Hidden Camera (TV Movie 2007)

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Hidden Camera: Directed by Bryan Goeres. With Dean Cain, Lucía Jiménez, Arnold Vosloo, Eloisa Bennetts. When a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter is killed in a mass murder in a Barcelona hotel room, maverick reporter Dan Kovaks, the dead journalist’s brother, launches an investigation all his own. But now he and his hard-driving producer, Alejandra Velor, are being hunted by the killers and a vast network of government agents on both sides of a military conflict brewing in North Korea. But who’s working for whom and who can be trusted? Those are the questions troubling Dan and Alejandra as they fight to stay alive and unravel the mystery of a super-secret item dubbed the “Mega-Bill.”

“u0026quot;Hidden Camerau0026quot; stars Dean Cain, who played opposite Denzel Washington in u0026quot;Out of Timeu0026quot; and held his own in a couple of terse verbal exchanges with the Oscar-winning actor. A check of IMDb reveals Cain has 153 acting credits, nearly three times as many as Washington, but most are television roles. Other than u0026quot;Rat Race,u0026quot; a film my sons enjoy and have watched a dozen times, I havenu0026#39;t seen anything else that Cain has been in, so was interested to see HC. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe movie is a Spanish DTV production, which seems to evince more negative aspects of both qualifiers than potential positive ones. The budgetary limitations are obvious in the lack of expensive scenes, such as car chases, explosions, martial arts and large crowd scenes. It does have quite a few aerial shots, but they seem to be stock footage. The gun fights seem typical of television productions, although I must admit that I havenu0026#39;t watched broadcast television in over twenty years, so my impressions may be outdated. Perhaps most disappointing is that the film seems to take what foreigners would regard as somewhat exotic locations for granted. James Bond films often feature local carnivals and car chases through picturesque tourist spots. Hong Kong and Bollywood films often feature scenes with hundreds of extras. HC was shot in Barcelona, but feels as if it could have been in any of dozens of cities. On the positive side, most of the shots seem fairly steady, possibly because they were shot with lighter equipment, and the lighting is fairly even, if not evocative. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe movie suffers from a weak script, which reminds me of a line from u0026quot;Kentucky Fried Movieu0026quot;: u0026quot;Klahn has been connected with every sort of nefarious activity. You name it – opium, weapons traffic, assassination, motion picture distribution . . .u0026quot; HC has a lot of diverse criminal activities; human trafficking, assassination, robbery, forgery, counterfeiting, official corruption, video voyeurism . . . It seems to occur in some sort of alternate universe, where surveillance cameras are everywhere, scoundrels can retask satellites and novelty spy-cams have optics that rival lenses costing several thousand dollars. It suffers dramatically because Cainu0026#39;s character never needs to expend much effort to find the clues. A memory card is hidden in the first place he looks. People call him with vital clues at convenient moments. The performances werenu0026#39;t bad, but you canu0026#39;t win with a losing hand. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eHC was neither good enough to involve me, nor bad enough to abandon, although I found myself multitasking during some of the scenes.”

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