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Lysette Anthony Movies

A native of London, England, actress Lysette Anthony got her start with the National Youth Theatre at age 14; she was the youngest member there. She began her television and film career in the U.S. in the early '80s appearing in two CBS adaptations of classic literature, Ivanhoe and Oliver Twist. In 1983, Anthony appeared in the NBC miniseries Princess Daisy as Lady Sarah. In feature films, she made a notable appearance as a sexy, astrology-crazed aerobics instructor who seduces Woody Allen in Husbands and Wives (1992). She again played "the other woman" the following year in Look Who's Talking Now. Anthony has subsequently continued to appear in feature and television films. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
1998  
 
Desperate for a child of their own, a young couple visits the local sperm bank so the wife can be artificially inseminated. The procedure is a success, and the two are blissfully happy until they discover that the donor is a crazed killer obsessed with raising the child himself. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Kevin DillonNick Mancuso, (more)
 
1997  
R  
In this sexual thriller a housewife nearly loses everything she treasures when a night's indiscretion leads to obsession -- and possibly murder. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
William R. MosesLysette Anthony, (more)
 
1996  
PG13  
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Pierce Brosnan, best known for his suave and sophisticated roles, takes on a new screen personality in this adaptation of Daniel Defoe's classic novel. Robinson Crusoe (Brosnan) is an adventurer who hopes to find fame and fortune on the high seas, but a fierce ocean storm wrecks his ship and leaves him stranded by himself on an uncharted island. Left to fend for himself, Crusoe seeks out a tentative survival on the island, until he meets Friday (Wiliam Takaku), a tribesman living on the island. Initially, Crusoe is thrilled to finally have a friend, but when he discovers another tribe is also living on the island, he comes mad with power and insists that he be the sole ruler of all he surveys. Robinson Crusoe also stars Ian Hart, Lysette Anthony, and James Frain. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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1996  
R  
In this suspenseful drama, a cozy second honeymoon turns into a nightmare when a compassionate young couple saves a lost hunter from freezing to death. Eric and Alicia's ordeal began months before when Eric was shot in the stomach during a car-jacking. Loyal Alicia helped with every step of his four-month-long recovery. As soon as he is sufficiently healed, the two head to the mountains for their long-awaited vacation. No sooner are they settled in before a cozy blaze when the door knocks and Cale, the lost hunter stands before them. The next morning, Eric goes to his truck so he can take Cale to the hospital, but the truck won't start. Suspiciously, Alicia rifles through Cales's belongings and discovers he carries no identification. Alarmed, the couple copes with the situation as best they can. Matters get worse when Cale makes it clear that he wants Alicia and considers Eric expendable. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Lysette AnthonyChris Mulkey, (more)
 
1996  
 
The long-awaited sequel to the 1975 made-for-TV cult-horror classic, Trilogy of Terror 2 features the original's knife-wielding Zuni fetish doll back in action, still diminutive and thirsty for human blood. The first story of the trilogy, "Graveyard Rats," sees a woman doing time amidst flesh-eating vermin after killing her rich husband. "Bobby" looks at the consequences faced by a woman who strikes a deal with Satan to bring her drowned son back to life. "He Who Kills" stars everyone's favorite homicidal fetish doll and is based upon Richard Matheson's short story "Prey." ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

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Starring:
Lysette AnthonyGeraint Wyn Davies, (more)
 
1995  
PG13  
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Mel Brooks does it again with this send-up of vampire films. That Leslie Nielson plays the great blood-sucking count gives viewers a good idea as to what they are in for. This Dracula takes himself very seriously despite the fact that he's a bit of a klutz with a tendency to slip in the bat guano that adorns his castle floor. Staying very close to Bram Stoker's original story, Brooks also pays sly homage to other major vampire film classics, including Nosferatu. Though silly but subtle gags abound in this outing, Brooks has taken great care to recreate the late 19th-century atmosphere in rich detail and harkens back to Hammer horror movies popular during the '50s and '60s. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Leslie NielsenPeter MacNicol, (more)
 
1995  
PG13  
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Robert Louis Stevenson's classic tale of a man whose scientific meddling has unexpected results gets a cross-gender update in this comedy. Richard Jacks (Tim Daly) is a research scientist trying to work his way up the ladder at a major perfume company when he inherits the notebooks of his great-grandfather, Dr. Henry Jekyll. Fascinated by Jekyll's ideas about the duality of man, Jacks starts performing experiments to refine his potion that would isolate man's good and evil natures. However, Richard's version has a very different result than the old Jekyll formula, instead of turning him into a snarling beast, the drug transforms him into Helen Hyde (Sean Young), a beautiful and powerfully sexy woman with a slight case of nymphomania. Jacks figures that a good looking woman willing to sleep with nearly anyone should have no trouble rising to a position of power within the company, so his alter-ego Helen may be his ticket to a room at the top. But this plan may require a bit of explaining to Jacks' girlfriend, Sarah (Lysette Anthony). The supporting cast includes Polly Bergen, Jeremy Piven, and Harvey Fierstein, who is so awestruck by Helen Hyde's allure that he's rendered heterosexual by the experience. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Sean YoungTim Daly, (more)
 
