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  • Family secrets and turmoil are always good plot points for a thriller as is the case with this story and film. After being left on her own by her mother, Rachel Kent (Skovbye), is taken in by her father, Greg (Bancroft), and his wife, Cindy (Davis). She quickly ingratiates herself into the family and everything is good. However, when the store she is working is broken into and her friend is murdered, while she is left tied to a table, the police don't believe that the crime is as black and white as it appears.

    It's the titles of the movie which are the drawback as they reveal a major plot twist. This is a shame as the writer does try to keep a mystery, at least for a little while, as to who the criminal is. Though there should be a spoiler alert on the titles it only deters from the integrity of the film a tad. Where it's strength comes from is the story and the characterisations. There are some really dark moments, though because of it being a TV movie these are depicted in a lighter shade. I really liked the moment that Cindy Kent tracks down Rachel's mother. This is when she learns of her past and along with the portrayal of Rachel's mom this scene left me chilly.

    The director, Garrard, does a good job of keeping the pace of the story trotting along while building tension and atmosphere at all the right places. Though the rest of the directing techniques are basic, some differing camera angles and such wouldn't have gone amiss. While the actors and actresses, for the most part, do more than an agreeable job with their portrayals. However, sometimes, Tiera Skovbye, slips in and out of the maple, oak and sycamore style of acting. Unfortunately, most of these moments come in key scenes so they're more noticeable.

    These are only minor issues so I would gladly recommend this to all armchair detectives, mystery lovers, and thriller fans, as I found this to be an enjoyable and entertaining film. Not a bad way to pass a snowy afternoon.
  • SECRETS OF MY STEPDAUGHTER/A MURDERER UPSTAIRS (2017 TV Movie)

    *WARNING: ANIMAL ABUSE/DEATH AS A PLOT DEVICE (see below)

    BASIC PLOT: The Kent family has recently taken on Rachel, the 17-year-old stepdaughter, from the husband's first marriage. Greg Kent has (Cameron Bancroft) never spent much time with Rachel, (Tiera Skovbye) she's a virtual stranger, but she's moving in with his current wife, Cindy, (Josie Davis) and younger daughter, Addy (Ali Skovbye). What could possibly go wrong?

    Rachel works at a clothing boutique with her friend, Leslie (Maddy Hillis). When neither girl checks in all night, Cindy uses 'find my phone' and discovers both girls still at the boutique. Leslie is dead, and Rachel is bound, with minor injuries. Det. Pam Cherfils (Lucia Walters) is called in to investigate the murder, but soon realizes there's something about Rachel's story that doesn't quite add up. Will Cindy realize danger lurks within her family, in time to save them from it?

    WHAT WORKS: *There are two types of movies on Lifetime. This is the second type, MELODRAMA. According to dictionary. C o m, the definition of melodrama is "a dramatic form that does not observe the laws of cause and effect and that exaggerates emotion and emphasizes plot or action at the expense of characterization."

    In other words, this is a PERFECT MELODRAMA. The characters are not so well defined, but their motives are. If you watch this movie with that in mind, you'll like it a whole lot more. You're not supposed to take the over-the-top motives too seriously, it's pure silly entertainment. STOP LOOKING FOR EMMYS FROM LIFETIME MOVIES!

    Also, Josie Davis is a master at the art of melodrama, there's none better.

    *Greg Kent (Cameron Bancroft) tells his wife Cindy, Rachel is NOT seeing a psychiatrist. He dismisses Cindy's concerns out of hand, running roughshod over her feelings about the matter. The next day, he gets the girls a dog, without asking Cindy first. So often men act, without thinking, (even good men) indirectly injuring their partners. This is a believable storyline.

    *Tiera Skovbye does a great job of portraying Rachel Kent, a total sociopath. Her depiction of practicing emotions in the mirror, delivering evil smirks, and in general 'pretending' to be a human being with feelings, is done very well.

    WHAT DOESN'T WORK: *I hate movies that use the word sis. No one who has a sister calls them sis, myself included. Even though these girls are sisters in real life, I GUARANTEE they don't call each other "sis".

    *Det. Cherfils questions Rachel after her arrest. It is illegal to question minors without a parent present. Rachel asks for a lawyer, and the Detective continues to question her. This would taint the whole case, and anything she did say, would be thrown out.

    TO RECOMMEND, OR NOT TO RECOMMEND, THAT IS THE QUESTION: *IF you can understand the art form that is melodrama, and you like that type of entertainment, you'll like this. If you are looking for lots of believable characters and motives in your TV movies, then give this a pass.

    CLOSING NOTES: *I don't believe in trigger warnings, I think WOKE is a virus. BUT, I also don't agree with supporting movies that use animal abuse/murder as a plot point, to show a character is evil. It is lazy writing, and in most cases should be quashed. This movie does use a dog's murder as a plot device, be warned.

    *This is a Made-For-TV movie, please keep that in mind before you watch\rate it. TV movies have a much lower budget, and so your expectations should be adjusted.

