Eager to find her estranged father, Summer (TWILIGHTs Ashley Greene) sets out on a cross-country journey but soon has a slight run-in with the law. Much to her amazement, a local handyman rescues her. Its an unusual connection, but she is quickly charmed and accepts his invitation to spend the night. The following morning she is in for a rude awakening when he decides to change the rules of attraction by trapping her in his house. Taken prisoner in the demented strangers basement, her dream has come to a bitter end and her real-life nightmare has only just begun.
Girl gets picked up by a nice young man. Ends up abducted and chainedin his basement where she is given to join him and his killer family orwell...you know the drill.Good cast and crew make something out of a well worn plot line. You'vebeen here before, the question is do you want to go here again sincethe material isn't anything special, even if the performances are verygood. This is one of the increasing number of movies that are takingwell worn ideas, spicing them up with a great cast and then getting aweak script. It ends up wasting everyones time.I vote take a pass.
Granted This Review Counts As 4 But Out Of 17 Reviews? The Film StartsOf As A Typical Killer Movie...Girl Is In A Minorly Difficult SituationSo The Guy Pulls HEr Out Then They Have A One Night Stand & They KidnapHer & Put Her In The Basement. The Movie Is Only Likable To Anyone WhoWants To See Ashley Grene Half-Naked. The Twist Just Made The FilmDisturbed...The Twist...Is That THE GUY IS THE GIRL'S 1/2 BROTHER! IHad A Small Hint Of How Disturbed It Would Be When He Makes Out WithHis Mother. Anyway You See It...The Character Was Disturbed. The FunnyThing Was How Many Raving Reviews There Were For It. I Find ItUnbelievable That Only 3 People Agree With Me.
Summer (Ashley Greene) has run away from home and is searching for herfather who had abandoned her and her mother when she was very young. Apoliceman catches her red-handed while she is attempting to steal froma store. She escapes from the policeman with the help of stranger,Peter (Tom Hoxey). She hooks up with him for a one-night stand and toher horror, he and his mother happen to be psychopaths. Peter catchesyoung girls off-guard and brings them down to his basement where he hasa human garden which is downright horrific. Here he subjects them toinhuman torture if the girls try to escape. Summer tries to escape, butcannot and decides it is better to join them rather than knowinglyinflicting harm. During the course of her stay, Peter's father comeshome and she finds out he is her father also. But her long awaitedfairytale reunion is marred by the cold-hearted father who decides toenjoy her young ripe body, rather than enjoying her presence. Peter isbodily harmed when he decides to intervene. Her father takes her awayto a secluded area where there is only a woman, whom he plans to finishoff. Can Summer manage to escape her monster of a father? Ashley Greene did a good job in portraying Summer & Peter as the psychowho makes her a pretty flower in his "Human Garden" with skulls &another girl were pretty disturbing. I liked this film more than Iwould have as it stars Ashley & I'm a fan of her from Twilight. (Now,that will get me some hate..). She's not the two-goody shoes here & itsvery fascinating. The film when it starts to slightly drag sees theintroduction of Peter's father, who is rather entertaining to usaudiences. How could any mother do that with her child? Ewww gross.This film, though not awesome stands on its own & you will not getbored. The performances are quite realistic. Give it a chance people.Don't overlook it.7/10 -Girish, 20
My girlfriend wanted to buy me a horror DVD. It was between the Orphanand Summer's moon...unfortunately she decided on Summer's moon, and boydidn't we both regret it that evening! It really is a waste of time.Sure the film was produced in a short amount of time, but so have someclassic movies and without huge budgets also. I keep reading people'sreviews that say how good the acting was and i had to check i wasactually reviewing the same movie. Okay, maybe it wasn't the worst ihave ever seen and to be fair Marlon Brando would have been hard pushedto produce any moment of clarity and substance with the script thesepoor actors and actresses were given! By far one of the poorest, mostboring and stupid dialogues produced. The story was regurgitated trash,but not quality trash that has the honesty to realise its a bit crapand so consequently and refreshingly has a little laugh at the filmsexpense too, but just drab nonsense with a typical big busted girlthrown in with half a recognizable name to try and help lift the filmscredentials and the size of the audience who may like it. Even bylooking at the DVD cover art you can tell this is a bad movie. It kindof reminded me of the sort of film someone who really loved Buffy mayenjoy, and there is nothing wrong with that but honestly if you likeyour horror/thrillers films with any element of grittyness, realism,with scary moments, honest fun, moving, violent, gory, blackly funny,unpredictable, with any original thought or seemingly any love for filmmaking such as good photography, dialogue blah, blah, blah then thisisn't going to ring your bells! Be scared...be very very scared, at howbored you may become! The movie should give away a free gift if youstay awake long enough to make it to the ending!