1994  
R  
This action thriller tells the story of Jonah, a daring cop with a hair trigger finger who finds himself suspended by Internal Affairs after he shoots a psycho-killer. His girlfriend Lisa is also in trouble as she tries to deal with the constant harassment of her boss, a dishonest city councilman. When her boss accepts a bribe for $3 million from the mob, Lisa decides to get her revenge and steal it. Jonah readily agrees to assist in the heist. Also involved is Dr. Chandler, a man with a genius for electronics. Problems ensue when Lisa finds herself attracted to Chandler. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Eric RobertsMichael Rooker, (more)
 
1993  
PG13  
Add Look Who's Talking Now to Queue Add Look Who's Talking Now to top of Queue  
This final installment in the Look Who's Talking trilogy is a combination of Make Room For Daddy and The Lady and the Tramp. In the six years since the original Look Who's Talking, Mikey and Julie are now old enough to speak for themselves, so the producers came up with a new gimmick -- talking dogs. The Ubriacco family adopts two surly dogs, Rocks (the voice of Danny DeVito), a street-smart mongrel, and Daphne (voice of Diane Keaton), a snobbish pure bred poodle. The story kicks in with Christmas rapidly approaching and Molly (Kirstie Alley) out of a job. Because of this, her husband James (John Travolta) must work doubly hard to impress his new boss, Samantha (Lysette Anthony). But Samantha, it seems, has hired James for more than what appears in his job description. Samantha contrives a plan to get James to her cabin in the North Woods on Christmas Eve, where she plans to seduce him. James' family races to rescue him from the snowbound cabin, but when their taxi skids off the snow-covered road, it is left to the primal instincts of Rocks and Daphne to save the day. ~ Paul Brenner, Rovi

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Starring:
John TravoltaKirstie Alley, (more)
 
1993  
R  
Three stalwarts of made-for-TV productions -- Harry Hamlin, Michael Ironside, and Steve Railsback -- team up for this erotic thriller. Hamlin plays a mild-mannered accountant who takes up with an intriguing stranger (Lysette Anthony), who happens to harbor multiple personalities: seductress, prude, and saint. ~ Michael Hastings, Rovi

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1993  
R  
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In France in 1452, the dark superstition of the Medieval era was beginning to give way to the more enlightened attitudes of the Renaissance. But the changes were slow in coming, as Richard Courtois (Colin Firth) learns when he moves to the country village of Abbeville, owned and ruled by the Seigneur (Nicol Williamson). Courtois is a lawyer, or an "advocate" as they were called in those days, and the Seigneur has hired him to act as a public defender for those who cannot provide their own legal counsel. One odd remnant of the dark ages that Abbeville has not purged from its legal system is the practice of prosecuting animals as well as humans for crimes; as Courtois arrives, he nearly witnesses the execution of both a man and a donkey who were found guilty of bestiality (the donkey was spared at the last minute because it could not be proved that she consented to the act). So Courtois is not exactly surprised when one of his first cases finds him defending a pig against charges of murdering a small child. Courtois soon discovers that the pig belongs to Samira (Amina Annabi), a beautiful gypsy woman he finds himself falling in love with. Losing the pig would mean losing many meals down the road, so to win Samira's good tidings, Courtois must prove the pig innocent -- which means finding the real killer. However, since the Seigneur is eager to see Courtois (or anyone, for that matter) marry his daughter Filette (Lysette Anthony), his affection for Samira may not be good for his future employment prospects. This period comedy/drama also features Donald Pleasance, Ian Holm, and Michael Gough. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Colin FirthIan Holm, (more)
 
1992  
PG13  
Tensions run high when a recently-divorced couple are given an offer they can't refuse. Once well-established movie songwriters, Dempsey and Ringwald are thrown together again when a movie producer offers them a rewarding contract to compose a new song. However, old wounds and new love interests guarantee that this job will be anything but easy money. ~ Iotis Erlewine, Rovi

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Starring:
Molly RingwaldPatrick Dempsey, (more)
 
1992  
R  
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One of Woody Allen's most seemingly biographical films, Husbands and Wives opens with upper-middle class Manhattan couple Sally (Judy Davis) and Jack (Sydney Pollack) announcing to their best friends, the Roths, that they are splitting up. Gabe Roth (Allen) and his wife Judy (Mia Farrow) are taken aback by their casual revelation. Jack begins dating his dim, but sexy, aerobics instructor and Sally starts up a tentative romance with Michael (Liam Neeson). Gabe and Judy begin analyzing their marriage, discovering that they might not be meant to stay together. English professor Gabe begins a serious flirtation with a student of his named Rain (Juliette Lewis) and Judy begins to have feelings for Michael. Eventually, Sally and Jack reconcile, but have not improved their relationship. Gabe and Judy end up going their separate ways. Husbands and Wives was seemingly influenced by Ingmar Bergman's Scenes From a Marriage. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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Starring:
Woody AllenJudy Davis, (more)
 
1991  
 
To look at him, you would never guess that Dick is a major ladies' man, but looks can be deceiving. He has a way with women, at least up to a point. He can almost always get them to go to bed with him. It's just that what happens afterwards is a bit of an issue. For instance, he married a beautiful woman who became a feminist lesbian and divorced him. His current main flame has a fondness for huge dogs and is so businesslike that she thinks nothing of answering the phone while they are having sex. This is disturbing to him, so he finds some comfort in the arms of two other women. In this amiable comedy, Dick soon discovers just how little control over his romantic life he really has. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Lynsey BaxterHaydn Gwynne, (more)