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Hideaway

 
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Hideaway

 
  • Directors: Brett Leonard; Bill Mizel
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Supernatural Horror
  • Themes: Woman In Jeopardy, Serial Killers, Devil Worship
  • Main Cast: Jeff Goldblum, Christine Lahti, Alicia Silverstone, Jeremy Sisto, Alfred Molina, Rae Dawn Chong
  • Release Year: 1995
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 103 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

A man has a near-death experience and awakens to find himself spiritually attached to another who went through a similar experience in this horror movie. The story is based on a Dean Koontz novel. Hatch Harrison, an antique dealer, finds himself in an extraordinary position following the car wreck in which he was broad-sided by a semi-truck. Although his wife and teenage daughter survive, Hatch was actually dead for two hours before innovative resuscitator Dr. Jonas Nybern was able to bring him back. Hatch tries to resume his normal life, but encounters difficulty when he begins having horrific hallucinations. It turns out that the "visions" are really the experiences of Vassago, a Satanist who ritually kills people. Somehow he and the killer are connected. Vassago, too can experience events in Hatch's life; he begins to threaten Hatch by telling him he will use his daughter for a virgin sacrifice. The two men must battle it out spiritually. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Mara Duronslet - Zoe; Suzy Joachim - Dr. Kari Dovell; Gaetana Korbin - Victim; Tom McBeath - Morton Redlow; Michael McDonald - Young Cop; Kenneth Welsh - Detective Breech; Don S. Davis - Dr. Martin; Rebecca Toolan - Female Doctor; Tiffany Foster - Samantha; Roger R. Cross - Harry; Hiro Kanagawa - Nurse Nakamura

Credit

Sandy Cochrane - Art Director, Cathy Sandrich - Casting, Amanda Mackey-Johnson - Casting, Monique Prudhomme - Costume Designer, Brett Leonard - Director, Bill Mizel - Director, B.J. Sears - Editor, Trevor Jones - Composer (Music Score), Rob Young - Musical Direction/Supervision, Michael S. Bolton - Production Designer, Gale Tattersall - Cinematographer, Jerry A. Baerwitz - Producer, Gimel Everett - Producer, Agatha Hanczakowski - Producer, Tim McGovern - Supervisor/Manager, Neal Jimenez - Screenwriter, Andrew Kevin Walker - Screenwriter, Dean Koontz - Book Author

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Wikipedia: Hideaway (film)
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Hideaway
Directed by Brett Leonard
Produced by Jerry A. Baerwitz
Gimel Everett
Agatha Hanczakowski
Written by Screenplay by Andrew Kevin Walker and Neal Jimenez Based on the novel by Dean Koontz
Starring Jeff Goldblum
Christine Lahti
Alicia Silverstone
Jeremy Sisto
Music by Trevor Jones
Cinematography Gale Tattersall
Editing by B.J. Sears
Distributed by TriStar Pictures
Release date(s) March 3, 1995
Running time 106 min
Country USA

Hideaway is a 1995 horror film directed by Brett Leonard and based on the novel of the same name by Dean Koontz. It stars Jeff Goldblum, Alicia Silverstone, Christine Lahti and Jeremy Sisto. In the movie Goldblum plays a man who dies in a car accident, only to be revived two hours later. He then experiences either hallucinations or psychic premonitions.

Contents

Tagline

  • Hatch Harrison was pronounced dead on arrival. After two hours, the doctors brought him back. But he didn't come back alone.

Plot

A Satanic worshipper (Sisto) chants in a room filled with candles and Satanic imagery. The worshipper then commits suicide in a ritualistic way by falling forward onto a knife.

Hatch Harrison (Goldblum) is on a drive with his family. Harrison gets into a car accident and is pronounced dead—only to be revived two hours later by specialist Dr. Jonas Nyebern (Molina). His wife Lindsay (Lahti), and daughter Regina (Silverstone), were also involved in the car accident but escaped without serious injuries.

After the accident and subsequent revival, Harrison begins to experience premonitions. These involve him seeing murders through the eyes of a killer. Harrison realizes that the murders are actually happening when the women he sees being murdered are announced as missing in news reports. The character Harrison sees committing the murders is later shown to be the same character who committed suicide in the opening sequence. The character, who is identified as Vassago, talks to Harrison's daughter at a night club, which Harrison sees in his visions.

Harrison attempts to stop Vassago from murdering only to be told that he is experiencing mental problems by his family, his psychiatrist, and the police. Harrison visits a psychic (Chong) who confirms his beliefs and tells him that Vassago is also having visions in which he can see through Harrison's eyes. It is then revealed that Vassago is the son of Dr. Nyebern and that Vassago killed his mother and two sisters. After his suicide (shown in the opening sequence), he was also revived from the dead by Dr. Nyebern.

Vassago then kidnaps Regina and goes to an abandoned amusement park, where he kills his father after being confronted by him. Harrison and his wife save Regina, and Harrison kills Vassago. The souls of Vassago and Harrison collide in battle. Harrison lives and exits the park with his family.

Cast

Reception

The film received negative reviews from critics, with the review tallying website rottentomatoes.com reporting that 9 out of the 11 reviews they tallied were negative for a score of 18% and a certification of "rotten".[1] Roger Ebert, one of the few critics who liked the film, characterized it as a standard fare horror film that accomplishes the film's modest goals.[2] Ebert summarized his review by saying, "Look, I'm not saying this is a great movie, or even a distinguished one. I'm saying: You want horror, you want psychic abandon, you want Rae Dawn Chong reading Jeff Goldblum's Tarot cards and not liking what she sees, you see this movie, you get your money's worth."[2] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle gave the film a poor review, but stated that Goldblum's performance "makes a tedious film intermittently tolerable."[3]

Hideaway made $11,677,123 in the US box office.[4]

Dean Koontz

Koontz was reportedly unsatisfied with the film. According to Washington Post's Rita Kempley, "Koontz hates the movie so much he tried to force TriStar to remove his name from the credits."[5] In addition, according to the San Francisco Chronicle's Walter Addiego, Koontz was so dissatisfied with Hideaway that he would only allow a film adaptation of his novel Phantoms to be made if he was allowed to approve of the final version of the film.[6]

References

  1. ^ Hideaway entry, rottentomatoes.com, accessed March 21, 2007.
  2. ^ a b Ebert, Roger. Hideaway review, Chicago Sun-Times, March 3, 1995, accessed March 21, 2007.
  3. ^ LaSalle, Mick. FILM REVIEW -- Goldblum Hidden Away in Predictable Movie, San Francisco Chronicle, September 1, 1995, accessed March 21, 2007.
  4. ^ Hideaway, movies.yahoo.com, accessed March 21, 2007.
  5. ^ Kempley, Rita. Hideaway, The Washington Post, March 4, 1995, accessed March 21, 2007.
  6. ^ Addiego, Walter. How it was made more interesting than the film Author Koontz got his say on "Phantoms", San Francisco Chronicle, January 28, 1998, accessed March 21, 2007.

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