Deadly Love
Deadly Love | |
---|---|
VHS cover | |
Genre |
Action Horror Thriller |
Written by |
Rob Gilmer Sherry Gottlieb |
Directed by | Jorge Montessi |
Starring |
Susan Dey Stephen McHattie Jean LeClerc |
Theme music composer |
Micky Erbe Maribeth Solomon |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Les Alexander Don Enright Clara George David N. Gottlieb Julian Marks |
Editor(s) | Pia Di Ciaula |
Running time | 104 minutes |
Distributor | Lifetime Television Network/ABC Network |
Release | |
Original network | Lifetime Television Network |
Original release | October 16, 1995 |
Deadly Love is a 1995 Lifetime Original Movie starring Susan Dey as a lonely vampire photographer. The film was based on the book Love Bites by Sherry Gottlieb and co-stars Stephen McHattie.[1]
Plot
Rebecca Barnes (Susan Dey) is a successful photographer who has it all—including the curse of vampiric immortality. Longing for companionship, Barnes leaves a disastrous trail of blood-less bodies in her wake. Shockingly, photographs that she snapped of one of the victims brings Rebecca into the police investigation and into the arms of Detective Sean O'Connor (Stephen McHattie). As the passion between Sean and Rebecca mounts, so does the evidence against her.[2]
Cast
- Susan Dey ... Rebecca Barnes
- Stephen McHattie ... Sean O'Connor
- Eric Peterson ... Elliott
- Julie Khaner ... Poole
- Robert S. Woods ... Jim King
- Jean LeClerc ... Trombitas Dracu
- David Ferry ... Sal Consentino
- Roman Podhora ... Steve Merritt
- Henry Alessandroni ... Forman
- Kelly Fiddick ... Griffith
- Suzanne Coy ... Rita Berwald
- Jim Codrington ... Derek Green
- Bernard Browne ... Cab Driver
- Kevin Le Roy ... Firebreather
Reviews
"Deadly Love" is an outstanding piece of reverse casting. Susan Dey, whose middle name is Nice, plays the vampire, and Stephen McHattie, Mr. Menace, is the cop trying to stop a series of murders. Because neither of these actors is playing to type, we don't know until the end which of the captivated lovers is the bigger threat to the other. When McHattie is on the screen, he is the one you look at. Dey had to give a strong performance to live up to him, and succeeded." [3]
References
- ↑
- ↑ "'Deadly' vampire flick has no bite". Daytona Beach Sunday News-Journal. October 8, 1995.
- ↑