Summer's Moon (Lee Demabre, 2009)Like most obsessive film snobs (at least, most obsessive film snobs I know), I keep best- and worst-of lists. I'm a little crazier than most, and have been unduly influenced by guys like David Thomson and Peter Travers, so I recently expanded my hundred-best list to a thousand-best list. (New movies get added to it at least once a month. There's so much out there to watch!) The hundred-worst list, however, is a lot less changeable. It's all half-a-star and zero-star movies, and despite my love of pure, unadulterated crap, I don't see all that many movies that are that horrible. For seven years, Lee Demabre's third film, Jesus Christ Vampire Hunter, occupied the #2 spot on that list. (It was supplanted a couple of months ago by Brian Yeo's horrid Zombies Ate My Neighbours: The Movie, coincidentally also a Canadian film. Predictably, it now resides at #3.) It is so far beyond terrible that better critics than I will have to invent new words for how beyond terrible it is. Which begs the question of why I'm sitting here writing this reminiscence while watching Demabre's most recent movie, Summer's Moon. And there's one answer: Stephen McHattie. I love Stephen McHattie, and will watch him in anything, from Gray Lady Down (which I saw in the theater! At nine years old!) to A History of Violence to Kaw, and every movie I've seem him in, well, at least he's good. Plot: Summer (Twilight's Ashley Greene) has grown up without a father, but she wants to find him, thanks to her deteriorating relationship with her mother. So, armed with nothing but an old photograph and a vague idea of where he lives, she heads north. All well and good until she runs into smooth-talking, sexy Tom Hoxey (Family First's Peter Mooney), who ends up being a psycho who has a thing for keeping a "garden" of lovely young transients in his basement, aided and abetted by his equally nutzoid mom (the wonderful Barbara Niven, probably best remembered these days for a role on the TV series Pensacola: Wings of Gold). She's been willing to put up with him doing it for a while, but just before taking Summer, he got a little greedy and took a girl from town, Amber (Carny's Dani Kind), whose father (The Bone Collector's Peter Michael Dillon) has just been sprung from prison and is now looking for her. And to top it all off, Tom's wayward father (McHattie) is coming home...If you can't see the big plot twist coming five minutes into this movie, you haven't watched enough movies like this. It's painfully obvious, and that's one of the movie's biggest weaknesses; Conradt (a veteran writer of Lifetime Original Movie fare) and Hogan (who wrote the much, much better Lie Still) didn't give us anywhere near a large enough cast to throw in the red herrings necessary to mask the identity of Summer's father. That said, once the writers give us the Big Reveal, which comes about halfway through the movie, and they stop trying to build the ineffective mystery, it actually starts getting good, in a twisted, envelope-pushing kind of way that one doesn't normally see in movies that are essentially made for television (while it did play a few festivals, it's essentially a straight-to-DVD flick that got picked up right quick by Chiller). I've seen a few reviews for the movie from gushing fans that I'd have to say go way, way too far. "...[O]ne of the most deranged, shocking, and twisted family thrillers ever made..." says the Imagination Films promo material, which makes me wonder if they've ever seen Street Trash or Motel Hell, or, for that matter, that scene in Deliverance from which this sort of thing normally stems. An IMDB reveiwer (who stamps him- or her-self as a Twi-hard from the outset) says s/he "[will] record it on a disk with Thirteen, Deep Winter, and Lords of Dogtown". I haven't seen Deep Winter, but I can attest that this is not as bad as the other two.Obviously a must for Twi-hards thanks to the Ashley Greene connection, and Stephen McHattie fans will find his over-the-top performance here enjoyable (I kind of thought of Gant Hoxey as the anti-Grant Mazzey, for those of you who recognize the name). Others will probably find it take-or-leave. Demabre has come a long, long way since Jesus Christ Vampire Hunter, but he still has a long, long way to go. **
This review is from: Summer's Moon (DVD) This movie was a lot better than I thought it would be! I enjoyed the performances of Ashley Greene and Peter Mooney. I thought they had good (albeit twisted) chemistry. I'm not sure why they decided to call the movie "Summer's Moon" as it has nothing to do with a moon. (probably to capitalize on New Moon?) Summer's Blood would've made more sense... although that would've made it sound like a gory horror film, which it certainly isn't. The most enjoyable performance was by Stephen McHattie, who doesn't arrive until the last 20 minutes, but he definitely makes his presence known. I've watched the movie multiple times and I always look forward to the moment he comes crashing on to the screen.
