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Far From Home

 
Movies:

Far from Home

  • Director: Meiert Avis
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Psychological Thriller
  • Themes: Serial Killers, Nightmare Vacations, Fathers and Daughters
  • Main Cast: Matt Frewer, Drew Barrymore, Richard Masur, Karen Austin, Anthony Rapp, Andras Jones, Susan Tyrrell
  • Release Year: 1989
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 86 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Former child star and one-time scandal magnet Drew Barrymore had her first teenage role in this offbeat thriller with comic overtones. Charlie Cross (Matt Frewer) is vacationing with his 15-year-old daughter Joleen (Barrymore). Charlie and Joleen are stranded in an Arizona trailer park when they run out of gas, and they quickly get to know their temporary neighbors, including ill-tempered landlady Agnes Reed (Susan Tyrrell), her son Jimmy (Andras Jones), friendly but scrambled Viet Nam vet Duckett (Richard Masur), fellow travelers Amy (Jennifer Tilly) and Louise (Karen Austin), and geeky Pinky Sears (Anthony Rapp). However, it turns out that a psychotic murderer is in their midst, and Sheriff Bill Childers (Dick Miller) joins with the mobile home dwellers in trying to catch the killer before he can strike again. Far From Home marked the directorial debut of Meiert Avis, while screenwriter Tommy Lee Wallace previously worked with co-star Frewer as a director for the TV series Max Headroom. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Dick Miller - Sheriff Bill Childers; Jennifer Tilly - Amy; Connie Sawyer - Viney Hunt; Stephanie Walski - Sissy Reed; Teri Weigel - Woman in Trailer; John Spencer - TV Preacher

Credit

Cate Bangs - Art Director, John H.M. Berger - Art Director, Linda Francis - Casting, Donna Linson - Costume Designer, Meiert Avis - Director, Marc Grossman - Editor, Lawrence Kasanoff - Executive Producer, Ellen Steloff - Executive Producer, Jonathan Elias - Composer (Music Score), Victoria Paul - Production Designer, Paul Elliott - Cinematographer, Donald P. Borchers - Producer, Susan Raney - Set Designer, Thomas L. Bellissimo - Special Effects, Theodore Gershuny - Screenwriter, Tommy Lee Wallace - Screenwriter, Elaine Mueller - Screenwriter, Ted Gershun - Short Story Author

Similar Movies

Bingo; Joy Ride; Identity; The Hitcher II: I've Been Waiting; The Undesirable; Dark Summer
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Wikipedia: Far From Home (film)
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Far from Home
Directed by Meiert Avis
Produced by Donald P. Borchers
Written by Theodore Gershuny(as Ted Gershuny)/Tommy Lee Wallace (Tommy/Tom Wallace)
Starring Drew Barrymore,
Matt Frewer,
Jennifer Tilly,
Dick Miller,
Anthony Rapp,
Andras Jones,
Richard Masur
Music by Jonathan Elias
Cinematography Paul Elliott
Editing by Marc Grossman
Distributed by Lightning Pictures/Vestron Pictures/Artisan Entertainment
Release date(s) June 30, 1989
Running time 86 min
Country USA
Language English

Far From Home is a 1989 Suspense/Independent Film/thriller (with slasher elements) starring Drew Barrymore, Matt Frewer, Jennifer Tilly, Dick Miller and the late John Spencer in a cameo role. It centered on a divorced father who breaks down in a desert town along with his teenage daughter, forced to stay in a trailer park they attract the intentions of a troubled local who becomes dangerously fixated on one of them. Barrymore's book, Little Girl Lost, which describes her battles with addiction, was written around the same time as this film was made.[1] The film was shot in the Black Rock Desert and in Gerlach, NV.

Contents

Synopsis

Charlie Cox (Matt Frewer) is a divorced writer who lives in Los Angeles. Charlie and his daughter Joleen (Drew Barrymore) are on their way home from a cross country vacation when they run out of gas in Banco, Nevada -- a small town located in a remote part of the desert.

