The Glass House
2001 -
Rated
PG-13 (MPAA)
Release Date: 01/02/2002
Features:
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Full Frame - 1.33
Letterbox - 2.35
Widescreen - 2.35
Audio:
Dolby Digital 2.0 - French
Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Additional Release Material:
Interviews
Trailers
Audio Commentary: Daniel Sackheim - Director, Wesley Strick - Screenwriter
Deleted Scene (1) (With Optional Audio Commentary)
Interactive Features:
Scene Selection
Interactive Menus
Text/Photo Galleries:
Production Notes
Filmographies
Time:
111
mins.
J&R Item # 1109671_1
UPC # 043396062528
Label: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
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Buying Info
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THE GLASS HOUSE, director Daniel Sackheim's sleek neo-noir thriller, is a modern Hansel and Gretel story with elements borrowed from HAMLET, set in California. As it opens, Ruby (Leelee Sobieski) watches unflinchingly while her friends cover their eyes from the horrors of a slasher movie. She deals with her over-concerned parents with cool resourcefulness. But, then her parents die in a car crash. Ruby learns from the family lawyer (Bruce Dern) that she and her younger brother Rhett (Trevor Morgan) will be well provided for, and will live with their sympathetic ex-neighbors Terry and Erin Glass (Stellan Skarsg�rd and Diane Lane).
Terry and Erin's new home is a modern mansion--all steel and glass--built on the cliffs of Malibu. But, all is not well beneath the cool surfaces of THE GLASS HOUSE. Ruby has to decide whether it is her imagination, or is she being watched as she undresses; and whether Terry is making a pass at her, or just fastening her seat belt; and whether Erin is shooting up drugs, or simply taking insulin to combat her diabetes; and whether Terry is really being menaced by well-dressed thugs. Leelee Sobieski plays Ruby with steely resolve as she tries to deal with the mysteries of THE GLASS HOUSE.
Cast:
"...[Sobieski] shows here how she can act on instinct, with her eyes doing the work..."
-- Robert Koehler
, (Variety)
"...In this eerily engrossing psychological thriller, there's also plenty to reflect upon..." -- Claudia Puig , (USA Today) "...Leelee Sobieski's orphan heiress is arrestingly grave and lanky....Diane Lane and Stellan Skarsgard are subtle performers whose best moments are silent, their features snagged by duplicity..." -- David Jays , (Sight and Sound) |