9 reviews
While jogging, an attractive young blonde woman is attacked by a man concealed by a dark hoodie. In broad daylight. Fortunately, a handsome young man intervenes and scares off the attacker. The young woman is 18-year-old Gatlin Green (as Lily Becker). She has just discarded a cheating boyfriend and is looking forward to college. The young man is 20-year-old Austin James (as Mick Grant). He's new in town and lives on a boat in the marina. These two characters are mutually attracted, but Ms. Green's "true crime writer" mother Brigid Brannagh (as Jennifer) and others think our pretty protagonist should proceed very slowly with Mr. James. James is cute, heroic, polite and muscular with or without his shirt. He seems almost too perfect...
Not confirming anything, but "His Secret Past" means James' character. Of course, these TV movies are liable to pull a fast one on you...
Our first real clue may be the character not wanting to have his picture taken. Either James is miscast as an unattractive young man or he's secretly a picture picky actor. James does well in the role, with director Randy Carter growing him a smaller stature as compared to Green's tall, dark ex-boyfriend Alex Heartman (as Scott Ellison); note, he has no last scene. Also well cast is Green's concerned best friend Lindsay Bushman (as Kelly). Serving nicely as his own film editor, Mr. Carter makes the story and players smooth and natural. So, when the characters get rough, it means something. "His Secret Past" is routine but engaging. There is a lesson to be learned about calling 9-11 when you are in trouble. They put you on hold for a very long time.
***** His Secret Past (12/26/2016) Randy Carter ~ Gatlin Green, Austin James, Brigid Brannagh, Alex Heartman
Not confirming anything, but "His Secret Past" means James' character. Of course, these TV movies are liable to pull a fast one on you...
Our first real clue may be the character not wanting to have his picture taken. Either James is miscast as an unattractive young man or he's secretly a picture picky actor. James does well in the role, with director Randy Carter growing him a smaller stature as compared to Green's tall, dark ex-boyfriend Alex Heartman (as Scott Ellison); note, he has no last scene. Also well cast is Green's concerned best friend Lindsay Bushman (as Kelly). Serving nicely as his own film editor, Mr. Carter makes the story and players smooth and natural. So, when the characters get rough, it means something. "His Secret Past" is routine but engaging. There is a lesson to be learned about calling 9-11 when you are in trouble. They put you on hold for a very long time.
***** His Secret Past (12/26/2016) Randy Carter ~ Gatlin Green, Austin James, Brigid Brannagh, Alex Heartman
- wes-connors
- Jan 3, 2017
- Permalink
HIS SECRET PAST (TV Movie 2016)
BASIC PLOT: Lily Becker (Gatlin Kate James) just got very lucky. While out jogging, she was attacked by a mask wearing assailant. A mysterious stranger intervenes, and she gets away. Her hero doesn't go to the police, but by chance (?), Lily runs into him the next day. His name is Mick Grant (Austin James), and he lives on a boat. He's only in town for a short while, but that's long enough for Lily to fall for him. He's quiet and enigmatic, and nothing like Lily's last boyfriend, Scott Ellison (Alexander P. Heartman). Lily can be a bit naive, especially when it comes to men, so it's up to her mother, and best friend Kelly, to look out for her.
Lily's mother, Jennifer Becker (Brigid Brannagh) is a true crime author. She's suspicious by nature, and there's something about Mick she just doesn't trust. Kelly (Lindsay Bushman), Lily's best friend, also feels something is off about Mick. Even Scott, Lily's ex, hires a PI to find out about this secretive loner, who's ingratiated himself into Lily's life. Can the people who care for Lily convince her something is wrong with Mick, before it's too late?
WHAT WORKS: *Gatlin Kate James portrayal of Lily Becker, the sweet, naive, girl next door, is right on the money. She's almost sweet enough to rot your teeth.
*Alexander P. Heartman plays Scott Ellison, the spoiled, entitled jackass, and he does it with style. His haircut, his name dropping, even his preppy country club sweater all work here; he has the solipsistic smug smirk down to an art form.
*In this movie, the women take care of their problems themselves. In so many movies, even movies made for women, there has to be a male hero who saves the day. Not here, and I applaud the three male writers for that choice. It makes the ending so much more gratifying.
WHAT DOESN'T WORK: *How many times can you say, "I'm just looking out for you," in one movie? Answer: Too damn many
*Why is Kelly (Lindsay Bushman) so suspicious of Mick (Austin James) right off the bat? Lots of people don't want to get involved with the police, whether they have something to hide or not. It seems contrived, and doesn't work. Kelly needs to be given a reason to be suspicious.
*Why doesn't Lilly question Mick's presence at the country club? Shouldn't she wonder what he's doing there?
*Charles finds an iPhone at the scene of an attempted murder. He tells the police tech, "get this unlocked immediately," and she does. No one, not even the US government can crack an iPhone's encryption.
*There are too many unnecessary deaths in this movie. One person would have been enough, but this many makes it much less believable or enjoyable. It's one thing to have murder to prove Mick is evil. Killing the ancillary characters works fine (the bum, the PI). There is no need for a blood bath in this type of movie. The kill count is 4 murders, 2 attempted murders. That's a bit much for a made-for-tv melodrama.
