Hit all the 'woman in prison' clichés right on the nose; from the warden on down through the various inmates. The inmates seemed to have been allocated one cliché/stereotype per role. (The black girl, the Hispanic girl, the blonde, etc.) The administration got their clichés, too; however they were poorly played. Come to think of it, all the clichés were poorly played. It came out as bland. They started to develop the characters and then just let them drop. In other words, boring, boring, boring.
Nick Chinlund, as the perverted psychiatrist, didn't live up to the role that ultimately defines his career–Donny Pfaster, the death fetishist in the X Files–"Irresistible' in 1995 and 'Orison' in 2000. The movie would have been better if Chinlund has changed into a demon like he did in 'Orison.'
I would have given it '0' stars, but the system won't let me.
Nick Chinlund, as the perverted psychiatrist, didn't live up to the role that ultimately defines his career–Donny Pfaster, the death fetishist in the X Files–"Irresistible' in 1995 and 'Orison' in 2000. The movie would have been better if Chinlund has changed into a demon like he did in 'Orison.'
I would have given it '0' stars, but the system won't let me.