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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars PORTIA IN PERIL
Portia de Rossi is the main reason to see THE GLOW. This radiant young actress (Arrested Development, Scream 2) dominates the standard plotting and mediocre direction, and infuses the movie with a sense of peril and urgency. She plays a young woman, whose fitness conscious husband (the ubiquitous Dean Cain) has been mugged and robbed in Central Park. Assistance is...
Published on February 9, 2005 by Michael Butts

versus
2.0 out of 5 stars There's better things to watch.
The plot was OK, but I think there were some big plot holes: was the 'parentless kids' connection ever explained?, Why was the star made to beleive she was pregnant??? And she was easily able to kill that guy in the end.
Agrivating scene: the police let the people accused of murder take the accuser into the building against her will!!!!
Published on October 28, 2003 by superconducter


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars PORTIA IN PERIL, February 9, 2005
This review is from: The Glow (DVD)
Portia de Rossi is the main reason to see THE GLOW. This radiant young actress (Arrested Development, Scream 2) dominates the standard plotting and mediocre direction, and infuses the movie with a sense of peril and urgency. She plays a young woman, whose fitness conscious husband (the ubiquitous Dean Cain) has been mugged and robbed in Central Park. Assistance is offered by a trio of elderly people brimming with uncommon energy and social etiquette. They take Cain home to call his wife, and when she arrives, lo and behold they have made them an offer on a beautiful apartment in the building they all live in. Most of the tenants are elderly, except for another young couple who later on mysteriously vacate the premises. This opens the plot to something unusual going on with these seemingly harmless seniors. Since the viewer has read the description on the box, we all know what's going on. Question is, can Ms. DeRossi convince anyone else?
DeRossi and Cain make a nice couple, although he seems sometimes a little wooden. The writers also don't point out why Cain's sexual drive has gone on vacation, but we can pretty much guess the "vitamins" and the "pink drink" have something to do with it. Cain also doesn't question how his wife is pregnant when he hasn't had sex with her for weeks. Why hasn't anyone else looked into the other missing couples? Conveniently, they were all "parentless children," but didn't they have friends and coworkers? Ah, what the heck...I have to admit that even with the gaps and stuff, I found myself involved and wanting the old fogies to get their just desserts. Portia is due credit for keeping me involved. And it was great seeing such veteran actors as Hal Linden, Dina Merrill, Grace Zabriskie and Joseph Campanella playing such evil characters.
For a Lifetime TV movie, it's not that bad, folks.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Glow, February 20, 2010
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This review is from: The Glow (DVD)
The CD was rec'd in original sealed pkg. It arrived within 10 days from order. Movie ran great. I would by from this seller again.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A True Masterpiece, February 18, 2005
By 
Artemis (Pittsburgh, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Glow (DVD)
What did I oike about this movie? it would be easier to say what I didn't like: nothing! The conflict might be popular, but that's because it's so attractive and creepy; it didn't diminish the quality of the story any less. I was on the edge of my seat, screaming at the screen, my heart beating like a flying bumblebee! The suspense to see who if anyone survived almost killed me! This is true horror that relies on the story and the characters to scare the audience rather than flashy special effects. A must see for... everyone, with a strong stomach for the scene when Jackie uncovers a truck full of bodies.
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2.0 out of 5 stars There's better things to watch., October 28, 2003
By 
"superconducter" (an undisclosed location) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Glow [VHS] (VHS Tape)
The plot was OK, but I think there were some big plot holes: was the 'parentless kids' connection ever explained?, Why was the star made to beleive she was pregnant??? And she was easily able to kill that guy in the end.
Agrivating scene: the police let the people accused of murder take the accuser into the building against her will!!!!
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5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Such a bad movie from such a good book., January 21, 2004
This review is from: The Glow (DVD)
The Glow (Craig R. Baxley, 2002)

The idea of turning Brooks Stanwood's wonderful novel The Glow into a film has been kicking around Hollywood for almost a quarter-century; the first paperback releases of the book had "Soon to be a major motion picture!" on them. As usual, that didn't pan out...until 2002.

Would that we had waited another quarter century rather than get a Lifetime Original Movie™. Not only that, but a Lifetime Original Movie directed by Craig Baxley, whose feature film record was so bad it's a miracle anyone lets him work in Hollywood at all.

