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Complete credited cast: | |||
Rosanna Arquette | ... |
Sarah Blake
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Scott Bakula | ... |
Kevin Nicholas
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Max Pomeranc | ... |
Sam Blake
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Clifton Powell | ... |
Braddock
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Robert Wisden | ... |
Jenks
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Jenny Gago | ... |
Kate
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Richmond Arquette |
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Jerry Wasserman |
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Chris Mulkey | ... | ||
Laurie Paton | ... |
Liana
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Nancy Hillis | ... |
Airline Rep
(as Nancy McClure)
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Peter LaCroix | ... |
Security Guard
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Jill Teed | ... |
News Anchor
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Dee Jay Jackson | ... |
Cab Driver
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Divorcee learns from the FBI that her husband has mafia connections and put a contract on her life. She gets into the witness protection program and falls in love with the agent who protects her. Written by Holger Hellmuth <hellmuth@ira.uka.de>
Few performers can claim to have made two unrelated movies that make a perfect double bill; Rosanna Arquette made "Nowhere To Run" in 1993, and the following year she starred in "Nowhere To Hide." Now, she has done some good TV projects - "The Executioner's Song," "Promised A Miracle" and "Son of the Morning Star" come to mind - but this is closer to "Poison" and "I Know What You Did" on the quality scale, alas.
From the opening scene with Rosanna and Max Pomeranc (as her son) engaging in the least convincing piano miming in screen history, you know you're not in for a quality watch; the basic storyline had possibilities - a soon-to-be-divorced woman (Miss Arquette) finds out that her soon-to-be-ex wants to kill her, and goes under the protection of FBI agent Scott Bakula - but the actual movie is so spectacularly dull that it took me three tries to get through it, something no movie with Rosanna Arquette has ever required me to do. (Not even "Off The Wall.")
You don't get much in the way of action, or even emotion, though it's unusual to see an American movie actually have Vancouver play itself for once instead of standing in for various U.S. cities (though it does that here as well). Bakula's too stiff to make an impact, and though Rosanna tries hard you get the impression she doesn't care much for the script... not that you can blame her. It's not until towards the end that it remembers it's supposed to be a thriller and throws in a couple of genuinely surprising plot twists, but by then it's too little too late. Call it a missed opportunity; a good storyline ruined by bad execution.
Executive producer Stan Rogow's other credits include "Lizzie McGuire." An animated version of Rosanna Arquette supplying commentary would have enlivened this 'un no end.