As models show up on calendars and magazine covers, someone is making bodies show up at the morgue. Is it the obsessed fan?As models show up on calendars and magazine covers, someone is making bodies show up at the morgue. Is it the obsessed fan?As models show up on calendars and magazine covers, someone is making bodies show up at the morgue. Is it the obsessed fan?
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Did you know
- TriviaFilm debut of Mark Derwin.
- ConnectionsFeatured in We Kill for Love (2023)
- SoundtracksWork It Out
Written by George Bunnell, Steve Schoenholz & Lawrence Forsey
Bunnell Music & Swindle Music
Featured review
A chiller, not a thriller, is the best way to describe this dreary feature, about an obsessed nerd (Corey Feldman) fixated on supermodel Margo Johnson (Kimberly Stevens), while someone is murdering other supermodels.
A script without depth, "Evil Obsession" leaves many questions unanswered. For example, given the popularity of showbiz supermodels -- from coverage in top publications to television entertainment-related sources -- why would the news of these murders be so downplayed? No sign of the press. Just the sound of the radio personality's announcement and a visual showing a lead character reading a newspaper's headline.
Well, of course, this is a low-budget feature with a low aim. And it doesn't have much aim, neither. We're expected to care, but don't, about numerous subplots, such as the possibility of romance between Johnson and her hired detective (Mark Derwin) -- their flirtatious and imminent lovemaking scenes are anything but hot -- and the possibly lethal manipulations of Margo's pompous acting coach (Brion James).
And the performances in director Richard W. Munch's film run the gamut from the mentally comatose to the proverbial hambones. Perhaps seeing is believing. But why waste the time?
"Evil Obsession," for all you erotic thriller fans, plays more like a neurotic chiller.
A script without depth, "Evil Obsession" leaves many questions unanswered. For example, given the popularity of showbiz supermodels -- from coverage in top publications to television entertainment-related sources -- why would the news of these murders be so downplayed? No sign of the press. Just the sound of the radio personality's announcement and a visual showing a lead character reading a newspaper's headline.
Well, of course, this is a low-budget feature with a low aim. And it doesn't have much aim, neither. We're expected to care, but don't, about numerous subplots, such as the possibility of romance between Johnson and her hired detective (Mark Derwin) -- their flirtatious and imminent lovemaking scenes are anything but hot -- and the possibly lethal manipulations of Margo's pompous acting coach (Brion James).
And the performances in director Richard W. Munch's film run the gamut from the mentally comatose to the proverbial hambones. Perhaps seeing is believing. But why waste the time?
"Evil Obsession," for all you erotic thriller fans, plays more like a neurotic chiller.
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