Jane Doe: Til Death Do Us Part

March. 11,2005      
Rating:
6.1
Trailer Synopsis Cast

When a ruthless arms Kingpin stages an ingenious escape from prison, Jane Doe and Frank Darnell, NSA head, realize he's bent on a vengeance killin. Who the prospective victim is remains to be seen.

Lea Thompson as  Cathy Davis
Joe Penny as  Frank Darnell
William R. Moses as  Jack Davis
Jessy Schram as  Susan Davis
Zack Shada as  Nick Davis
Joseph Bologna as  Louis Angelini
Antonio Sabàto, Jr. as  Joey Angelini
Stacy Haiduk as  Monica Angelini
Richard Tanner as  Hugo Verardi
Ed Marinaro as  Vincent Colabella

Reviews

Sexyloutak
2005/03/11

Absolutely the worst movie.

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MoPoshy
2005/03/12

Absolutely brilliant

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Kaydan Christian
2005/03/13

A terrific literary drama and character piece that shows how the process of creating art can be seen differently by those doing it and those looking at it from the outside.

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Curt
2005/03/14

Watching it is like watching the spectacle of a class clown at their best: you laugh at their jokes, instigate their defiance, and "ooooh" when they get in trouble.

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MuggySphere
2005/03/15

OMG I love these Jane Doe movies. They have started screening them here in Australia every Monday and they're great. I've never seen them before so they are new for me. The only thing is that I don't know what order these are meant to be shown in. This one feels very much like it should be at the end of the series as Jane Do / Cathy has told her husband about her work and what she really does. The other thing is that they screened this right after "The Wrong Face" and that is why it very much felt like it was all out of sequence.At least that is how I felt upon watching the shows. But I'm not complaining. They are a great distraction even if things are a little predictable, but what TV isn't like that these days?Of the ones I have seen so far a good 7/10 for them.

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bob the moo
2005/03/16

When a Mafia king-pin is found dead in the woods, buried with a gun covered with the prints of big-time arms dealer Louis Angelini, CSA boss Frank Darnell is able to arrest him and send him away from life. However Anelini offers to provide information that will stop a massive arms movement going through, so Darnell has him moved to a minimum-security prison. Once there, Angelini has a heart attack and dies in the hospital block but, in the time it takes the doctor to go and tell the warden and come back, the body has vanished. Knowing his ass is on the line over this puzzle, Darnell calls in former CSA agent, turned housewife, Cathy Davis to help him work out what happened.My fourth bite of the undemanding but distracting Jane Doe pie didn't start with the same interesting idea that the other ones have done – usually they have a seemingly impossible crime or puzzle that serves as the starting point to Cathy coming in. Maybe it is because I've seen 24's Jack Bauer do it every couple of episodes for the past 5 years, but the whole "fake heart attack" didn't grab me as a mystery and thus the "hook" of the puzzle wasn't there early on. This still left a solid enough mystery story to be going along with but it was particularly average for the most part but did enough to satisfy genre fans. The family part of the story is a bit bigger than in other films and it involves husband Jack being suspicious of what Cathy and Frank are doing spending so much time together. This offered a chance at depth but it is handled in an obvious way, all superficial and all resolved far too easily.The cast operate at the same level as the material and, although Mastroianni makes it all look good, nobody really does fantastically well. Thompson is a good lead, delivering what is asked of her – nothing more and nothing less. She doesn't really convince that often but she does enough to carry the generic material. Penny is again a welcome presence but his performance is far too one-note and I quickly tired of him continually popping up to do the same things over and over. Moses at least has something to do in this film but the material doesn't let him be a person – just a plot device, which he does but it isn't anything of note. Bologna is a nice addition but he doesn't do a great deal. The rest of the cast fill out the story and nobody is bad or good, they are just there.Overall this is another distracting entry into the Jane Doe series albeit not one of the ones that works that well in regards the central "puzzle" premise. The cast, story and material are all OK and the delivery is slick and professional looking but the end result is pretty much by-the-numbers, which may still satisfy those coming to this expecting just that from the tvm series.

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blanche-2
2005/03/17

Of all the shows in the Hallmark mystery series, I have to say I like the "Jane Doe" entries the best so far. One of the things that makes it the most interesting of the three - which includes Mystery Woman and McBride - is the dichotomy between the family life of the main character and her life as an agent for the government. I also think this show has the strongest cast - Lea Thompson, Joe Penny, and William R. Moses. Thompson is energetic, believable, and adorable; Moses is solid and likable as her husband; and Joe Penny is Joe Penny - tough and sexy. In this particular plot line, a mob boss dies and then his body disappears. I have one objection, which I have to almost every show on TV - when you have someone like Anne DiSalvo playing the nurse, people knowledgeable about actors know that she had something to do with it. Whenever I see a familiar actor in what appears to be a small or inconsequential role, I know the character is involved somehow. But just about every show does it - the great "Law and Order" being one of the biggest offenders. Anyway, these Hallmark shows are delightful.

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lavatch
2005/03/18

In " Jane Doe Till Death Do Us Part," Lea Thompson stars as a top-notch crime investigator in this compulsively watchable made-for-television mystery. Thompson plays Kathy Davis, a mild-mannered housewife. She is also the best in the business in her double life of "Jane Doe," an undercover investigative operative, which she keeps a secret from her family. This film was interesting in the contrasting family scenes resembling the Brady Bunch and the police scenes involving Jane's investigation of an L.A. crime boss. The local godfather made a daring prison break by faking a heart attack and fleeing the Lompoc, California prison, and Jane Doe is able to get on his trail through careful crime reconstruction. Thompson shines in her role, and her best scene is when Jane adopts the disguise of an Italian vixen from Brooklyn worthy of "The Sopranos." Armand Mastroianni, the director of this film, deserves to be mentioned in this review. The set-ups, camera angles, and colorful location filming in west Los Angeles evoke the film's effective atmosphere. The actors in both the family and crime stories are well-cast in their roles. Many of the run-of-the-mill films that appear on the various cable channels could learn a great deal from studying "Jane Doe Till Death Do Us Part." In the scripting, production values, and performances, this film was a cut above the regular television fare. Thompson was successful in carrying the film. She resembles the fine actress Angie Dickinson, who played a similar role in her popular television series "Police Woman" in the 1970s. " Jane Doe Till Death Do Us Part " is all-too-predictable, and it suffers in places from lack of suspense. But Thompson was very effective in the convincing portrayal of a Mom leading two lives.

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