game escalates, she suddenly finds herself in an all-out war, one that forces her to redefine her ideas of good and evil, and has her fighting to stay alive.[2]
Cast
- Rose McGowan as Sonny Blake
- Daniel Ross Owens as Derek Barber/Paperboy
- Sonny Marinelli as Barrett Tanner
- Lauren Vélez as Paula Crenshaw
- Ray Wise as Det. Briggs
- Tom Tarantini as Det. Mike Sabatino
- Rance Howard as Fred Crumb
- Steve Tom as Glenn Forrester
- Lesley-Anne Down as Dr. Cloey Talbot
- Lin Shaye as Mrs. Hawthorne
- Bill Fagerbakke as Hank Hawthorne
- Judson Mills as Darren Summers
Critical reception
Sean Decker of the Dread Central gave Rosewood Lane 1 out of 5 stars, saying "the film is rife with baffling plot turns, characters who consistently make the most illogical of decisions, abandoned sub-plots (and players), plot holes a'plenty and a second act sequence that betrays the third reel's reveal (a reveal that ultimately makes little sense anyway)".[3]
References
- ^ "First Images from Rosewood Lane". Dread Central. May 5, 2011.
- ^ "About of Rosewood Lane". Archived from the original on July 13, 2011.
- ^ Decker, Sean (October 28, 2011). "Rosewood Lane (2011)". Dread Central. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
External links