When Michael Harding (Penn Badgley, TV’s “Gossip Girl”) returns
home from school, he finds his mom is madly in love with
her charming live-in boyfriend David (Dylan Walsh, TV’s
“Nip/Tuck”). At first, David appears to be the ultimate nice guy
and an ideal future husband and stepher. But when Michael and
his girlfriend (Amber Heard, Zombieland) start delving into
David’s past, they begin to discover a dark and dangerous side to
Michael’s new “daddy” in this riveting, chilling thriller.
.com
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The Stepher is one of those movies that telegraphs its ending
almost as soon as it starts; so, since we already know the
destination, the only question involves whether or not we'll
enjoy the journey. When we meet the guy who calls himself David
Harris (Dylan Walsh, Dr. Sean McNamara in the Nip/Tuck TV series)
during the opening credits, he's stepping over the bodies of the
wife and kids he's just murdered, out the door and on his way to
a new life. Sure enough, he's soon flirting with attractive
divorcée Susan Harding (Sela Ward), and six months later they're
engaged and living together with her three children, including
prodigal son Michael (Penn Badgley), who has just returned from
some kind of reform school. It doesn't take long for
Michael to begin suspecting that his stepher-to-be is not all
that he seems; Susan's sister, Jackie (Paige Turco), who hires
David as a real estate agent, has her suspicions too, as does a
cat-loving old neighbor. Only Susan remains clueless; then again,
one of the many shortcomings of the movie, which was directed
Nelson McCormick and written by J.S. Cardone, is its failure to
adequately explain why she fell for this creep in the first place
(we're often told how charming he is, but said charms are little
in evidence). All that remains is to see how the tale will play
itself out, and while McCormick supplies a few y moments, he
leaves no cliché unexplored (including Charlie Clouser's ominous,
obvious music) on the way to the expected violent climax. In the
end, one can only wonder why someone thought remaking The
Stepher was a good idea; the 1987 original offered both a much
better explanation for the killer's motives and a significantly
more compelling performance by Terry O'Quinn in the lead role.
--Sam Graham
Stills from The Stepher (Click for larger image)
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