*Why do male writers always have women get scared when men fight? I can forgive it here, because the character of Lily is naive and fragile, but I can't forgive it from her friend Kelly. Kelly recommends Lily dump Mick because he fights back, when punched. WTF?! Why do men write this trope so often? Hey, George Erschbamer, Barbara Fixx, and Jeffrey Barmash, lots of women are turned on (or at least not afraid) when men fight. Why not add those types of women in occasionally?
TO RECOMMEND, OR NOT TO RECOMMEND, THAT IS THE QUESTION: *If you like melodramas, you might like this. It's pretty formulaic with lots of stereotypes, even for this type of movie. There are better movies out there, but there are much worse too. It's entertaining, if you can ignore the bloodbath.
CLOSING NOTES: *This is a Made-For-TV movie, please keep that in mind before you watch\rate it. TV movies have a much lower budget, and so your expectations should be adjusted.
*I have no connection to the film, or production in ANY way. I am just an honest viewer, who wishes for more straight forward reviews. Hope I helped you out.
BASIC PLOT: Lily Becker (Gatlin Kate James) just got very lucky. While out jogging, she was attacked by a mask wearing assailant. A mysterious stranger intervenes, and she gets away. Her hero doesn't go to the police, but by chance (?), Lily runs into him the next day. His name is Mick Grant (Austin James), and he lives on a boat. He's only in town for a short while, but that's long enough for Lily to fall for him. He's quiet and enigmatic, and nothing like Lily's last boyfriend, Scott Ellison (Alexander P. Heartman). Lily can be a bit naive, especially when it comes to men, so it's up to her mother, and best friend Kelly, to look out for her.
Lily's mother, Jennifer Becker (Brigid Brannagh) is a true crime author. She's suspicious by nature, and there's something about Mick she just doesn't trust. Kelly (Lindsay Bushman), Lily's best friend, also feels something is off about Mick. Even Scott, Lily's ex, hires a PI to find out about this secretive loner, who's ingratiated himself into Lily's life. Can the people who care for Lily convince her something is wrong with Mick, before it's too late?
WHAT WORKS: *Gatlin Kate James portrayal of Lily Becker, the sweet, naive, girl next door, is right on the money. She's almost sweet enough to rot your teeth.
*Alexander P. Heartman plays Scott Ellison, the spoiled, entitled jackass, and he does it with style. His haircut, his name dropping, even his preppy country club sweater all work here; he has the solipsistic smug smirk down to an art form.
*In this movie, the women take care of their problems themselves. In so many movies, even movies made for women, there has to be a male hero who saves the day. Not here, and I applaud the three male writers for that choice. It makes the ending so much more gratifying.
WHAT DOESN'T WORK: *How many times can you say, "I'm just looking out for you," in one movie? Answer: Too damn many
*Why is Kelly (Lindsay Bushman) so suspicious of Mick (Austin James) right off the bat? Lots of people don't want to get involved with the police, whether they have something to hide or not. It seems contrived, and doesn't work. Kelly needs to be given a reason to be suspicious.
*Why doesn't Lilly question Mick's presence at the country club? Shouldn't she wonder what he's doing there?
*Charles finds an iPhone at the scene of an attempted murder. He tells the police tech, "get this unlocked immediately," and she does. No one, not even the US government can crack an iPhone's encryption.
*There are too many unnecessary deaths in this movie. One person would have been enough, but this many makes it much less believable or enjoyable. It's one thing to have murder to prove Mick is evil. Killing the ancillary characters works fine (the bum, the PI). There is no need for a blood bath in this type of movie. The kill count is 4 murders, 2 attempted murders. That's a bit much for a made-for-tv melodrama.
*Why do male writers always have women get scared when men fight? I can forgive it here, because the character of Lily is naive and fragile, but I can't forgive it from her friend Kelly. Kelly recommends Lily dump Mick because he fights back, when punched. WTF?! Why do men write this trope so often? Hey, George Erschbamer, Barbara Fixx, and Jeffrey Barmash, lots of women are turned on (or at least not afraid) when men fight. Why not add those types of women in occasionally?
TO RECOMMEND, OR NOT TO RECOMMEND, THAT IS THE QUESTION: *If you like melodramas, you might like this. It's pretty formulaic with lots of stereotypes, even for this type of movie. There are better movies out there, but there are much worse too. It's entertaining, if you can ignore the bloodbath.
CLOSING NOTES: *This is a Made-For-TV movie, please keep that in mind before you watch\rate it. TV movies have a much lower budget, and so your expectations should be adjusted.
*I have no connection to the film, or production in ANY way. I am just an honest viewer, who wishes for more straight forward reviews. Hope I helped you out.
- vnssyndrome89
- Jul 9, 2023
- Permalink
- phd_travel
- Mar 20, 2019
- Permalink
This movie was the dumbest movie I every watched. I can't believe I waited to see the ending. They should never show this movie again
Can't blame it on the actors. They did their best. It's a tie between the editing, directing and sound. Maybe put them together in a room together and watch the movie and make their edits BEFORE they release it. Could have been good.
- CranberriAppl
- Nov 20, 2021
- Permalink