This review is from: Summer's Moon (DVD) The movie starts off very slow. There isn't alot of tension or edge of your seat moments. There is not alot of gore or violence. Summer is looking for her father and ends up meeting a boy who she hooks up with and ends up spending the night with him. Things appear normal until his mother is outside his door listening to him fornicate with Summer. The "creepiness" the boy possesses is his love for gardening; however, it never really explains why he must have garden angels. It explains his reasoning for his garden but not the angels. The mother and son seem to have a "thing" going on between them (yes, they kissed). The father is more sadistic than the son and simply kills women for amusement. The twist was predictable since the film didn't focus on other characters. I did find the end rather amusing and ended up giggling since it had a somewhat happy ending.
Obnoxious, foul-mouthed teen Summer (Ashley Greene) has a falling outwith her drunken mother, runs away from home and hitches her way to asmall town looking for the birth father she's never met. After gettingcaught shoplifting at a gas station, Summer escapes the police withhelp from a handsome young guy named Tom Hoxey (Peter Mooney). The twogo to a bar and then hook up back at his place. The next morning whenSummer attempts to leave, she's knocked out and wakes up chained in thebasement. Turns out that Tom is a bit on the unhinged side and hisfavorite pastime is keeping unwilling girls prisoner in his downstairs"garden." Tom is aided by his lonely, miserable mama Gaia (BarbaraNiven), who knows all about her son's little hobby but does nothing tohelp the victims. A little insane herself, Gaia is still a lovingmother. Well actually, she's a little too loving if you catch my drift.Meanwhile, Darwin (Peter Michael Dillon) is snooping around townlooking for his missing daughter Amber (Danielle Kind), who is alsobeing held prisoner in the Hoxey home. Things take an even strangerturn when Tom's father and Gaia's husband Gant (Stephen McHattie) - aserial killer himself! - returns home for a visit.Though the premise is pretty ridiculous, it gets off to a rocky startand the whole thing comes off like an R-rated made-for-TV movie, it'sfairly entertaining and has some pretty sick content. Most (not all) ofthe actors do a serviceable job. I was not very familiar with leadactress Greene, since you couldn't force me at gunpoint to sit througha TWILIGHT movie. She was highly abrasive (and thoroughly unlikable)the first half but seemed to do better as her character became moredesperate. Mooney did a nice job as the unstable son and Niven andMcHattie were both good as the psycho parents. The film is relativelylow on gore, though there's some nudity provided by Cinthia Burke,playing a tough biker babe/garage mechanic here.The Canadian-born director also made three (very clever) HARRY KNUCKLESshorts and several other genre pictures I've yet to see: the memorablytitled Troma release Jesus Christ VAMPIRE HUNTER (2001) and the H.G.Lewis-inspired horror-comedy SMASH CUT (2008).
