I know the words 'made for TV' are hardly a ringing endorsement for a film - it normally denotes a low budget, no real actors you've heard of and shoved on late at night when no one is ever going to see it anyway. All that may actually be true of 'The People Across the Lake,' but, despite all its shortcomings, it's actually quite watchable.
It's about a 'typical' (i.e. Mum, dad, teenage daughter and younger son) moving from the city to a small, rural town to start up their own business. However, when they get there it turns out to be possibly one of the most least friendly places to go in America - and that's before random corpses start showing up seemingly under every stone that's overturned.
Again, nothing amazingly revolutionary with the plot, but what made it watchable for me was generally the dynamic between the husband and wife. The kids don't really get an awful lot of screen time, so it's the adults who are the main characters. I just found something about them very believable as a couple and, for whatever flaws reared their heads, I still found myself wanting to root for the central characters through to the end.
It's hardly a 'thrill-ride.' In fact you could probably call it a bit of a 'slow burn,' as very little of real note happens during the first half of the movie and it's all just generally setting the scene. Once all the 'red herrings' have been discounted as to what's going on, when the 'threat' is finally revealed there is a slight element of 'scenery chewing' here and there which does make you want to roll your eyes just a little in terms of various people's acting ability, but it is a 'made for TV' movie, so what do you expect?
It's hardly a classic that will stick with you for very long, but if there's nothing else then this one will certainly fill an hour and a half of your time.