New U.S. Release
The Haunting of Molly Hartley
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Molly Hartley - Haley Bennett
Joseph - Chace Crawford
Mr. Hartley - Jake Weber
Leah - Shannon Woodward
Jane Hartley - Marin Hinkle
Suzy - Annalynne McCord
Alexis - Shanna Collins
Dr. Emerson - Nina Siemaszko
Mr. Bennett - Ron Canada
Dr. Donaldson - Kevin Cooney
Laurel - Jessica Lowndes
Newly transplanted to God's country after her institutionalized mother's aforementioned attack, Boston girl Molly (Haley Bennett, the Hannah Montana-esque pop star in "Music & Lyrics") lands at tony Huntington Academy, whose English teacher gives the Bible to his students, ostensibly to provide context for Milton's "Paradise Lost." Molly gets a nosebleed upon receipt of this holy assignment, followed by a panic attack in the girls' bathroom. Liddell stops just shy of throwing satanic possession into the mix, as Molly's worried dad (Jake Weber) seeks help from a guidance counselor (Nina Siemaszko) rather than an exorcist.
Poor Molly, who continues to imagine that strung-out Mom (well-played by Marin Hinkle) has escaped from the sanitarium to wreak more havoc, is eventually taken to a hospital and examined by a John McCain lookalike (Kevin Cooney) who diagnoses a tumor in her sinuses. The tumor, like the film, turns out to be benign.
Exploiting a high schooler's anxiety over turning 18, "Molly Hartley" does its best to smuggle as much slasher-movie formula as possible into the no-ID-required package. Film makes creative use of the PG-13's one permissible F-bomb and, in place of nudity, includes a brief shot of Bennett in a revealing brassiere. Vaguely resembling the young Shannen Doherty or Daphne Zuniga, round-faced Bennett is appealing, if not exactly magnetic in the lead role, and her cringe-inducing dialogue -- "My head hurts. I hear things. Everything's messed up," Molly tearfully tells Dad -- doesn't do her any favors.
Young cast also includes "Gossip Girl" hunk Chace Crawford as Molly's flirtatious suitor; Shanna Collins as a wiggy born-again girl who repeatedly wonders whether our heroine has been saved; Annalynne McCord as the requisite rich bitch; and, liveliest of these, Shannon Woodward as a punk-rebel chick with self-described "anger issues."
With Liddell managing to conjure only one effective jolt in 80-odd minutes, pic's precious few highlights include a regrettably brief keg-party catfight and an emergency baptism gone horrifically bad. Film wasn't shown to the press in advance, but test screenings can be surmised from the ludicrously abrupt, upbeat and utterly incoherent finale set at Huntington's graduation ceremony. Prep school will save us all, apparently -- although tech credits throughout the pic are hardly upper-class.
Camera (color), Sharone Meir; editor, Zene Baker; music, James T. Sale; music supervisor, Christopher Mollere; production designer, John Larena; art director, Helen Harwell; costume designer, Anita Cabada; sound (Dolby Digital), Coleman Metts; sound designer, Thierry J. Couturier; visual effects supervisor, Kent Johnson; visual effects, Stargate Digital; associate producer, Todd J. Ulman; casting, Joseph Middleton. Reviewed at AMC Southdale 16, Edina, Minn., Oct. 31, 2008. MPAA Rating: PG-13. Running time: 86 MIN.
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