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Mirror Mirror 3: The Voyeur

  • 1995
  • Unrated
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
2.6/10
358
YOUR RATING
Billy Drago in Mirror Mirror 3: The Voyeur (1995)
DramaHorror

A young man discovers a mysterious mirror and begins to have disturbing visions of forbidden passion and brutal murder. But when he also finds a beautiful woman back from the dead and a dete... Read allA young man discovers a mysterious mirror and begins to have disturbing visions of forbidden passion and brutal murder. But when he also finds a beautiful woman back from the dead and a detective with a thirst for revenge, the real terror has only just begun. The mirror sees all.... Read allA young man discovers a mysterious mirror and begins to have disturbing visions of forbidden passion and brutal murder. But when he also finds a beautiful woman back from the dead and a detective with a thirst for revenge, the real terror has only just begun. The mirror sees all...but what shocking secrets will it reveal?

  • Directors
    • Rachel Gordon
    • Virginia Perfili
  • Writer
    • Steve Tymon
  • Stars
    • Billy Drago
    • David Naughton
    • Monique Parent
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    2.6/10
    358
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Rachel Gordon
      • Virginia Perfili
    • Writer
      • Steve Tymon
    • Stars
      • Billy Drago
      • David Naughton
      • Monique Parent
    • 10User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast14

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    Billy Drago
    Billy Drago
    • Anthony
    David Naughton
    David Naughton
    • Detective Kobeck
    Monique Parent
    Monique Parent
    • Cassandra
    Mark Ruffalo
    Mark Ruffalo
    • Joey
    Richard Cansino
    Richard Cansino
    • Julio
    Elizabeth Baldwin
    • Carolyn
    Rudolf Weber
    • Ramone
    Brandon Scott Peterson
    • 1st Mobster on bridge
    Matthew Chontos
    • 2nd Mobster on bridge
    • (as Matthew J. Chontos)
    Jimmy Lifton
    • Thug with rifle
    • (as James Ian Lifton)
    Derrick Costa
    • Thug on stairs
    • (as Derrick J. Costa)
    Brandi Payne
    • Carlotta
    • (as Brandy Payne)
    Ingrid Hyross
    • Girlfriend
    Florence Smith
    • Old Cassandra
    • Directors
      • Rachel Gordon
      • Virginia Perfili
    • Writer
      • Steve Tymon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    2.6358
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    Featured reviews

    2justinwilliams371

    This is dire.

    There is nothing redeeming about this film. First one was OK. The second one was great purely for the presence of Roddy McDowell. The leading lady has a good figure but that is only interesting for the first minute or two. It is poor, poor, poor. I have seen better school plays. Although made in the mid nineties, the film quality is reminiscent of the early eighties B movies. The dialogue is as cheesy as it comes and the acting, oh dear. With regards to this film someone has definitely lost the plot. There isn't one. Really, stay clear if you can, but if you are willing to sit through it just to complete the series, then disengage your brain.
    2drownsoda90

    Mark Ruffalo's half-naked body is the only reason I stuck with this

    "Mirror, Mirror III: The Voyeur" follows an artist with a ghostly woman/ lover stalking him after he relocates to a mansion where a mysterious antique mirror is housed. She randomly appears to him and they have sex in front of the mirror, which bleeds whenever she kills someone. A subplot detailing her death at the hands of a drug dealer is intermixed.

    That's the best I have at describing the plot of the film, and even that may be totally off-base. The truth is, there is not much of a decipherable plot to this film, and I say that completely ingenuously. There really is no "story" to "Mirror, Mirror III"; it is more like a series of badly-shot "shock" images peppered within a Cinemax soft-core porno—no story, no intrigue, no subtlety. I don't really know what it was about, except that the majority of it was made up of tacky sex scenes and bad dialogue.

    The editing and special effects are horrendously sloppy; for example, there is a long, drawn-out opening montage featuring FX-enhanced images of a car speeding through Los Angeles that attempt to thrust a backstory at the audience before the exposition has even begun (there isn't any exposition after all I suppose, so it ultimately makes no difference). At moments, the filmmakers seem to attempting to channel David Lynch, but the result is embarrassingly bad. Billy Drago spends most of his time on screen moping around a bedroom when he's not having sex with Monique Parent on the bed while curtains flap around them in the wind. The only honest-to-God reason I finished the film was because Mark Ruffalo (who was also in an unconnected role in the previous sequel) was infectiously adorable in it, as well as the only actor to turn in a somewhat solid performance.

    Overall, "Mirror, Mirror III: The Voyeur" is an unequivocally bad film—like, really bad—and I rarely say that about a movie. It is some of the laziest filmmaking I've ever seen, and also a disgrace to the original "Mirror, Mirror," which, although no masterpiece, was a decent horror movie. Even the prior installment, which was bad for other reasons, was ten times more watchable than this. Literally one of the most dumbfounding experiences I've had watching a movie. Monique Parent spends virtually the entire film naked, so there's that, and Ruffalo also shows his body off at the end, serving as proof that he's always looked great. Other than that, there is no reason to watch this film—intellectually, visually, or otherwise. 2/10.
    1whammy666

    Those idiots trashed the series!