    *I have no connection to the film, or production in ANY way. I am just an honest viewer, who wishes for more straight forward reviews. Hope I helped you out.
  • Early on my husband and I commented about the bad writing and acting. Yet, we agreed to keep watching it despite the flaws. It got a bit better and we watched to the end, we are just glad that it was on Netflix so we didn't have to pay for it.
  • trishstrand27 April 2019
    Poorly written and acted. Must have been very low budget. Better to watch documentary of true story on u-tube.
  • david11147828 January 2019
    Warning: Spoilers
    Above average Lifetime mystery. As other reviewers have noted both titles give too much away. Acting wise I felt everybody was ok. The standout for me was either the mother (Josie Davis) or bad daughter ( Tiera Skovbye ).

    A lot of films on channel five ( UK) teatime always end with the perp losing out in a showdown. The film employs this overused cliche.

    A final scene in the youth detention centre puzzled me. Did it mean: we are NOT taking your rubbish anymore. As I said at the beginning for me still above average for this type of film.
  • Watched this to pass an hour and a half and I wish I had the time back. I knew after 30 seconds it had that made for tv feel about it but thought maybe it might be ok. Nope. I was wrong. Acting is shocking. Script is worse. Based on a true story so I don't know how they did it so badly. Would have been better off making a docudrama out of it than an actual drama. Don't waste your time
  • Warning: Spoilers
    "Secrets of My Stepdaughter" was originally shot under the title "A Murderer Upstairs," which sounds more chilling but was probably rejected because it gave too much of the plot away. The central characters are mom Cindy Kent (Josie Davis), her husband Greg (Cameron Bancroft) — a trial attorney whose job takes him out of town a lot — and their kids Rachel (Tierra Skovbye) and Addy (Ali Skovbye). The identical last names of the actresses playing the sisters at least shows why they look so credible as blood relatives — they really are! — though in Conor Allyn's screenplay (effectively and unobtrusively directed by Jem Garrard) they're only half-sisters. Addy, the younger of the two girls, is the biological offspring of Greg and Cindy, but Rachel is Greg's daughter by a previous wife named Martha whom we don't meet until towards the end of the film. Martha suddenly abandoned Rachel just three months before the film begins, and Greg and Cindy took her in and tried to break through to her. Rachel got a job at a fashion store alongside her best friend Leslie (Madelyn Grace), only in the opening scene Rachel is discovered tied to a chair in the store and Leslie is next to her, bludgeoned to death with the store's cash register.

    Rachel's story is that two robbers, both wearing ski masks and gloves, burst into the store, attacked both her and Leslie, killed Leslie and left Rachel for dead — and she's got strangulation marks on her neck to support the story. The cops uncover a young (cute, blond) man named Aaron Barker (Jared Ager-Foster) who several months earlier was stalking Leslie to the point where Leslie and her mom got out a restraining order against him, and he was in the store that night, but Aaron insists that when the murder occurred he was at home with his mother. That's not much of an alibi, as police lieutenant Brian Smith (a big middle-aged white guy played by Garry Chalk) says; he becomes convinced early on that Aaron killed Leslie and utterly refuses to listen to any other possibilities. (Stop me if you've heard this before.) His associate, detective Pam Cherfils (Lucia Walters) —oddly her last name means "dear son" and, though younger than these characters usually are in Lifetime movies, she's the all-wise African-American who's going to come into the story and save the white characters from their stupidity and naïveté —isn't so sure. She begins to suspect Rachel actually murdered her friend, and as the film goes on and Rachel's behavior gets more squirrelly and bizarre, Cindy does too (as do we). Secrets of My Stepdaughter may not sound like much in synopsis, but it's actually a quite effective suspense thriller, powered by Jem Garrard's effective direction and a nicely honed performance by Tiera Skovbye as Rachel, who in the best tradition of Lifetime's psychos is quite matter-of-fact about her actions and convinces us that she simply doesn't see anything wrong with them.
  • Please do not watch this movie. It starts off like it could be decent but the acting at the end is nothing short of the worst I've ever seen for a movie that wasn't a zombie B movie.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Poor acting, poor storyline and the cinematography isn't much better. It was nominated for a Leo Award in 2018 (Best Cinematography in a Television Movie) but actually, the filming in this movie was so "over the top trying to do it the right way" that it was distracting. Combine that with such an overly dramatic wardrobe choice for the lead female actor (Josie Davis) in comparison with the "missing" mother of the stepdaughter (Martha) and it becomes laughable. Don't waste time on this.
  • Look, everybody knows that Lifetime movies march to the beat of their own drummers. So why expect an Oscar winning type script or performance from the actors? C'mon. It deserves better than 1 star. And I'd definitely rather watch this than "pass a kidney stone" as one reviewer so eloquently put it lol. This particular movie was above average for lifetime standards in my opinion.

    Josie Davis is one of my favorite actresses because she can play a psycho in one film then play a compassionate loving mother in another with ease. I especially loved her in Dirty Teacher and Backstabbed. She's hilarious. She is just comfortable & fun to watch. She was great in this role. You could see the confliction tearing her up inside. Plus, the look on her face when she got smacked! She was so expressive! I loved it. The daughter Rachel had issues but I think they could've made her even more intense!

