Second Chances

May. 06,2010      
Rating:
3.9
Trailer Synopsis Cast

A college professor is pursued by a stalker two years after her actions led to a young woman's death.

Melissa George as  Kate Fisher
Ellen Dubin as  Detective Sinclair
Quinn Lord as  Robbie
Robert Crooks as  Collum McTavish
Catherine Bérubé as  Becky Wade
Gianpaolo Venuta as  Neil Bray/ Phil Sterin
Spiro Malandrakis as  Officer Hathaway
Marcel Jeannin as  John Benedict
Eric Davis as  Prof. Gideon
Alex Bisping as  Wayne Conlon

Reviews

Odelecol
2010/05/06

Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.

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AnhartLinkin
2010/05/07

This story has more twists and turns than a second-rate soap opera.

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Fatma Suarez
2010/05/08

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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Darin
2010/05/09

One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.

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lavatch
2010/05/10

It is easy to tell when the protagonist in a crime movie is in for trouble: when the police appear incompetent. At the start of "Second Chances," the heroine, Professor Kate Fischer, is given the following contradictory and redundant warning by a police detective: "Don't worry. But be aware and keep your eyes open!" Another piece of advice that should have been taken to heart by the professor: don't count on the police, even if you are sleeping with the lead investigator.The story of the professor backtracks to the moment when Kate Fischer was a superstar journalist, who conducted an interview with a serial killer without informing the police. With the long delay, the killer claimed another victim, a young woman with the beautiful name of Laura Rose. That moment has haunted Kate. But it has haunted even more someone who is now out for blood against the journalist.The screenplay serves up a host of possible villains, including the faculty, administrative staff, and student body at Haskins College, a fictional institution in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where Kate has now landed a plum teaching job. For her first course, she only has a smattering of students in a large lecture hall. But four of those students become suspects when they registered for the course only after it was announced that Kate would be teaching it. The wily police zero in on those suspicious late registrants.SPOILERS FOLLOW: One word is in order about the job that the detective did in protecting Kate: Pathetic! While he evidently scored in the bedroom with Kate, he loses points on his tactical approach to a crime scene, entering the home alone and getting clubbed over the head by the perp.For the police as a whole, this film may have depicted the slowest response on record of a SWAT team, once the perps and the location have been identified. On arrival at the crime scene, the team even took its time to affix large photos of the perps on the side of the police van. Then came the brilliant order of the lead detective: "Stand down!!!" The abysmal screenplay produced more laughs than suspense. But the most appalling line of dialogue was when the professor stated about her teaching position at Haskins: "It's a new start for Robbie and I." With that level of expertise in her grammar, I would not want a paper of mine to be graded by Professor Fischer.

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MattyGibbs
2010/05/11

A reporter who made an error of judgement finds it coming back to haunt her a couple of years later. This is a made for TV movie so you are aware from the time you put it on that it's not going to win many awards. The story is a bit confusing at times and very generic but it is held together by a decent performance from Melissa George as the ex reporter. The rest of the performances are less impressive and this does hamper proceedings at times. For all it's faults it does at least build up a nice air of mystery but unfortunately the end reveal is a bit disappointing Whilst this isn't a great film, I did find it somewhat entertaining and it did at least hold my interest. As long as your expectations are low then this is an easy enough watch.

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Sean Bender
2010/05/12

I just had a good laugh at sddavis63's review about wishing he had a second chance to get the last 1 1/2 hours of his life back after watching this. How true! It's funny how a bad movie has warning signs right from the get go and in this case, it was literally a sign in the form of a highway sign. I won't go into the details about the movie because they really don't matter, it's so poorly made that the details don't even matter.The bottom line is there's this kid in a Canadian movie that's trying to pretend it's filmed in America, and as he's heading towards Boston, there's a highway sign which reads, Cambridge XXX miles and Boston XXX miles, (I'm surprised they didn't goof up and make the sign in kilometers). But the fatal flaw is you can tell the sign isn't real! The fonts are too small and it just clearly looks fake. It reminded me of when Wylie Coyote would see the Road Runner coming and he'd make a fake sign that said 'detour' and would be waiting at the top of a ravine with a giant bolder. So that's all you need to know, the sign says it all. From there on in it's 1 and a 1/2 hour downhill boulder into a ravine.

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sddavis63
2010/05/13

By the time "Second Chances" is finished, all you wish is that you had a second chance to live the hour and a half wasted on watching this. This is truly a dreadful movie, composed of a weak cast offering weak performances playing uninteresting characters filled with meaningless sub-plots and a main plot that was poorly developed and not that interesting. It's supposed to be about a former reporter filled with remorse about not helping the police capture a serial killer years before who is suddenly being targeted herself. Why, then, did we need to know about her former marriage - replete with flashbacks? Why, then, did there have to be a past romance between her and the cop on the case? Why, then, did there need to be this irritating professor at the college she's hired to teach ethics in journalism at who adds nothing to the story and offers perhaps the worst performance of a bunch of bad performances? Why, then, did she even need to have a son? And - my pet peeve - why did this Canadian movie have to pretend to be an American movie by placing itself in Cambridge, Massachussetts? (I mean, Kate could just as easily have left Toronto to teach in Peterborough.) On behalf of all Canadians, I apologize to the people of Cambridge for setting such a dreadful movie in your city. Those who put out this movie should now apologize to us all. 1/10

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