Baxley (director of such brilliant cinematic fare as "I" Come in Peace, Stone Cold, and Deep Red-and fear, my brothers and sisters, for he has been put in charge of the remake of The Kingdom) takes a script by Stanwood and equally good teleplay artist Gary Sherman (Dead and Buried, Vice Squad) and comes up with, well, bupkus. Jackie (Portia de Rossi) and Matt (Dean Cain) Lawrence are typical struggling-to-get-by New Yorkers. Matt, on his morning run, is mugged in Central Park, and a trio of septuagenarians comes to his rescue. By the end of the day, they've offered him a cheap apartment on the Upper East Side. The couple move in, and all goes well. Or so they think; Jackie starts becoming suspicious that things are not all as they seem.

The cast, to give credit where credit is due, do the best they can with what they've got. Others on the docket include Hal Linden, Dina Merrill, Grace Zabriskie, Sabrina Grdevich (whose face may not look familiar, but Sailor Moon fans know her as the voice of Sailor Pluto), and a host of others. All of them work relatively well within the parameters of what they've got, which is zilch. Baxley misses hundreds of small details which could have been used to build suspense, sets up silly situations (hiding under the stairs only works when the people you're hiding from can't see under the stairs!), things like that. All of them add up to, well, your typical Lifetime Original Movie; slapped together without any thought to the details of filmmaking.

Brooks Stanwood (actually, a pseudonym for a husband-and-wife writing team, both of whom work in the publishing industry) is still alive, and still producing. With any luck, the authors have been shielded from seeing what their work hath wrought. Were there any justice in the world, the rest of us would have been shielded from it as well. *

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good Plot, October 31, 2004
This review is from: The Glow (DVD)
This was quite an adventure packed movie. Its focus is around a couple, Jackie and Matt, who find an great apartment in NYC, too good to be true? You bet it is. In this apartment house it seems most of of the tenants are old, and the young ones don't stay around very long. Strange things begin to happen, and people begin to disappear. Jackie knows something is very wrong.
The movie hinges around the elderly taking the 'glow' from young peoples blood. Of course they have to kill them to do this.
Not all the main characters make it out alive in the ending, which I always hate, but still this was a sit on the edge of your seat show.
I enjoyed it, great to watch on a Saturday afternoon.
Shirley Johnson
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars THE BOOK IS BETTER..., January 2, 2004
This review is from: Glow [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Based upon an excellent book by Brooks Stanwood, this film tells the story of a young, attractive couple befriended by a group of attractive senior citizens who own and live in a gorgeous townhouse in Manhattan, replete with its own state-of-the-art gym. They offer the young couple (Portia Derossi and Dean Cain) a fantastic, spacious apartment in their townhouse for a fraction more than the young couple is paying for their current cramped quarters.

They lose no time in accepting this chance of a lifetime deal, not knowing where it would lead. Shortly after they move in, another young, attractive couple living in the building mysteriously disappears. The elderly residents of the building explain it away somewhat implausibly, arousing some initial suspicion in our newly moved in pair. Still, their initial concern is quelled, when an NYPD Detective appears and ostensibly sets the story straight.

Still, some mysterious, unexpected deaths raise the suspicions of the female half of this young couple. Moreover, the elderly residents seem to be becoming somewhat more intrusive, as they seem to impose themselves upon the couple at every turn. Reminiscent of "Rosemary's Baby" in some ways, it forges off in another macabre direction, having nothing to do with the supernatural.

Just what is going on? Well, that is what is at the heart of this film, which plays like a made for television movie. Portia Derossi and Dean Cain are out-acted by every one of the senior citizens, who are lead by Hal Linden. The plot is fairly obvious after a while, though it does keep the viewer entertained and, being moderately entertaining, is certainly worth a rental.

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars MY FAVORITE LIFETIME MOVIE!, September 4, 2004
By 
Steve L. Morris (Ellicott City, MD USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Glow (DVD)
I love love love love this movie! The plot is excellent. I taped it and I watch it over and over again!
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The Glow
The Glow by Craig R. Baxley (DVD - 2003)
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