A Reason to Believe (1995)
Facts
| Directed by | Douglas Tirola |
| Cast | Jay Underwood, Allison Smith, Danny Quinn, Georgia Emelin, Kim Walker, Holly Marie Combs, Keith Coogan, Mark Metcalf, Robin Riker and Afton Smith |
| Theatrical Release | October 27, 1995 |
| DVD Release | April 5, 2005 |
| Running Time | 108 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 031398172673 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Jul 21 22:35 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Lions Gate, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 36 new from $8.25, 12 used from $8.81 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| bad movie, but I am fan Holly Marie Combs |
| Women are from Venus, etc. |
June 26, 2007
| Well-Crafted Low-Budget Drama Deserves a Look... |
The heroine of the story is young Charlotte (Allison Smith), a popular sorority girl, who, against the wishes of her boyfriend, Wesley (Danny Quinn, son of Oscar winner Anthony Quinn), attends a frat party alone, where she is raped by Wesley's best friend, Jim (Jay Underwood). As Jim brags of his 'conquest', Charlotte goes through a period of self-loathing and denial, until Jim's version destroys her relationship with Wesley, the friendship of her sorority sisters, and makes her an unwilling 'Cause' for the campus feminist group. Forced to take a stand, she finds her reputation smeared by Jim, his fraternity, and even her ex-friends, until the Dean ("Animal House" 'Neidermeyer', Mark Metcalf), calls in both parties to learn the truth...
While the fraternity scenes are more 'Delta House' than real, the chain of events rings true (Jim's girlfriend, so devoted that she'd rather lie about Charlotte than 'lose' him; Wesley's 'rebound' bedmate, played with conviction by Combs, becoming another victim of Jim's unwanted attentions). Even an eyewitness to the rape (Keith Coogan, great-grandson of Jackie) cannot come forward, as he is a 'druggie' who would not be believed, only arrested if he spoke out.
To Tirola's credit, he never permits the film to slide into melodrama, preferring to allow events to unfold naturally. The limited budget forces the film's resolution to be a bit rushed, and 'pat', but will still satisfy most viewers.
"A Reason To Believe" deserves praise for the quality 'look' it achieves (on a budget of under $200,000), the timeliness of the issues it addresses, and several outstanding performances. To remember it solely for a few moments of nudity does it a disservice!
January 20, 2006
| Accurate Though Exhaggerated View of College Students |
| Reason To Believe |
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