    This movie isn't anything to get super excited about but it is intriguing and again, one of those flicks you watch on a cold boring day or a midday, nothing on your schedule type of thing. I liked it!
  • rvymdptg26 December 2020
    My wife was watching this movie when I came home, so I only saw 30 minutes, but what I saw was terrible. I feel sorry for the actors, it's not their fault, but the director should be embarrassed.
  • SnoopyStyle31 December 2018
    Warning: Spoilers
    Rachel (Tiera Skovbye) has been living with her father Greg, stepmother Cindy Kent (Josie Davis), and stepsister Addy for three months after her biological mother disappeared. Greg is away for business. Cindy is concerned when Rachel doesn't contact her after work. She assumes that Rachel is staying with her best friend Leslie. The next day, Cindy goes to the store to find Rachel unconscious and Leslie dead beside her. After a few incidents, Cindy starts to suspect that Rachel may actually be the killer.

    The alternative title is A Murderer Upstairs which reveals the big twist. I do wonder about Tiera's long term viability as a leading lady. She's definitely pretty enough to have a long Hollywood career. She could be a villain. She has the icy cold stare but her crazy needs a bit of work. It's scatter work and unrefined. It's a little awkward.

    This is a Lifetime movie and the female protagonist has to be alone against the world. That would explain the weak pathetic husband. "I can't do this", is a recurring refrain as the characters walk away. Addy is also dumb but at least, she has the excuse that her mother never says that Rachel is dangerous. There is a good fun section as she starts unraveling the secrets. In the end, it's only Lifetime and it has a few too many eye-rolling moments.
  • The acting is pathetic which seriously let this film down. Had potential but didn't deliver. This is a made for TV film without a doubt.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    In the scene where they are all gathered around thier dead dog, I couldn't help but notice the dog does not appear to be breathing! Upon research, I also noticed there was no handler or dog trainer on set and the second dog the family gets, has a credit but the first does not. It's almost like they adopted the dog for the film and then had him euthinised. I am not okay with this and I think everyone involved is horrible. Except the dogs. The film is also horrible.

    P. S This film is based on the Lululemon murder and by the way, no dog died in that case. Killing that dog was compleatly unnessisary.
  • I feel that this was a huge disappointment if you really want to watch a chilling suspenseful movie. The acting from 'Rachel' and 'Cindy' is terrible based on the script, I feel the delivery was really poor. As the title is very predictable, it isn't worth watching the movie in the first place. The ending could have been more interesting but the way in which they revealed the murderer was just ridiculous, if felt like the movie was rushed and I can't say that we were left intrigued. I also feel like we have watched numerous movies like this so this provides no motivation for us to watch it unless it is something new and fresh.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Young Rachel Kent has come to live with her father and stepmother after growing up with her mother, Martha. After three months in residence in the Kent household, Rachel is involved in an apparent robbery at the clothing store where she works. Her best friend, Leslie Miles, is killed, but Rachel survives with some minor injuries. But there are deep, dark secrets at the heart of the story of Rachel Kent.

    The dramatic action is anchored by Cindy Kent, the stepmother of Rachel and the spouse of Greg, a high-profile attorney. Unfortunately, Greg is so deeply attached to Rachel and too guilt-ridden for not being a part of her past life that he cannot see the danger signals in his daughter's disturbing behavior. Even when Cindy is verbally and physically abused by Rachel, Greg comes to the daughter's defense.

    The role of Cindy was played by Josie "Lifetime" Davis, a great fan favorite. She brings a warmth and sensitivity to the role of the kind stepmother. Everyone wants to see Josie act in more Lifetime pictures.

    The rest of the cast admirably performed their roles with one of the standouts the wily Detective Pam Cherfils. Early on, Detective Cherfils recognized that Rachel's story about the robbery did not hold up. Yet she received no support from the top brass, especially her by-the-book supervisor Lieutenant Brian Smith, who chose to pursue a flimsy case against Aaron Barker, an acquaintance of the decedent, Leslie Miles. Leslie's dear mother Tess also provided helpful clues about the girls stealing from the clothing store.

    A couple of the defining moments in the film were when Cindy observed Rachel priming before a mirror and rehearsing the sob story that she would deliver to the media. In another fateful moment at the Crestview Motel, Rachel's birth mother, Martha Cook, is working as a maid. She informs a shocked Cindy that for fifteen years, she had been a prisoner in her own home.

    Armed with that knowledge, Cindy then moves into action to see to it that she will not be a similar prisoner and that the color of orange befits Rachel in her new jumpsuit at the state asylum for mentally disturbed criminals.
  • Crappy film, there are no other words to describe it, this film is exactly a manual on how not to make a thriller film because it contains everything that sucks in this type of film because the film is obvious and predictable in a terrible way and in its the central part is so stupid, obvious and boring that you can easily skip it, in my opinion you could easily watch the first minutes of this film and then the last ones just to see how it ends because otherwise the film is rubbish and that's it. So it can be said in conclusion that this film is unwatchable, boring and annoying and that watching it is just a useless waste of time.