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Format: DVD
 Sep 1998
 Rated R
 Recording Mode: (unknown)
 91 min.
 Color
 UPC: 025192038624 |
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Movie Description John Lithgow goes bananas in a crazed multiple role as a child psychologist haunted by his deranged twin in this film from Brian De Palma (who explored similar territory in his earlier feature SISTERS). Inspired by Hitchcock as well as Michael Powell's classic PEEPING TOM, this study in abnormality has child psychologist Dr. Carter Nix (Lithgow) beginning to go bonkers around his young daughter. Wife Jenny (Lolita Davidovich) is a little concerned but too guilty over her affair with another man (Steven Bauer) to do anything about it. It's not until local children start disappearing that Jenny begins to realize that her husband might be continuing the demented experiments performed on him as a child by his own father, an infamous psychiatrist who's been wanted by the police for years. As the number of missing children rises, it is up to Jenny to unravel just what is going on before her own daughter vanishes as well. The highlight here is Lithgow, creepy and magnificent in not less then three distinct roles. It's a gleefully insane little chiller that features some great De Palma set pieces and will keep even dyed-in-the-wool suspense fans guessing.
Synopsis A psychologist takes a year off to help raise his daughter. His wife is pleased...until his multiple personalities emerge and drive him to re-create the experiments of his deranged father.
Film Notes DVD Features: Region 1 Encoding Production Notes Cast Bios Film Highlights Theatrical Trailer
Estimated budget $11.2 million.
Shot on location in Palo Alto, San Jose, Stanford, Los Gatos, Cupertino, Menlo Park, Woodside and Mountain View, California, in DeLuxe color and Panavision.
Began shooting October 24, 1991; completed shooting December 16, 1991. Released in the USA August 7, 1992. Released on video January 20, 1993.
Show in competition at the 1992 Venice Film Festival in September.
Industry Reviews "...A delirious thriller....Enjoyable precisely because it makes the most of its own lunacy and stays so far out on a limb..." New York Times - p.C5 - Janet Maslin
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