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2005 American film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Headspace is a 2005 psychological horror film directed by Andrew van den Houten. The screenplay was written by Steve Klausner and William M. Miller, based on a story by Troy McCombs.
Headspace | |
---|---|
Directed by | Andrew van den Houten |
Screenplay by | Steve Klausner William M. Miller |
Story by | Troy McCombs |
Produced by | Marius Kerdel William M. Miller Andrew van den Houten |
Starring | Olivia Hussey William Atherton Sean Young |
Cinematography | William M. Miller |
Edited by | Elwaldo Baptiste |
Music by | Ryan Shore |
Production company | Modernciné |
Distributed by | Freestyle Releasing |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Alex, a young man struggling with migraines, is sent to a hospital where he is told his brain uses the frontal lobe more than any normal person. Soon after, he begins hallucinating apparitions while murders are occurring around the city
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Christopher Denham | Alex Borden |
Olivia Hussey | Dr. Karen Murphy |
William Atherton | Dr. Ira Gold |
Sean Young | Mother |
Mark Margolis | Boris Pavlovsky |
Larry Fessenden | Father |
Pollyanna McIntosh | Stacy |
Paul Sparks | Jason |
Dee Wallace | Dr. Denise Bell |
Udo Kier | Rev. Karl Hartman |
Mercedes Renard | Connie Sanchez |
Headspace: The Director's Cut was released via cable and video on demand in North America on April 24 and via DVD & Blu-ray on 19 June 2012.[1]
Neil Genzlinger of The New York Times:
Not that it's a bad movie, particularly; it has all the necessary gore and beasties and gratuitous nudity that this not-very-demanding genre demands... None of this is very scary, but William M. Miller's cinematography and those big-name cameos keep it interesting.[2]
From TV Guide:
While neither especially chilling nor particularly unpredictable, van den Houten's debut, scripted by Steve Klausner from a story by Troy McCombs and William M. Miller, aspires to little more than the usual stalk-and-slash clichés, it features a number of nice touches, including a knowing nod to H. P. Lovecraft's classic short story Pickman's Model and a slew of familiar faces in small roles, such as Udo Kier as a spooky priest and Dee Wallace-Stone and William Atherton as baffled doctors.[3]
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