Summer's Moon is a suspense horror movie that starts off with the hot-headed and rebellious young Summer (Ashley Greene, who plays Alice in the "Twilight" series) hitch-hiking to the small town of Massie to find the father she never knew. Well, she finds her blood relatives, but also finds a lot of trouble along the way, stumbling first upon a mentally unbalanced, twisted and incestuous family before later coming to meet her biological father. The insane family isn't in the vein of Leatherface and his clan in "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre", this is a perfectly normal-looking family at first glance, living in a clean, attractive home not far from town. It's only when you discover the unsettling relationship between mother and son, and the human additions to the son's 'garden' in the basement, that their true nature becomes apparant. And then things go from bad to worse when Daddy comes home. Stephen McHattie plays the family patriarch, away from home for long periods of time on business and on other pursuits. McHattie, as Gant Hoxey, delivers one of the best and most subtly creepy performances as a psychopath that I've ever seen. As with Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter, his effectiveness comes largely from the fact that much of the time there's nothing in his demeanor to suggest the violence and horror we know that's in there. There's a scene of the character in a park, sitting on a bench and sipping a drink, looking perfectly friendly and non-threatening, looking around at the park, noticing the pretty girls around... But with what we've seen of the character previously, and knowing his less-than-friendly intentions, especially toward the pretty girls, the otherwise benign scene is incredibly intense and disturbing. The filmmakers take their time with this scene, as they do with a number of spots in the movie where the atmosphere is given time to grow and take on a really eerie feeling. Ashley Greene also does a great job in this, and it's great to see a bit more of her than inTwilight (Two-Disc Special Edition). The cast in general is good, and the production well-made. There are little nods to other movies the cast has made - Summer's mother is named 'Twila' and in one part of the movie Summer's even dressed very much like Bella from Twilight! In a bit more subtle homage, the small town is named Massie, the same as the surname of McHattie's character Grant Massie in Pontypool (a criminally underseen gem, by the way). There's one angle in Summer's Moon, very small and subtle, but it adds a whole new possible dimension to the movie. I'm hesitant on whether to mention it, and am going to put it after my usual spoiler warning.****WARNING - POSSIBLE SEMI-SPOILERS AHEAD**** As I mentioned, the family house is very nice and clean. I don't know exactly how to say this, because it's probably better if noticed on one's own (hence the spoiler warning) but it adds such a powerful question to the whole movie. Put bluntly, when Gant returns home, the number of flies in the house jumps way up. It's nothing obvious, like in The Amityville Horror where you'd see a whole room swarming with them, but in various scenes in and out of the house, there's discreetly a fly or two buzzing around in the background for a couple seconds when McHattie's character is present or near. Nothing is commented on this within the movie, and it's so subtle (not All his scenes have them, by any means) that in real life one may never notice it, but given the character and the un-nerving sense of creepiness coming off him (hidden under a very sociable, charismatic exterior), this whole angle has obvious and powerful implications.****END SEMI-SPOILERS****** Summer's Moon leaves you with an eerie feeling after the credits have finished rolling, and there are questions that are deliberately left unanswered. Sometimes it's better not to go and spell everything out neatly in the last five minutes of the movie. This is one of those cases. Also known by the title "Summer's Blood", this is definately one to get.
"Summers Blood" starts out not too bad... I liked the overall look andthe acting, yet there was some technical downsides on the bad dubbingand the editing became atrocious in the end with tons of senselessdissolves. What at first looks like a slow movie with a hidden secretturns into a mess of its own. The movie opens up with a hitchhikinggirl ending up captured in a strange family after a pretty unconvincingone night stand. Her psycho lover keeps her in his "garden" in thebasement along with another girl who just sits and babbles and thendies.You wonder about what that garden is supposed to mean, why the motheris acting strange while it plays a fake love story between the girl andher capturer who has a soft spot for her. As soon as the drop that theguys dad is out and coming home and the girl tells her story about howshe came to town looking for her father you know everything thatscoming up.And thats the funny thing about the movie... everything that ismysterious is dropped on the sidelines while everything else ispredictable about one third in the movie. It all ends up random likethey made the plot up on the fly while filming it culminating in one ofthe most ridiculous movie endings ever. I thought my DVD was broken andskipped a few minutes to the credits but the movie really just end.Stay away from this farce. There is no depth in the characters, theiractions are not explained and for a horror movie this one seriouslylacks either atmosphere or gore and can't make up for it with the lameincest story and "evil knife loving daddy".
