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Charly Cantor Movies

1999  
R  
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Director Charly Cantor's offbeat British vampire tale concerns a synthetic woman (Lee Blakemore from the Rula Lenska vehicle Paradise Grove) whose blood is a heroin-like drug with powerful effects on those who drink it; however, she must replace every unit of blood she loses with nine units from human veins. Adrian Rawlins (Breaking the Waves) stars as the scientist who created Blakemore for "Project Elixir," and soon finds himself dangerously walking the line between love and narcotic addiction. Phil Cornwell, Nicolas Harvey, and Paul Herzberg co-star. Cantor also made the wistful ghost story Furnished Room. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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1998  
R  
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George Milton directed and co-wrote this quirky and riveting British thriller set in a crumbling old hotel run by a suspicious-looking manager named Jay (Trevor Eve, who played Harker in the 1979 Dracula). A group of strangers, gathered by an obnoxious young sailor (Christien Anholt) to celebrate his birthday, plays cards to determine which of them will spend the night in Room 207. The room is reputed to be haunted and a place where one "dreams the dreams of the ones who slept before you." Susie (Yse Marguerite Tran), an Asian woman who came to the hotel ostensibly to meet "someone special" is first, witnessing an appalling scene combining apparent oral sex and childbirth. She was dreaming the same dream the manager had when he slept there last. As the days and nights progress, more of the guests' dark secrets begin to come to light, leading them all to know far too much about each other's personal lives. One is there to avenge his dead son; another is seeking the birth-mother who rejected her; another is a suicidal former centerfold. There's robbery, drug abuse, perverse sexual behavior, and it's all somehow tied in to the hotel's creepy chef (George Lentz) and his dull-witted assistant (Detlef Bothe), leading inevitably to murder. Ute Lemper stands out as the mysterious Greta, Milton's direction is assured, and the film's look and feel often bring to mind a self-contained variant on Twin Peaks at its best. George Harris and Edward Hardwicke co-star. ~ Robert Firsching, Rovi

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