    Wow, I bought the Mirror, Mirror boxed set. Part 1 is a classic. Part 2 is good. And I had not seen 3. I heard it was bad but wowwwwwwwww. It is bad. This is one of the worst films I have seen in my life. It looks like a 2 year old made it. No, a 2 year old could of done better. I am amazed by this crap. The acting sucks. The directing sucks. The special effects suck. The quality of the film sucks. I cannot say one good thing about this film except Jimmy Lifton's score is still around and that is good music. I cannot think of another positive thing about this film. UGh all it is is these 2 people having sex for an hour and a half then some people die. The mirror does look the same as in the other films but that does not matter. Nothing on Earth can save this miserable piece of crap. 1/10
    3Leofwine_draca

    The worst one yet

    The third instalment of the MIRROR MIRROR franchise, which started out fairly averagely and degraded in quality for the first sequel. This one is the worst yet. The story sees Billy Drago (amusingly described as a 'young man' in the synopsis) who comes into possession of the cursed mirror and soon finds himself haunted by a dream succubus with whom he has regular softcore sex. There's also support from David Naughton as a cop investigating some murders and an annoying Mark Ruffalo playing a different character to the one he played in the last film. This is an extremely diluted experience in terms of horror, and for the most part it just offers repetitive nudity and little more. The always-interesting Drago deserved better.
    2I_Ailurophile

    Floundering dreck in almost every possible way

    A seventeen-minute prologue, which we are informed took place two months prior, in a second sequel to a second-rate horror film? Sure, why not. Two recognizable stars, one up-and-comer (now more famous than the others), and a relative of an even more famous actor? You bet! Lovingly shot but empty and nevertheless prolific love scenes, acting that is almost uniformly either limp or overdone, dubious sequencing and editing, and dialogue, scene writing, and direction that one could be forgiven for thinking came from the mind of Tommy Wiseau? Check! It really seems from the start that scribe Steve Tymon was straining to summon workable story ideas when all he actually had to do was focus on an evil mirror. Two credited directors were both equally unable to shape this into a cohesive, meaningful, or baseline interesting form, nevermind a tantalizing or exciting one. The music here is even more bland and milquetoast than it was in either of the previous films. I'm supposing it was producer Jimmy Lifton, the common link of these titles, that decided 'Mirror mirror III: The voyeur' was a good idea. Producer Jimmy Lifton, however, was deeply mistaken.

    The 1990 progenitor was no peak of horror, nor storytelling or film-making, but it was overall pretty well done and enjoyable. The first sequel, 'Raven dance,' was marked by direly weak writing, direction, and acting, a desperately inferior follow-up to a less than stellar product, but at least it had a cute cat. One tends to assume diminishing returns in movie series, horror above all, and we've seen that trend time and again. This series, however, went from "hey, this is pretty decent" to "by the gods, this is awful" to "bafflingly dull, languid, and useless." In fact, it's readily apparent that this 1995 dud was intended to be and built as an erotic thriller first and foremost, a few hairs shy of softcore, with the genre element mostly represented in the mere presence of a ghost who in life dabbled in magic doodads. It's not until we're almost two-thirds through the length that the mirror even really comes into play, and as it does we're treated to another sore spot in this production, which was absolutely bottom-dollar visual effects. Action sequences are pretty much downright senseless. A more concrete horror aspect does show up in the last third, but it is very thin and insufficient.

    The most interesting and clever 'The voyeur' gets is arguably in a short, throwaway scene in which Mark Ruffalo's character is preparing a sandwich, and with the space of a couple minutes the scene makes small references to this picture's predecessors. Those facets of the story centering David Naughton or Richard Cansino's characters are all but completely superfluous. When the horror does show up more firmly n the last stretch it gives a surprising tiny boost to the proceedings, but it's not nearly enough all on its own to count for much in the grand scheme of things. There's some nice lighting, perhaps, and art direction, and practical effects. But what else about this feature comes off well? I'm hard-pressed to name anything. I had low expectations and still I'm flummoxed by how terribly meek this is. That the last act is marginally stronger than the preceding length saves this from the extreme bottom of the barrel, but for as flaccid as the presentation is in almost every single way, the distinction is almost totally meaningless. Whatever it is that you think you might get out of 'Mirror Mirror III,' I regret to inform that you are gravely mistaken, and I urge all potential viewers to more wisely spend their time elsewhere.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mark Ruffalo previously appeared in the second Mirror Mirror movie in a different role.
    • Crazy credits
      The main credits do not appear until 17 minutes into the film.
    • Connections
      Followed by Mirror Mirror 4: Reflections (2000)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 1, 1996 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dreaming of Angelica
    • Filming locations
      • 2218 S Harvard Blvd, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Miranda Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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