Heartstopper

Dom Robinson reviews

Heartstopper
Distributed by
Momentum Pictures

    Cover

  • Cert:
  • Cat.no: MP625D
  • Running time: 82 minutes
  • Year: 2006
  • Pressing: 2007
  • Region(s): 2, PAL
  • Chapters: 12 plus extras
  • Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 (Dolby Surround)
  • Languages: English
  • Subtitles: English
  • Widescreen: 1.85:1
  • 16:9-Enhanced: Yes
  • Macrovision: Yes
  • Disc Format: DVD 9
  • Price: £12.99
  • Extras: Trailer, Interviews

    Director:

      Bob Keen

    (The Beastery, Heartstopper, The Lost World, Rogue)

Producers:

    Kate Harrison and Lewin Webb

Screenplay:

    Warren P. Sonoda and Vlady Pildysh

Music:

    Eric Cadesky and Nick Dyer

Cast:

    Sara Wexler: Meredith Henderson
    Walter: Nathan Stephenson
    Chambers: James Binkley
    Dr Hitchens: Michael Cram
    Sheriff Berger: Robert Englund
    Nurse Grafton: Laura DeCarteret
    Dr Drayis: Scott Gibson
    Ms Wexler: Lori Hallier
    Trina Foote: Celine Lepage
    Triage Nurse: Amy Lalonde


Heartstopper is clearly a film that’s jumping on the Freddy Krueger bandwagon in order to justify its existence. Let’s see…

  • Teens in peril – check!
  • Mass murderer put to death who then comes back to life – check!
  • Robert Englund in the cast so let’s make a big deal out of it by putting him on the cover – check!

Chambers (James Binkley) is a very bad man – so bad in fact that this convicted killer is sentenced to death by electric chair and once we see the corpse’s melted face it’s clear that that’s the end for this personification of evil… Well, for now, at least. On the way to the hospital, in order to put the serial killer to the morgue, they come across teenager Sara Wexler (Meredith Henderson), found sat in the middle of the road.

Alas, the serial killer manages to come back to life by ripping out the heart of his first victim post-incineration, while lying on the mortuary slab, and thus he’s back to his old self again, ready to continue his reign of terror.

Sara’s the only one who knows the truth about the killer, following an incident in the ambulance, but since she’s a bit of a freakazoid a school, no-one believes anything she says.


Just what is the killer’s connection with the girl? You will find out, but is it anything to make this movie stand out from amongst the slasher crowd? Not really.

Of the main cast, Robert Englund plays a Sheriff Berger, determined to stop Chambers when he goes back on his rampage, out-of-state coroner Dr Hitchens (Michael Cram) is brought in because he specifically deals with serial killers, Walter (Nathan Stephenson) is a young lad who’s brought into the hospital as a stab victim and 5ive Girls hottie Amy Lolande shows up again here as a triage nurse.

Who will live and who will die? You’ll spend literally seconds worrying about that one inbetween hearing cheesy one-liners from the killer since, unfortunately, Heartstopper shoots its bolt early on in terms of who gets offed too early. Overall, this leads to a film that’s badly written, badly acted and with something that cries “late-night TV filler”, making it a wonder it was ever made as so many better films have gone before it.


The 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen print is a clean and clear one, with nothing particularly standing out as everyone’s rushing round the same dark hospital corridor for the majority of the time. The sound is in Dolby Surround only, which makes you wonder why they couldn’t stretch to a Dolby Digital 5.1 soundmix as it would’ve benefitted the times when it’s at least trying to scare you with Chambers going crazy-ape bonkers.

The extras are a brief trailer (1:40) in letterbox 1.85:1 and standard Q&A interviews with Robert Englund (15.14) and director Bob Keen (11.55), the only thing of note about these being that they’re better-chaptered than the film with one per question in their short time, rather than a meagre 12 across the entire movie.

The disc comes with English subtitles and the menus are a silent and static affair. After putting the DVD in, you’ll see it opens with a trailer for 2001 Maniacs, but why isn’t this part of the DVD content itself and not stuck at the front like a VHS rental trailer?


FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS


OVERALL
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2007.


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