Holden
(Andrew W. Walker) comes home from Harvard to find his filthy rich father (Winston
Rekert) has married a much younger woman named Lana (Angie Everhart). Since dad is a workaholic, that means Holden
and Lana wind up spending a lot of time with each other. Naturally, they end up in the sack and begin
a relationship. Holden eventually learns
his hot-tempered father’s been abusive toward Lana and he becomes visibly upset. When daddy is found dead, both his son and
his lover become suspects.
Wicked
Minds has a good scene early on where Walker and Everhart meet the first time
when he walks in on her in the shower. A
few of their romantic encounters have a modicum of sizzle too, but despite the
DVD box’s claim that it’s “Unrated”, this is unfortunately nothing more than a
Lifetime Movie, so Angie is only seen naked from the shoulders up. In fact, Walker spends more time with his
shirt off than Everhart! (You can tell
it was made for TV by the occasional fade-ins used to signal a commercial break.)
After
a solid set-up (well, for a Lifetime Movie anyway), the pacing dawdles as it
enters the second act. The tension
falters when it really should be ramping up as director Jason (Poison Ivy: The Secret Society) Hreno seems more adept at
the scenes of watered-down seduction than he is at following through with the
whodunit aspects of the story. The reveals
of the various plot twists are also telegraphed and lack panache. The finale is OK, but again, Hreno doesn’t handle
the tension particularly well.
Angie
is sexy to be sure. She also has good
chemistry with Walker, who does a fine job as the naïve son who gets suckered
into her game. Maybe if there was a nude
scene or two in here, it would’ve been worth a damn.
AKA: Paranoia.
Nice review dude
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