Monday, April 1, 2013

Movie Recommendation Time: A Mother's Nightmare.

It was quaint how the actress who played Vanessa Redman is a spitting image of Megan Fox (Jennifer's Body, 2009). Ladies and Gentlemen, Russovoir proudly introduces to you Jessica Lowndes (below), 24-year old Canadian actress, singer, and songwriter (one of God's favorites surely) whose rise to public recognition draws a line between 90210 fans and her YouTube subscribers. It wasn't until A Mother's Nightmare that Russovoir develops a selfish anticipation, as if she's the fulfilling chorus too impatient to finish the entire favorite song.


What clever reference, although while it's based on true events, the film has elements reminiscent of Jennifer's Body that had Megan Fox played Vanessa, its reception could've significantly echoed. Define actress value. In compromise, while still determined to preserve the subtly similar nature of both films, a Megan Fox look alike would suffice. Kudos! It did make a recall of a particular Fox story.

Let's briefly remind ourselves of the story of Jennifer's Body. We follow with this early bloomer high school lass whose extra small tee is apathetic to ogling men. She has a best friend, Anita (Seyfried), the uncomfortably insecure, less hot one. Let's get with the program - they went to a concert, there was a fire, a group of struggling artists kidnapped and sacrificed her to Satan, mistaking she's a virgin, resulting to a demon incarnate. Here's the film's element: as a succubus, she's weak until only have brutally eaten men (Director's Cut, get it). Frankly, the film was brilliant in manifesting from seduction to a recoiling monstrosity - unmistakeably a Fox feature.

Jennifer in Jennifer's Body.

A bothering true story, A Mother's Nightmare is a demon incarnate minus the gaping set of razor-sharp teeth. High school transfer Vanessa Redman didn't need them anyway to torment men. Likely the third victim on her list, lovelorn Chris Stewart (Grant Gustin, Glee) is your soft-spoken, heartbroken, good-lookin' boyfriend material on which her plan weaves from. Suspiciously rushing in their love bubble, a mother is concerned for her son not only because he's failing in school and missing out practices unreasonably smitten; she suspects the girlfriend will make him miss them out altogether for good.

"Prove your love to me."



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