SOUVENIRS DE L'AU-DELÀ
Hideaway
Apres un accident d'automobile, Hatch Harrison, tombe dans un coma depasse, est ranime au bout de deux heures grace aux soins d'une equipe chirurgicale hors pair. Seulement il ne revient pas seul de l'au-dela et la menace de ce double plane sur sa propre fille.
Réalisateurs
Distribution
Jeff Goldblum
Hatch Harrison
Christine Lahti
Lindsey
Alicia Silverstone
Regina
Jeremy Sisto
Vassago
Alfred Molina
Jonas
Rae Dawn Chong
Rose Orwetto
Kenneth Welsh
Detective Breech
Michael McDonald
Young Cop
Don S. Davis
Dr. Martin
Suzy Joachim
Dr. Kari Dovell
Tom McBeath
Morton Redlow
Joely Collins
Linda
Roger Cross
Harry
Rebecca Toolan
Female Doctor
Hiro Kanagawa
Nurse Nakamura
Gaetana Korbin
Victim
Equipe
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ
(1)
Wuchak
Coming back from the other side with a strange new ability (or curse)
A well-to-do couple in the Seattle area (Jeff Goldblum & Christine Lahti) is struggling with grief and the challenges of parenting a beautiful teenager (Alicia Silverstone). When the man seems to die in an accident he is resuscitated by a revolutionary doctor (Alfred Molina). Yet coming back from the afterlife has a peculiar effect as he starts to have visions of a local serial killer (Jeremy Sisto).
"Hideaway" (1995) is a psychological crime thriller with mystery/horror elements based on Dean R. Koontz’ 1992 novel. Dean hated the end results and wanted his name removed from the credits, but the gist of his story is intact (I guess the devil is in the details, as they say). True, the movie changes Regina from a cool orphan into a typical spoiled teenager and omits elaboration on how Vassago (Sisto) becomes what he is, but so what? You can only fit so much of a book into 1 hour and 45 minutes; besides, enough detail is there if you read in between the lines.
The movie reminds me of a meshing of the future “Kiss the Girls” (1997) and “Bless the Child” (2000). It shares the tone and general locations of “Disturbing Behavior” (1998) with the story being influenced by flicks like “Body Parts” (1991) and “Eyes of Laura Mars” (1978). Obviously if you favor these kinds of flicks you’ll probably like this one despite complaints by Koontz and fans of the book.
The storytelling is a little confusing in certain ways (for instance, if the killer dies in the opening sequence, how can he be alive & murdering people?). Yet everything is explained by the last act. Meanwhile the colorful CGI depicting the afterlife is quaint (being done in 1994) and reminiscent of the dubious effects in “Bless the Child,” but that’s okay because the afterlife should appear amorphous anyway.
Silverstone was about 18 during shooting and quite fetching, but she’s not the focus; Goldblum and Sisto are. Speaking of Sisto, he looks & acts like Jim Morrison would if he was a psycho serial murderer. Meanwhile Lahti was 44 at the time and looks great.
The ending at the titular hideaway (in a defunct amusement park) is thoroughly comic booky, but the flick has effective atmosphere and delivers the goods if you can roll with it rather than against it.
The film was shot in Britannia Beach, British Columbia, which is 20 miles north of Vancouver. Vassago's hideaway was constructed in the abandoned Britannia Mine.
GRADE: B-/C+
Avis fournis par TMDB
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