It's the day before Joleen's 14th birthday. When they stop in the Banco Supermarket, they notice that there's no one behind the counter, but sheriff Bill Childers (Dick Miller) is in the store.

When Joleen looks at the floor behind the counter, she screams. That's because she has just seen the body of the store's owner, Ferrell Hogus, in a pool of blood.

Charlie and Joleen later check a nearby gas station owned by a friendly Vietnam war veteran named Duckett (Richard Masur), but Duckett doesn't have any gas, so Charlie and Joleen check into the nearby Palomino Guest Ranch and Trailer Park, which is owned by an abusive landlady named Agnes Reed (Susan Tyrell).

Joleen soon meets Agnes's teenage son Jimmy Reed (Andras Jones). On that night, while Agnes is taking a bath, Agnes is killed when a hand reaches in through her bathroom window and pushes a small fan into the bathtub water, electrocuting Agnes.

That night, Charlie and Joleen also meet their neighbors, fellow travelers Louise (Karen Austin) and Amy (Jennifer Tilly). On the next day, when Jimmy tries to rape Joleen, Joleen is rescued by Pinky Sears (Anthony Rapp), another teenager who lives at the guest ranch.

Later that day, Charlie and Joleen agree to car pool with Louise and Amy, and that night, as they are about to leave the guest ranch, the killer blows up the car -- with Amy in it -- to prevent Joleen from leaving.

The killer is now obsessed with Joleen, whose diary is stolen by the killer. On the next day, when Jimmy tries to rob Duckett's gas station, Jimmy is accused not only of trying to rob the gas station, but he's also accused of the murders of Ferrell, Agnes, and Amy.

Duckett goes to Pinky's trailer, where he discovers that Pinky's mother has been dead for some time, and her body is covered with bags of ice. Pinky, who is the killer, shows up and stabs Duckett with a screwdriver, and then Pinky leaves. When Joleen goes to Pinky's hideaway to hang out with him, she finds her diary, and comes to the realization that Pinky is the killer.

When Duckett radios Bill's car and tells Bill and Charlie that Pinky has Joleen, Bill and Charlie head to the hideaway to find Pinky and Joleen, and at the hideaway, Pinky kills Bill.

Pinky chases Joleen up to the top platform on a nearby radio tower. Charlie tries to get up on the platform, but Pinky stops Charlie by cutting Charlie's hand.

Pinky says that he thought Joleen loved him. Duckett, who is sitting in a nearby vehicle with a rifle in his hands, fires a shot that causes Pinky to fall off of the tower. Pinky dies when he lands in a large satellite dish below.

Later, Duckett explains about Pinky keeping his mother's body iced, and then explains that Pinky started slipping over the edge before Pinky ever met Joleen.

Pinky has been keeping ice on his mother's body and leaving her TV on because he didn't want to believe that she got sick and died, he didn't want to believe she was gone.

Pinky had to somehow get food for himself, so when Pinky went to the supermarket to get food, and Ferrell denied him, he killed Ferrell. Pinky had to live somewhere, so when Agnes went after Pinky, angrily demanding that Pinky pay rent that he couldn't afford, Pinky killed Agnes.

Pinky became obsessed with Joleen, so when Joleen, Charlie, Amy, and Louise went to leave, Pinky blew up the car with Amy in it to stop Joleen from leaving.

Charlie, Joleen, and Louise leave Banco, and they head home to California.

Cast

Actor / Actress Character
Drew Barrymore Joleen Cox
Matt Frewer Charlie Cox
Anthony Rapp Pinky Sears
Jennifer Tilly Amy
Dick Miller Sheriff Bill Childers
Andras Jones Jimmy Reed
Richard Masur Duckett
Susan Tyrrell Agnes Reed
Karen Austin Louise
Connie Sawyer Viney Hunt
Murrill Maglio Man in Trailer
Teri Weigel Woman in Trailer
John Spencer TV Preacher

References

  1. ^ Barrymore, Drew (February 1990). Little Girl Lost. Atria. ISBN 0671689223. 

See also


External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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