Two live store window mannequins witness a murder late at night.Two live store window mannequins witness a murder late at night.Two live store window mannequins witness a murder late at night.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSculptures in the movie were made by artist Donna Nield who used the money she earned to fund her life in Paris.
- GoofsSet in the United States but there are various shots of Canadian National (CN) trains.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Daphne James: That is your eighth sneeze today.
Harry Mirapolsky: Yeah?
Daphne James: You can't sneeze, you're not allowed to move!
Harry Mirapolsky: Sorry.
Daphne James: Why don't you just quit and get it over with?
Harry Mirapolsky: And lose the pleasure of your company?
- ConnectionsReferenced in Game-On: Martin's Baby (1998)
- SoundtracksBE MINE TONIGHT
Written by Dane DeViller and Sean Hosein
Performed by David Steele
Published by Banana Toons Music
Featured review
From the files of 'I saw this at 2am'
It must be getting hard to come up with fresh ideas for some nut case to be chasing around after someone. It's a pretty basic formula after all. There isn't a whole lot of room for originality. In the case of Flinch, you have two people who know the identity of the killer and he in turn knows they know he killed someone.
Did I mention the two people trying to evade the demented killer are live floor window models for a department store played by none other than Judd Nelson and Gina Gershon? Thankfully they work really well together on screen. That leaves Nick Mancuso to be the obsessed artist/killer who owns an art studio called Torso's. His turn as the baddie is the kind you seen him do many times before.
The story rolls out in a predictable made-for-TV fashion. There's no surprises, no real flair and an abundance of stock characters that would feel right at home in a sit-com. It does what it has to do to be watchable but not a smidgen more. It's not a movie you talk about, set aside time or money for. You catch it late night and maybe you watch it out of boredom. You know the routine.
Did I mention the two people trying to evade the demented killer are live floor window models for a department store played by none other than Judd Nelson and Gina Gershon? Thankfully they work really well together on screen. That leaves Nick Mancuso to be the obsessed artist/killer who owns an art studio called Torso's. His turn as the baddie is the kind you seen him do many times before.
The story rolls out in a predictable made-for-TV fashion. There's no surprises, no real flair and an abundance of stock characters that would feel right at home in a sit-com. It does what it has to do to be watchable but not a smidgen more. It's not a movie you talk about, set aside time or money for. You catch it late night and maybe you watch it out of boredom. You know the routine.
helpful•13
- refinedsugar
- Aug 21, 2001
Details
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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