A picture-perfect family is shattered when the work of a serial killer hits too close to home.A picture-perfect family is shattered when the work of a serial killer hits too close to home.A picture-perfect family is shattered when the work of a serial killer hits too close to home.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Jonathan K. Riggs
- Pastor Randy
- (as Jonathan Riggs)
Mark A. Nash
- Uncle Rudy
- (as Mark Nash)
Lea Hutton Beasmore
- Grocery Shopper
- (uncredited)
Mercedes Carter
- Church Friend
- (uncredited)
Matthew Davis
- Kassi's Dad
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I enjoyed this thriller movie. Pretty good acting and kept me interested until the end. What more can you ask for!
I quite liked this film...the two young leads seem like good actors.good story.only real criticism is the ending.....could have been better
At times extremely effective, deeply disturbing & uncomfortable to watch, The Clovehitch Killer is a relatively satisfying & well made film that's worth a watch - but it's also a classic example of a movie that doesn't know when to end - dragging out the resolution until you're willing the credits to start rolling; every scene feels like it's setting up the conclusion until it's followed by yet another & you're left impatiently waiting for the crescendo, which is tedious, frustrating & disappointing.
However, the performances sell the entire film & there's palpable tension between characters in emotionally charged scenes so the conflict is incredibly well done & regardless of its faults, it's still a good film - despite being unnecessarily long & drawn out.
I wanted to like "The Clovehitch Killer" more than I did. Many ingredients are there for an interesting movie. I think the direction is the key flaw here. It doesn't take its premise as far as it should have, to really make you feel something. It seems to approach some fairly uncomfortable viewing, but never make good on it.
Dylan McDermott, the centre of the movie, is really its best part. His performance is chilling and confounding. The character of his son and his snooty gal pal don't really do enough. The investigate the titular killer, but you don't see enough of how they really think and feel. Nor is there enough of a look in from the mother character, who, doubtless, would have a lot of pain.
Family, in most cases, is a web of secrets and lies. This movie could have been about more than a killer who's also a family man. It could have been painfully relatable. It just isn't.
Dylan McDermott, the centre of the movie, is really its best part. His performance is chilling and confounding. The character of his son and his snooty gal pal don't really do enough. The investigate the titular killer, but you don't see enough of how they really think and feel. Nor is there enough of a look in from the mother character, who, doubtless, would have a lot of pain.
Family, in most cases, is a web of secrets and lies. This movie could have been about more than a killer who's also a family man. It could have been painfully relatable. It just isn't.
Years after a notorious serial killer of teenage girls stops, loving son (Charlie Plummer) finds evidence to suggest his father (Dylan McDermott) may have been responsible. Slowly, with the help of new girlfriend (Madisen Beaty) whose mother was killed by the the eponymous villain, the evidence begins to mount up.
Slow-burn thriller that nicely highlights the macabre contradictions between a perfect loving family in gun toting, American bible belt country with a psychopath killer within. McDermott is terrific as the killer who still feels the right to hold his head high because of his god fearing / family loving ways, despite tying up and strangling young girls. This belief by father and ultimately his son leads nicely to a slightly off kilter, but nonetheless persuasive and enjoyable climax which has tended to be criticised by critics as being too action oriented, but which I thought fitted quite nicely.
Slow-burn thriller that nicely highlights the macabre contradictions between a perfect loving family in gun toting, American bible belt country with a psychopath killer within. McDermott is terrific as the killer who still feels the right to hold his head high because of his god fearing / family loving ways, despite tying up and strangling young girls. This belief by father and ultimately his son leads nicely to a slightly off kilter, but nonetheless persuasive and enjoyable climax which has tended to be criticised by critics as being too action oriented, but which I thought fitted quite nicely.
Did you know
- TriviaIn the scene where Don Burnside and his group of scouts is seen in a class room, there are a number of knots drawn on the black board with the clovehitch knot prominently in the middle.
- GoofsThe Leadership Camp would have contacted Tyler's family as soon as they realized he didn't show up.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Tyler Burnside: [narrating] The first murder happened before I was born. The killer called himself Clovehitch, after his favorite type of knot. Our town lived in fear, and then, ten years ago, he stopped.
- SoundtracksYesterday's News
Written by Ronnie D'Addario
Performed by Ronnie D'Addario
Published by D'Addario Music & Hannah Sam Music
Courtesy of d2 Music
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Al lado de un asesino
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $8,208
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $5,175
- Nov 18, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $167,994
- Runtime
- 1h 49m(109 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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