'He's Watching' (TV Movie 2018)
29K‘He’s Watching’: Directed by Steven Brand. With Linsey Godfrey, Darri Ingolfsson, Tilky Jones, Joseph C. Phillips. Angela has it all – she’s on the partnership track at her prestigious wealth management firm and she is engaged to the perfect man. But things take a turn when her college boyfriend, Kyle, suddenly reappears in her life. Kyle had proposed to Angela after graduation and she turned him down – she wasn’t ready to commit to one person and wanted to focus on her career. Now Kyle is a famous photographer and is very wealthy. He hires Angela to manage his money, and what begins as a strict business relationship soon turns into a heated affair. But as Angela begins to spend more and more time with Kyle, she realizes that this trip down memory lane may be a disastrous mistake. When her life suddenly takes a downward spiral with her fiancé, friends and work, Angela is forced to confront the fact that Kyle may no longer be the sweet, gentleman of her past. Linsey Godfrey, Tilky Jones star. (2018)
“Well I read a lot of the reviews here and it seems to be pretty divided as to whether or not this is a good movie. So hereu0026#39;s my 2 cents. In my opinion this was not trying to be Indiana Jones. I think the intension was to make a campy, cheesy spoof, and as that it succeeds fantastically. Keep in mind this was the early – mid 80u0026#39;s. Cheezeball B-movies were all the rage and popular. Look was came out in around that period. King Solomonu0026#39;s Mines, a year later a sequel, Lost City of Gold. But we had many other great cheese movies like Ice Pirates, Dungeonmaster, Dragonslayer, Spaceballs, just to name a few. Conan the Barbarian spawn a whole subgenre of barbarian movies as did Road Warrior for post-apocalyptic movies. Iu0026#39;m sure there where other movies of these subjects before, but these were the ones that really kicked it off for those subgenres. I think that many of those who are complaining that King Solomonu0026#39;s Mines is so bad are those who are too young to remember and appreciate these movies that came out in around that period or those who decided itu0026#39;s not u0026quot;coolu0026quot; to like cheesy movies.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eOf course you canu0026#39;t compare the effects to that of Raiders of the lost Ark. Raiders had a near unlimited budget for the day, how do you compete with something like that? And do you honestly think that they blatantly ripped off scenes without getting permission first? I wouldnu0026#39;t be surprised if Lucas is making a small royalty of these movies, or at least did back when it came out. Yes, they rode the Raiders wave. Why is it that we criticize someone for riding a winning wave? If I had the chance, Iu0026#39;d do it in a heartbeat. I would argue that any of these movies have more heart than most of what comes out of Hollywood these days. These were made back when, for the most part, budgets were tight and people made movies for the love of making movies.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eHaving a weakness for violent gore movies and foreign, B-Movies and foreign probably comprise 60% of my DVD collection and 70-80% of my VHS collection. Almost 600 movies combined. But I have a rare gift to be able to sit down and watch a movie without comparison to another and judge it on itu0026#39;s own. Thatu0026#39;s why my collection contains everything from Little Mermaid and Aladdin to Cannibal Holocaust(Uncut) and Salo: 120 Days of Sodom(Uncut), from The English Patient to, yes, King Solomonu0026#39;s Mines. (I do, however, have Lost City of Gold on VHS) So sit back, try to watch movies without any preconception of what you are about to watch. Critics, friends, rumors are just that. You are your own person, make up your own mind. If you canu0026#39;t do this, you are probably looking at the wrong movie. All you will see is a bad Raiders rip-off and you should stick to what you know or u0026quot;realityu0026quot; *Ya Right* TV.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eAnd thatu0026#39;s my 2 cents.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eME”