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Trailer Synopsis Cast Keywords

Daisy Lowendahl is a best-selling suspense novelist who finds herself at her isolated beach house with a local young fan who knows almost everything about her, and two men — one of whom may be trying to kill her, the other of whom could save her life, causing Daisy to be thrown into the middle of a real-life drama.

Candice Bergen as  Daisy Lowendahl
Michael Murphy as  Robbie
Bryan Brown as  Eddie Bruno
Bug Hall as  Spencer Weaver
Cindy Sampson as  Jordan Hayes

Reviews

blanche-2
2003/10/11

Candice Bergen plays an author recovering from a nervous breakdown in "Footsteps," a 2003 TV movie based on a play by Ira Levin.Bergen is Daisy, a popular author making her first public appearance in a long time. She has just killed off a major character who has appeared in many books. A man screaming at her about this from the back of the hall unnerves her. She has decided to face her fears and spend the night in her beach house alone, as her husband is away - during the film, she has a series of phone calls with him. When she arrives there after the Q&A, she can't find her dog and a fan (Bug Hall) has broken into her house. He assures her he's not there to hurt her. He seems to know everything about her; afraid, Daisy keeps ordering him to get out.The police arrive at the behest of her husband in the form of Bryan Brown, his "Thorn Birds" days long behind him He manages to get the fan out of the house and agrees to wait with her until her dog is returned - it's been picked up by the pound. As time goes on, Daisy realizes he's not a cop. Who is he? And did someone send him? This is a good, atmospheric TV movie. It's somewhat derivative and somehow it never really scared me, but the performances are good and there are suspenseful moments. I had one problem. I won't give anything away but at a certain point, one of the characters suffers a horrific injury to his hand. A towel is wrapped around it and the individual goes on as if nothing has happened. To which I say, give me a break. The pain had to be unendurable.You're not really sure what's going to happen in the end, so you'll have to make your own decision.

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ctomvelu-1
2003/10/12

Candice Bergen plays a nervous thriller writer spending a night alone at a beach house after making her first public appearance in five years. She runs across an intruder, a young man who worships her, followed by a cop who comes to arrest the kid. Someone is out to get her, although it isn't clear who until the end. Her husband is on his way to the house as she tries to sort out who's who and what's what. Bergen is OK as a nervous Nelly, and the kid (played by Bug Hall) is pretty entertaining. Aussie actor Bryan Brown as the cop and Michael Murphy as the husband round out the cast of this telepicture based on an Ira Levin play. A good one for a slow Saturday night. Its release date (2003) ensures much use of cell phones, which is a good thing, because the story otherwise could just as easily be taking place in 1950..

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jtindahouse
2003/10/13

I found myself constantly trying to find something wrong with this film through the duration of it because I knew better than to be liking it so much - but i couldn't help it. I kept thinking that with some decent actors this script had great potential. It did of course have its typical t.v movie flaws but you learn to except those eventually. I must admit the one let down I will stick with is the not so brilliant title. It's really got nothing to do with the film and it certainly doesn't make you say "I need to watch this film." The twists and turns this movie take will keep you on edge right to the last shot. I even loved the last scene so much it took this from an 8 to a 9 so stay tuned right until the end credits flash up.

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vchimpanzee
2003/10/14

Daisy Lowendahl is the author of a series of books about a female James Bond. When she makes her first public appearance in five years at the premiere of her latest movie about one of her novels, she is threatened by a man in the audience who says someone copied the crime in one of her novels, resulting in the death of someone close to him.Though shaken up by the experience, Daisy still returns alone to her isolated home, only to find no lights and no dog. She calls her husband on the cell phone, but there seems to be terror around every corner, behind every door. Meanwhile, on the news, a man has been beaten up, and his green pickup with lots of bumper stickers has been stolen. Daisy soon finds herself in what seems like a real-life version of one of her novels. What follows is a series of twists and turns that will keep surprising right to the very end. The VERY end.Candice Bergen was great. Her character was quite neurotic, but she also showed a great deal of confidence when the time came to be really scared. Later, she seemed no more frightened than the average person. She also went through a period of seeming borderline insane. Bryan Brown was quite good, too, going through numerous changes as the movie progressed. The music was quite effective in establishing tension, even when it seemed everything was all right. Sometimes the music turned positively otherworldly.This was good. I don't like movies like this to be TOO scary.Possible Spoilers:The lights worked. There was just a bulb loose. But there was a young obsessed fan (Bug Hall) hiding in a closet. A cop with a British accent (Bryan Brown) showed up soon after that, saying that Daisy's husband called him.DEFINITE SPOILERS:Everything seemed all right, and the cop let the boy go. Daisy has observed, though, that he doesn't seem much like a cop. And the boy got in a green pickup with lots of bumper stickers ...SURPRISE ENDING!!!!!!!You didn't think we were going to forget the man from the theater?

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