There are tried and true tropes that grab hold of the viewer’s attention and don’t let up. An elaborately-staged crime scene? You have my attention. A rookie police officer paired with an old stand-by scarred from a case in his past? Definitely. Cops interviewing a locked-up serial killer for his thoughts on another murderer in their midst? Yes, please.
When jumbled together and dumped out like Scrabble letters, these formulas often build to something coherent if not compelling, except in the instance of “Mindcage.”
Directed by Mario Borrelli and written by Reggie Keyohara III (the two previously collaborated on “WarHunt”), “Mindcage” tells the story of cops Jake Doyle and Mary Kelly as they investigate elegantly-arranged murders of women sculpted and posed like angels in death.
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Lionsgate Acquires Thomas Jane and John Malkovich Action-Thriller ‘One Ranger’
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When jumbled together and dumped out like Scrabble letters, these formulas often build to something coherent if not compelling, except in the instance of “Mindcage.”
Directed by Mario Borrelli and written by Reggie Keyohara III (the two previously collaborated on “WarHunt”), “Mindcage” tells the story of cops Jake Doyle and Mary Kelly as they investigate elegantly-arranged murders of women sculpted and posed like angels in death.
Also Read:
Lionsgate Acquires Thomas Jane and John Malkovich Action-Thriller ‘One Ranger’
These crimes would be bizarre and memorable in and of themselves,...
- 12/14/2022
- by Fran Hoepfner
- The Wrap
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