When Strangers Appear

2001 "Don't serve coffee to strangers."
6.3| 1h38m| R| en| More Info
Released: 01 February 2001 Released
Producted By: Midnight Films
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A man enters a roadside diner run by a young woman and claims he is being chased by murderers.

Genre

Thriller

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Director

Scott Reynolds

Production Companies

Midnight Films

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When Strangers Appear Audience Reviews

Alicia I love this movie so much
Lumsdal Good , But It Is Overrated By Some
Abbigail Bush what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
Kamila Bell This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Hollywoodshack The plot is so full of absurdities it is difficult to stay and see if the rest of the film is any good at all. Radha Mitchell is a waitress in a café all by herself near an abandoned highway. No one there to manage the place or watch it while she steps out for a break? The drifter drives up with a surfboard on his car. It seems his friends are surfers in this setting which seems to be far inland somewhere in the US, so do they plan to use a lake instead? Her dialog is more like a one liner list from 2 Broke Girls. "If you're a thief, go ahead and steal everything right now." She's always drawing conclusions without a thread of anything real to support them. I also grow tired of pointless setup shots filled with closeups of coffee pots and frying eggs or the thirty year old song from Blondie, Atomic Man.
SnoopyStyle Beth (Radha Mitchell) runs a roadside diner next to a desolate highway. Jack Barrett (Barry Watson) shows up out of nowhere in a dirty car with a surf board on top. Peter (Josh Lucas) and two other guys show up looking for the beach. Jack hides from them claiming they're going to kill him and her.I like the empty roadside diner. I wouldn't mind if the movie stayed there as a minimalist psychological thriller. The movie loses a little something by moving on. It gets muddled and confused by adding too much stuff. I lose some patience by the time of the McGuffin CD. The other thing is that this is noticeably not Oregon. It would even be cooler to set this in New Zealand. The third thing is that this movie needs to take place at night. That would increase the intensity by half. I like the general indie mystery thriller vibe. However it tries to do so many twisty thrills that I don't think they all work.
hnt_dnl I remember seeing roughly the last half of this movie WHEN STRANGERS APPEAR (2001) years ago on TV thinking one word...UNPREDICTABLE! Having seen it in full recently, I still go with that adjective. The viewer really doesn't know the twist until fairly late into the movie, and then the movie goes from methodical into overdrive! It works mainly because (A) it does an amazing job of infusing realistic doses of humanity into the thriller genre and (B) it is minimalist in it's presentation and (C) it is very well-written and acted. The movie introduces us to Beth (played convincingly by the talented Australian actress Radha Mitchell). Mitchell is one of the very few actresses that has repeatedly been able to draw me into her characters over the last 10 years or so. She always seems to play women that are tough, individualistic, resourceful, that still maintain their femininity (PITCH BLACK, ROGUE, SILENT HILL). There's an authenticity about the way she plays these characters. I find her a lot easier to watch than many "bigger" name actresses. Helps that she's hot as hell, too!Beth runs a diner and motel in a small "Oregon" burg near the beach. One morning opening the diner, a mysterious guy named Jack (Barry Watson in a effectively creepy performance). Jack has a surfboard on his car and seems headed for the beach; Beth is suspicious and grills him for info. Three "surfer" guys show up for breakfast. The "main" guy appears to be Peter (slyly and appealingly played by Josh Lucas). Jack hides out and explains to Beth after they leave that they are out to kill him. A skeptical Beth orders him out, but he has a flesh wound and passes out. She takes him to the local surgeon and then starts to investigate Jack's story. In the meantime, Beth finds herself drawn to Peter. Needless to say, there are several twists and turns along the way.The angle that really caught my attention is the relationship between Beth and Peter, which is very natural and convincing. They seem to really like each other aside from all the twists and turns and I kept thinking that under different circumstances, I could actually see them together! There's an interesting exchange between them near the end that I found to be strangely endearing and believable given the connection between them. Also, I liked the more platonic Beth-Jack relationship; she had an almost maternal instinct when it came to him.Although some of the turns in the story are a tad, shall we say, "convenient", the director times them in a very tongue-in-cheek manner that makes one smile rather than wince. Not to mention the leads Mitchell, Lucas, and Watson do a great job of "selling" the story. The 2 guys with Lucas are kind of underused and underdone as characters, But veteran actor Kevin Anderson gives a very strong turn as the dicey town sheriff Bryce, who has his own rather interesting connection to Beth. Beth's very different interactions with Jack, Peter, and Bryce are a strong point of the film.The ending is very tense, exciting, and ironic (you'll see!). There is a minimalist approach to film-making that I love about this flick as it relies primarily on somewhat lengthy scenes of character interaction and very little of that typical background music you hear in thrillers. The flick also has an otherworldly appeal/supernatural element as it takes place in isolation in the seeming middle of nowhere with VERY FEW people; makes the proceedings all the more scary. It also has that well-known Hitchcockian touch of the Macguffin plot point that in the end is really secondary to the main draw of the film, yet the Macguffin strangely still seems relevant and important somehow at the end...Highly recommended.
merklekranz It's extremely manipulative, some scenes make little sense, character development is weak, absurd coincidences abound, and the ending leaves the audience hanging cruelly. Nevertheless, "When Strangers Appear" keeps moving along and does maintain interest. It's just a little too cute for it's own good, and in the final analysis acceptable entertainment but nothing more. One last point, none of the characters are likable, including the heroine. If you want to watch a much better twisty movie which at least makes sense, and is far more entertaining, I highly recommend "Clay Pidgeons", with Jaquin Phoenix and Vince Vaughn. - MERK