just watch it!
... View MoreAn action-packed slog
... View MoreBy the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
... View MoreIt really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
... View MoreJennifer Riley (Stefanie von Pfetten) is a NYC detective and a good one. She has a great supporting boyfriend (Tahmoh Penikett). When her sister Lauren (Ferelith Young) is arrested for murder, Jennifer must return to Thornwood Heights, where she is less than welcomed by everyone except Lauren. Not only must Jennifer try to prove the innocence of her sister, she has to re-open old wounds, discover secrets, and figure out what happened to Abbey Blake who disappeared 20 years ago. A little plot spoiler here. She doesn't figure out what happened to Abbey Blake per se. She has an affair with an old boyfriend which tosses mud on her character. This was made for TV and has a horrible sound track and a lot of soap. Looks like there is going to be a part two to solve the Abbey Blake mystery. Guide: No swearing. Sex and partial nudity.
... View MoreA NY detective returns to her hometown after 20 years, to help her sister who is accused of murder. The plot was certainly what won me over, combined with good story progression and good cinematography, it never gave me the chance to get bored. As far as acting goes, we get a solid performance out of the protagonist and two more characters, but after that we sink in mediocrity. Which doesn't really matter, since our main focus is the detective. The background melody wasn't always ideal and some scenes could have been avoided. (unless they were used to support the sequel if there is one)Deadly secrets by the lake was worth watching, visiting their site was fun, I hope a sequel is on the way. Overall score 6.5/10
... View More"Deadly Secrets by the Lake" sounds like a typically risible title for a Lifetime project but is actually pretty good, effectively written by Roma Roth (also listed as one of the project's four producers) and Al Kratina, and directed by Don McBrearty with an effective sense of atmosphere. Jennifer Riley (an actress saddled with the indigestible name "Stefanie von Pfetten" — the sort of name that in the days of classic Hollywood got changed: back then nobody thought anyone would go see a movie billed as "'The Wizard of Oz,' starring Frances Gumm") is a New York City police detective who just arrested a man she caught in the act of preparing to rape the woman he'd already kidnapped, bound and gagged. She's been in a relationship for two years with a man named Santos Alvarez (played by an actor named Tahmoh Penikett — it almost seems as if the casting director worked hard to find a co-star with as ridiculous a name as the female lead, and despite the name of the character he doesn't look particularly Latino) but they've neither got married nor moved in together, and her life gets upended when she receives a call from her father back home in the small town of Thornwood Heights, where she grew up. Her dad is the police chief of Thornwood Heights but an ambitious deputy, Lewton (Dean Armstrong), is trying to push him out of that position. It seems one of Chief Riley's other daughters, Lauren (Ferelith Young), has been arrested for murdering Victor Townsend, the owner of the blog for which she worked and which was trying to expose the misdeeds of the town's richest man, coal magnate Connor Blake (Chris Gillett).Lauren was found next to Victor's corpse, with his blood all over her and the knife that killed him in her hand, but of course Our Heroine Jennifer is convinced that her sister can't have killed anybody, and she's determined to investigate the case herself even though she has no jurisdiction. Jennifer is hated in Thornwood Heights because 20 years earlier she was supposed to meet her best friend, Connor Blake's daughter Abby, for a platonic date — only she didn't show up because she was too busy having a decidedly non-platonic encounter with Abby's brother Hayden (Steve Byers). For some reason the police in general (other than her dad) and Lewton in particular decided that Jennifer must have killed Abby, and while they had neither Abby's body nor any other actual evidence against her, she didn't have a provable alibi either. Hayden refused to say they'd been together that night because his dad had previously lied and said the two had spent the evening together — a double lie because dad had actually been cheating on Hayden's mom with another woman, and if Hayden had told the truth about his own whereabouts he would have exposed his father's lie. So he didn't and let Jennifer take the blame for Abby's disappearance, and though Jennifer was never prosecuted she was forced to leave town — whereupon she went to New York City, became a cop and hooked up with the racially ambiguous Santos.Meanwhile, back home Hayden attempted to work in his dad's coal business, decided he didn't like it — though it's not all that clear how he did make his living — and he also got married, but by the time Jennifer returns Hayden and his wife have separated. Jennifer is convinced that Abby's disappearance and Victor's death are linked, and she investigates both crimes despite the open hostility of Connor Blake, who warns her not to see any member of his family; Lucky Martin (Conrad Coates), a nice-looking middle-aged African-American whose daughter was a co-worker of Lauren's at Victor's blog (which had aroused the ire of Connor Blake by printing material from an environmentalist organization challenging Connor's attempts to expand his coal mine); Jennifer's sister Nova (Claire Rankin), who works as a file clerk in the Thornwood Heights police department and is worried Jennifer's investigation is going to get her fired; and even Jennifer's dad (Fulvio Cecere), who tears into her one afternoon when he catches her with Hayden Blake at their home and demands she never see him again. While all this is going on Jennifer also realizes that someone in Connor Blake's operation had been leaking compromising financial information to Victor's blog, and she reaches the conclusion that the leaker was also the murderer.I could have done without the "teaser" aspect of the ambiguous ending, but for the most part this is actually quite a good program, rich and redolent with atmosphere and genuine suspense, and also ably capturing the mephitic atmosphere of small-town life, the metaphorically incestuous relationships that build up between all these people who have literally known each other all their lives, and above all in the classism of the piece. At one point Connor Blake makes his objections to Jennifer's activities so clear he grabs her arm and says, in a low, threatening voice, "I'm used to people doing what I tell them" — and though this movie was probably made before the last Presidential election there's certainly a lot of Trump in his attitude, this whole sense of noblesse oblige that because I have more money than you I am a naturally superior person and therefore I can demand your obedience and punish you however I see fit if I don't get it.
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