ReaderKenka
Let's be realistic.
Helloturia
I have absolutely never seen anything like this movie before. You have to see this movie.
Deanna
There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.
Beulah Bram
A film of deceptively outspoken contemporary relevance, this is cinema at its most alert, alarming and alive.
dontspammyjunk
This film was one of the worst I have ever seen. Felt like a made for TV low budget poorly acted film. Honestly I kept watching it because it was like a train wreck. It was like they had gone to a film school and said, now we have a really poor idea for a film, do you want to act in it for free and make a film so terrible you will be embarrassed to put it on your cv, and they all said yes. I would be beyond mortified if I had been a part of that film. Worst of all is that you never find out how/why the stalker started stalking her in the first place. Truly truly terrible. Not even sure what to write now to fill in how much I didn't like this film. For me it was right down there with Blair Witch Project.
blingatme
This is a terrible movie. I watch a lot of movies and this one has no real life base.It's one thing to try and scare people into being careful, but it's another to totally shield the audience from reality.The cinematography is totally horrible. I am still not sure what Lifetime Channel had hoped to achieve form this movie.Even the leading actress is working half way - - at no point do we see her authentic self.Was it the company? The production? or the writers?I have no clue. But I feel like I want my dollar back from red-box (it was that bad).
diddleysquat-1
(I'm not sure this is a spoiler but don't want to take chances.)***************Nothing in this movie makes sense. The stalker breaks in by decoding the burglar alarm, lies down in the girl's bed, drops a cell phone that somehow clues the parents (with a few numbers) that the alarm system has been breached. He then emerges to kill the girl's parents and in a flash he's gone.Next we go to a scene 13 years later where a detective is still struggling to solve what would have been a very cold case. And the home invader, well, he's still at it.Did the script writer expect us to believe that a cell phone app could turn a series of deadbolt locks at the apartment of a tech-phobe who wouldn't get near anything related to electronics? Yes, we're talking plain old brass deadbolt locks. Step right up suckers. See him turn them from the outside using a cell phone! And, yes, he manages murder the woman's only friend (her therapist) by messing with the walk light at a busy intersection. Another cell phone app, it seems. You'd think the lead character would have reacted with some sadness. Well, don't expect logic here.It took at least a month to film this piece of pure rubbish. How do I know? The lead actress's hair is blonde to the roots in some scenes and has a one-centimeter outgrowth of untreated hair in others. That takes a month.A budget of under $2 million is low for movies, I know. But it should be enough for an $8 bottle of hair dye. Never mind. Not worth it.Worst TV movie I've seen outside the intentionally-bad SciFi channel stuff. Ghastly awful.
lat1008
I could only describe movie as completely absurd and predictable. The way that the killer seems to have the ability to control the entire world from his laptop is laughable. The big reveal at the end was obvious half way through. In one scene, the killer places surveillance cameras in the main characters apartment in places that are so obvious, he could have hung signs on the wall pointing them out. In another ridiculous scene, he somehow takes control of city cameras to locate his victim then manipulates cross walk signals to send her in to the path of an on coming truck. I realize that this was a small budget Lifetime movie but, unfortunately, this seems to be typical of what the network has become. I really wanted to like it because I was an OC fan and I like Mischa Barton. I hope that she makes better script choices in the future.