I fast forwarded through half the movie..if you want to get some sleep I suggest watching this repetitive slow moving dialog-laden flick:)
What a strange movie this is! Is it supposed to be some macabre humor?It seemed to take itself much too serious for that. As a thriller itdidn't have enough suspense and the storyline just was too thin. And asa downright horror flick it didn't have enough scares or gore. So thenet result was a non-distinct mix of everything and nothing. On the positive side I have to say that the acting was over-all fine.Maybe Ashley Greene didn't have to stretch her abilities, since shemost of the time walks around as a traumatized zombie. But the parentswere great, especially Stephen McHattie as the father is veryconvincing as an intimidating, self-assured but always good-humoredpsychopath. And I have to give due credit to Peter Mooney as the weirdand mentally deranged son. I thought he did a terrific job, his actingis a perfect mixture of boyish charm, insecurity and innocence withhair-raising bursts of sudden violence and unpredictable behaviour. Isaw Peter Mooney in the TV series Falcon Beach and snubbed hisperformance on IMDb, but now I see that that was due to bad casting anda way too shallow character-definition in the script. Here he'sabsolutely great! Now back to the negatives. There were all these illogical things thatkept amazing me. We're made to believe that the son habitually abductedgirls to lock up and torture in the family basement. Why? And why doesmother condone this rather quaint behaviour? It never gets explained.He does this for years and years? Didn't the police or anyone come andsearch for missing persons? Where did they ditch the bodies? What was the purpose of the "garden"? Did I miss some metaphor here? Orare the (numerous?) bodies buried there? The script never gives anyclue.Suddenly the evil father shows up (very convenient for the storyline,since he turns out to be exactly the lost father that our heroine issearching for). He doesn't seem to have much affection for either wifeor son, in fact he relentlessly and without a single hesitation killsthem on the spot to claim the girl for himself. So what kept him fromdoing the same thing much earlier, I mean, he apparently made thesevisits frequently, and he must often have found a locked-up girl therethat he fancied for himself. Our heroine succeeds in winning some trust with her captors and iseventually allowed to roam freely within the house. Was she so numbedthat she couldn't make a go for an escape? She seemed to have had ampleopportunities. The ending was an anti-climax, to say the least. When evil daddy leavesthe car to chat with an innocent by-standing woman (presumably toinflict some terrible harm on her), our heroine leaves the car andstabs him in the back. The end. Come-on now, couldn't they have done a little bit better than that!?! Iknow that many horror movies make the death of the villain/monster etc.a bit too elaborate, with countless miraculous and sudden resurrectionsbefore the final and most spectacular blow is given. But hereeverything ends with a dreadful puff: deranged son and mother killedwith one shot, father killed with one stab, that's it. I want my money back!!
I swear, I honestly don't know how these Twilight kids are going tosurvive in Hollywood if they lose their looks.Next to Robert Pattinson's the Haunted Airman, this movie comes in 2ndas the worst movie with a Twilight cast in it. I know this because myfriends decided to torture me by making me watch all the Twilightactors (pre-Twilight) after I had lost a bet.This is a movie about a girl who seeks her long lost father (aw, sweet)but then ends up having a one night stand with a weird, but hot guynamed Tom who saves her from the big bad sheriff after she's caughtstealing (how romantic). When she attempts to leave the next morning,things get awkward as Tom basically kidnaps/keeps her hostage (not soromantic).Of course, her capture eventually reveals just a whole bunch oftraumatic stuff to watch and listen to as the viewer witnesses badacting, more sex, daddy issues, and a garden of women in the basement.Yet none of that compares to the horrendous acting by Greene andeveryone else. This is so B rated and belongs more to the "teenagersattempting to make a horror sexy flick during their free time" genre.So basically, unless you have this intense desire to see Greene's back(she does no nudity. You'll have to go on a different website forthat), skip this and save room in your memory for something that won'tmake you say, "WTF did I just watch?" or more importantly, "Why did Ijust watch that?"
After discovering that his mother had hidden her birth to her unknownfather, Summer tempered teenager (Ashley Greene, Twilight) goes off tomeet the mysterious man. His only clue is a letter battered containingthe postmark of a little town called Massey. Once arrived in the ruralcommunity Summer meets a charming local handyman Hoxey named Tom (PeterMooney Falcon Beach TV's). Then she goes to Tom's house, where he liveswith his mother Gaia (Barbara Niven), for a night of casual sex. Herethe film is supposed to start... What can I say? Absurd, no rhythm,situations that can not even be ridiculous, certainly not scary. Actorsunable to be credible, but certainly not their fault, given theinconsistency of the script. But perhaps a bit 'more expressive wouldhelp... Dubbing in Italian, if possible, makes things even worse. Anhour and a half of boredom and yawning. No suspense, no thrill. Wealready know who is who and what will happen. The first part is slow,then the second is slower. I wonder who found it interesting just howthey did it. Maybe they felt asleep and dreamed another film.
This review is from: Summer's Moon (DVD) Pretty good movie! I love Ashley Greene! It's good to see her in little flicks outside Twilight. She did a great job in this one!
