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304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
By Robert Scucci
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If you ever hear lumps at night while waiting at Motel Seedy off the highway, it is probably in the best interests not to order A glass that looks On demand because it will spoil your night for a couple of reasons. The first reason is that the idea of someone watching you through a one -way mirror during your most private moments is enough to make your skin crawl. I don’t know about you, but when I order a suicidal amount of taking out because I’ve been on the road without stopping all day, I don’t want to consider the shame of someone watching me an unhealthy gorge on cheesy bread and chicken wings between bubbles from a charcoal diet straight out of the 2-liter in search of a re-making in search of a re-made-do South Park on a cable.
Secondly, A glass that looks Not a very good movie in spite of the fact that Nicolas cageGod among men, do his best with what he has given.
After their child’s death, Ray (Nicolas Cage) and Maggie (Robin Tunney) do what any bereaved couple would do in their situation: they buy a declined motel down from Craigslist. The original motel owner, Ben, disappears without a trace, which raises doubt, but Ray puts his best foot forward, gets immediate work to lay the land, and start various renovation projects to spruce up the place. Ray gets his first encounter with Tommy (Ernie Lively), a lonely trucker who attends the motel – he likes room No. 10 – with prostitutes before heading back on the road.
Meanwhile, a continuing deputy sheriff called Howard (Marc Blucas) begins to make his presence known in A glass that looksAs well as the fact that he was looking for a head, he left urgently before Ray arrived. Suspicious of the Sheriff’s Nose, and the rough behavior by gas station attendees across the street watching his every move, Ray begins to sneak around, ultimately revealing a secret tunnel that leads to a one -way mirror looking directly into room No. 10.
Room No. 10, now occupied by a woman named Cassie the Strawberry Yellow (Kassia Conway) and her BDSM boyfriend from Room No. 6, Jessica (Jacque Gray), is a testament to Ray through the glass one -way title, and he knows that he should not be spying on his guests but can’t seem to help himself. Issues are increasing when Howard informs Ray of a woman named Crissy, who was murdered shortly before he bought the motel, suggesting that Ben was involved in some way. Not sure with who to trust, Ray gives up his walls, who breaks his relationship with Baggagewho is wondering where he wanders every night.
A glass that looks It has the potential to be an effective excitement film, but it is too linear and out in the open to follow the landing. The biggest problem I have with this movie is that everyone who behaves is suspicious is Suspicious – so much, really, while the film does a decent job hiding its main opponent, you can narrow it for a few people more or less because of how strange everyone behaves. By the time I reached the third act disclosure, I didn’t experience the revelation of a change of mind, but rather thought to myself, “Oh yes, that makes sense,” it doesn’t create a good excitement film.
However, I cannot blame the actors for working with the screenshot presented to them, as their performances in A glass that looks firmly around. Set in a small off -the -highway motel somewhere between California and Las Vegas, it is easy to believe the performances because living in the middle of nowhere is not for an extended period of time leaving you with a lot to do, making your imagination run wild, leading to a healthy amount of paranoia – especially if there is an active murder investigation to consider.
At the end of the day, A glass that looks Falls within the Thriller-Lite category, as it produces a suspension at the expected moments, but the whole thing is so dimensional that you don’t sit on the edge of your seat for long.
From this writing you can stream A glass that looks Free on a tubi.