Mimic 3: Sentinel
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Mimic 3: Sentinel | |
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Mimic 3: Sentinel DVD cover |
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Directed by | T.J. Petty |
Produced by | Cary Granat, Bob Weinstein, Harvey Weinstein |
Written by | T.J. Petty |
Starring | Karl Geary, Alexis Dziena, Rebecca Mader, Lance Henriksen |
Music by | Henning Lohner |
Distributed by | Miramax Films |
Release date(s) | September 8, 2003 |
Running time | 77 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $10,000,000 (estimated) |
Preceded by | Mimic 2 |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Mimic 3: Sentinel is a 2003 science fiction horror film, directed by T. J. Petty, with a script inspired by a short story of the same name by Donald A. Wollheim. The movie was a direct to DVD sequel to Mimic (1997) and Mimic 2 (2001).
Mimic 3: Sentinel takes a departure from the tone of the first two films. It has a feel similar to Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window rather than the action/horror tone of its predecessors.
Tagline: Terror has been reinvented!
[edit] Plot
Unable to leave the germ-free confines of his sterilized bedroom for any real stretch of time, environmentally hypersensitive Judas child Marvin (Karl Geary) spends his days taking pictures of his neighbors from his window. Occasionally catching glimpses of his young sister Rosy (Alexis Dziena) being romanced by the neighborhood drug dealer, Marvin's lens remains mostly fixed on a mysterious neighbor known as "The Garbageman" (Lance Henriksen) and pretty neighbor Carmen (Rebecca Mader), while his slightly overbearing mother (Amanda Plummer) rests on the couch. As neighbors begin disappearing and mysterious figures move in and out of Marvin's viewfinder, the secluded voyeur begins to suspect that a sinister force is at work in his neighborhood. Though Rosy and Carmen are anxious to assist in a little detective work, the situation soon begins to spiral out of control upon the discovery that the Judas breed is far from extinct.
[edit] Production
- Martial-arts star Gary Daniels was up for the role of Detective Gary Dumars, played by John Kapelos.
- The Marvin Montrose character was originally scripted to be a 13-year-old boy.