Blood Crime

Blood Crime

DVD Cover
Directed by William A. Graham
Produced by Preston A. Whitmore II
Written by Mark Lawrence Miller and Preston A. Whitmore II
Starring
Music by Chris Boardman
Cinematography Robert Steadman
Edited by Drake Silliman
Production
company
Distributed by USA Network (USA) (Original Airing)
Columbia TriStar Home Video
Release date
  • September 13, 2002 (2002-09-13)

(USA)

Running time
88 min.
Country United States
Language English

Blood Crime is a 2002 American made-for-TV thriller film, starring James Caan and Johnathon Schaech. It was co-written and co-produced by Preston A. Whitmore II and directed by William A. Graham. The film was first aired at USA Network on September 13, 2002.

Plot

A hominicide detective have problems with a local sheriff, after pummelling a man who supposedly attacked his wife, while they were on vacation at the sheriff small town.

Cast

Reception

Frank Veenstra from the blog "BobaFett1138" gave the film 4 out 10 and wrote: ""Blood Crime" has a bad written script. Well, perhaps bad is not the most correct word to use since the story is more just a highly unlikely one. You just never get sucked into it because it all and the way the story progresses seem so highly unlikely. You can say that I even was a bit annoyed by the movie its story at times. It isn't credible and has some gaping plot-holes."[1] Scott Weinberg from "eFilm Critic" gave the movie only two stars, stating: "Blood Crime is an interesting movie, if only in one very specific and silly way: it pairs one legendary actor who really ought to know better (James Caan) with one chiseled B-level actor who not too long ago was considered a 'next big thing'."[2] Robert Pardi from TV Guide gave "Blood Crime" two out four stars and wrote: "If Mark Lawrence Miller and Preston A. Whitmore's screenplay had focused more subtly on the wary relationship that evolves between the urban and rural lawmen, this would be a far more compelling film. As it stands, there are exciting sequences but the film overall is undermined by a protagonist whose decision to tamper with clues strains credulity."[3]

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film currently holds 26% of audience score.[4]

References

  1. Veenstra, Frank. "Blood Crime". BobaFett1138. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
  2. Weinberg, Scott. "Blood Crime". eFilm Critic.
  3. Pardi, Robert. "Blood Crime". TV Guide. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
  4. "BLOOD CRIME (2002)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
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