This was a movie that was predictable by description, but the journeyto get to her meeting her father is interesting. Summer is a tough girlwho is on a journey to find her father, who was told that she had beenmiscarried. The only thing she had to lead her to him was a picture anda card he had sent her mother. She hitches rides to the town that theletter came from. While running from a police officer for shoplifting,she meets a young man that hides her and takes her home. She has agreat night with him, but when she gets up in the morning and tries toleave, she ends up in the basement as a victim. As the movieprogresses, she gets more liberties in the house and stays locked therewith her captor and his mother. The father of the family is on the roadall of the time, but once he hears about Summer, he comes home to seethe new captive. Then the movie progresses as I would expect it to. Itwas a movie worth watching. Ashley Greene is not the sweet girl fromTwilight, but a tough girl with a will to survive.
Having bascially tracked this movie down online the very first moment the least bit of information was coming out about it, you could imagine the excitement I felt when I saw it in the New Releases section of Walmart. I fell in love with the trailer, and it looked bloody and a total gore-fest. Which was one of the many reasons I wanted to watch it so much. The next day, I talked to my mom about buying it with my own money. I had to have permission first, considering the fact it was Rated R and that I'm two years under eighteen. I told her the plot. And, believe it or not, I was allowed to buy it! As soon as I got to it the next time, I grabbed it and was ready to watch it alone and soon as I got home. I was kind of disappointed. The acting was a bit cheesy, and the large amount of useless curse words were ridiculous. The sex scene in the begining was a little longer than expected, but it was over in under a minute. Not a big part in it at all.***This may or may not contain spoilers***The mother watching her son have sex with a guest she didn't even know about was disturbing. The next morning, as Summer (main character) steals some money from a jar, Tom (other main character; woman's son) appears by the kitchen opening. Flirting at first but when he doesn't let her leave, she begins to feel offensive, pulling a hand gun out of her bag. The mother comes behind her and knocks Summer unconscious. Ouch. Tom says he was just joking that she couldn't leave. Summer wakes up in a darkend basement chained down only in her red t-shirt and black panties in a box of dirt. What the ---? She tries to escape, but, she fails. Tom appears. Summer threatens him and Tom says "Shh! You're upsetting Amber," Who is Amber? You may be thinking. Well, the camera turns to the corner of the basement to find a half-dead girl. Dirty, bloody, and unable to speak. Tom also has a collection of human skulls on a shelf (that is not a joke).Tom has a "human garden". He keeps women in the basement and over time they are either murdered or die. Tom thinks women are the most beautiful flower of them all (also not a joke). Believing he doesn't even hurt them. At all. Summer spends days trapped in the half-dark basement with dying Amber in the corner. To hurry this up, the family ends up being all serial killers, and if Summer wants to live, she must join them. It is pretty bloody, and it shows very disturbing things. So I wouldn't recommend anyone fourteen and under to watch it. It is full of drama, action, suspense, and a sense of thrilling horror. While it wasn't what I had expected, it truly lives up to the "disturbing" quality. If you want to know how twisted this movie really is . . . then do watch it.
I'd give this a 0 in a horrible moment. This is the lip-sincer of movies. Like Britany Spears Bimbo Beat Blather, this is talentless, directionless, visionless, meaningless and has absolutely nothing to say about nothing. The "acting" if that's what you call it these days is atrocious, I could do a better job, and I am no "actor".
Trying to subvert the expectations associated with the family of serial killers horror subgenre, SUMMER'S MOON offers an idealized small town and an attractive family as the villians and Twilight's Ashley Greene as the heroine who has more in common with these killers than she'd care to admit.While the movie plays it relatively coy with the amount of on-screen bloodshed (compared to other recent horror films), this restraint actually works in the film's favor--making it the perfect horror trojan horse for a younger audience who might not be prepared/old enough for more graphic scenes. The ideas about family, and nature vs/ nuture, and the twists within the story will freak them out enough.
Well i have to agree with most here , this movie is average at best & i like cheesy B-type horror films , this one just really does not go anywhere , it's missing so much ...... The story just does not work at all , most of the acting is average , i guess the Only reason to see this would be if you were an Ashley Greene fan , she looks great & her acting is good considering what little she has to work with , that would be pretty much the only reason to see this , maybe give it a rental if you must , but remember i can't give you back your 90 minutes of life you lose .
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