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  • Overall I thought the acting was decent, and this whodunit mystery had me guessing and admittedly second-guessing my first choice as to who kidnapped Ann Bradshaw's (Daphne Zuniga) husband in broad daylight. Ann Bradshaw and her husband Dale (Robert Underwood) are raising their teenage daughter Casey (Nicole Muñoz) under some marital strain after Dale's extra-marital affair is exposed. Men eh? You just can't trust us.

    Dale Bradshaw has a business partner named Mel Davidson (David Lewis) who appears to be close to the three Bradshaw family members if you believe the barbecuing video tapes that the family and the cops have looked at over and over again. In fact Mel appears to be affectionate towards Dale's wife Ann in her time of great need as the kidnapper(s) send her videos of the kidnapped Dale which the lead detective Barry Matthews (Aaron Pearl) picks up this hand holding on being the smart, strong and handsome detective that he is.

    It seems Ann Bradshaw has her way with the men surrounding her but not with (DEA) Drug Enforcement Agent Pullman (Johannah Newmarch) who has a permanent scowl on her face and she is in direct opposition with the lead detective Barry Matthews willingness not to consider Ann Bradshaw a suspect in her husbands kidnapping. The detectives and the DEA discover that the Mexican drug cartel is involved and millions of dollars are being transferred in and out of Dale and Mel's manufacturing business to offshore banks.

    As I said the film kept me in suspense at least until the last 15 minutes when the film fell apart and became just one of many lame mystery/crime films with a below par ending. I don't expect a TV budget film to wow me like a blockbuster big screen release may, but I do expect that the writers after investing 90 percent into a good plot would end their suspense/mystery film with somewhat of a believable ending. I won't spoil the ending for anyone, because I'll leave the spoiler to the producers who did a great job spoiling a decent made for TV film into a below par film due to a rotten ending.

    I give this film a 5 out of 10 rating.
  • A seemingly successful Washington state businessman is abducted in a van, tied to a chair and squirms for videos posted to his wife Daphne Zuniga (as Anne), a busy mom and dentist. Lonely lead investigator Aaron Pearl (as Barry Matthews) comforts Ms. Zuniga and her pretty 15-year-old daughter Nicole Munoz (as Casey). They wait for the inevitable request from hostage-takers. We learn about past infidelities and some unfortunate business practices associated with victim Robert Underwood (as Dale Bradshaw). His "high tech manufacturing" business partner David Lewis (as Mel Davidson) joins the distraught family in waiting to see what will happen to the missing man...

    It's best not to try to figure out how this story develops because, most of the time, you will be correct and kill the suspense...

    Zuniga is a fine performer and capable of subtle characterization. She is "acting" almost constantly herein, but this is the genre and she is on task. As the loyal business partner, Mr. Lewis shows similar skills. Contrasting them, leading investigator Pearl is positively stoic. His red-haired rival Johannah Newmarch (as Sarah Pullman) arrives midway to take over the case, concerned about Pearl becoming too chummy with Zuniga. With her pointed delivery and swinging medallion, Ms. Newmarch leaves an impression. In one of her scenes, a man pulls a cart before Newmarch appears. Clever...

    The best character is the amusingly adorned young computer geek and fast-food eater Christopher De-Schuster (as Mike Ferrit)...

    Writer Jennifer Studer's story might have been improved by having young daughter Munoz made a few years older and, perhaps, in college or living on her own. The opening could include a scene with her leaving, after a visit. She could reappear for the ending. This would give Zuniga's character an added sense of abandon. Having her alone in the house would add suspense. Director Brenton Spencer and his crew do especially well when Zuniga hears noises in the middle of the night. She leaves her bedroom, checks on her daughter (this part is weak and Munoz shouldn't move when the door opens), frighteningly moves down her staircase into the kitchen and grabs a knife. The lighting, camera angles and soundtrack are very effective.

    **** My Husband Is Missing (10/1/2016) Brenton Spencer ~ Daphne Zuniga, Aaron Pearl, David Lewis, Christopher De-Schuster
  • carolynocean11 March 2021
    I really wanted to like this film, considering the cast , both leading male/female actors are usuallly strong , capable actors, but I think they both struggled with this movie.

    There are so many problems with the whole production and writing.

    I mean, what detective will allow the wife of a missing person to accompany him to work and participate in the investigation?followed by a sleepover! What ?

    The background music , meant to create "tension" , added with silly "jump scare" moments left me completely unimpressed and unconvinced.

    Yes , I am being very harsh here, but for what could have been a decent enough thriller, has been ruined by cliched characters and a predictable and boring anti climatic ending.

    Sorry but only a 4 rating from me.
  • Great plot but that is about it. The actors are so bad, I have no idea where to start. They shout at each other without cause even when on the same side. They hate on one another just because they want to. The reactions to EVERYTHING is so wrong! Just doesn't make sense at all. The husband/father gets kidnapped and wife/daughter act as though he is lost in a theme park! The worst cops on the planet! Pullman needs a slap, what the heck is her problem?! Overreacting, over exaggeration!
  • Just one star for this 1 Didnt like the movie Irritating plot with some worst actings.
  • TKBlackburn29 December 2016
    Warning: Spoilers
    On my cable DVR there's a photo of the perp holding a weapon to the wife's throat.

    9 minutes into the movie this perp shows up as a biz partner concerned that the husband didn't show up for work. Well DUH.

    This is about a mundane family in a mundane town (always in Canada pretending to be the US). The mundane dialogue TALKS about what we see - she wears scrubs & lectures her eye-rolling teen about flossing because she's a dental hygienist. MUNDANITY at its worst.

    If there had been a hint of good writing, clever dialogue, good casting, good acting, or anything interesting for those first 9 minutes maybe I would stick with it. Instead, I hit pause, posted this review & will go on to watch the news.

    DUMB ads RUIN movies. And bad writing without even a hint of cleverness or at least INTERESTING nails the coffin.
  • Last night's Lifetime movie was "My Husband Is Missing," a surprisingly good neo-noir thriller even though it had an awful lot of the clichés typical of this network. The story begins, as so many Lifetime stories do, with a typical bucolic day in the life of a suburban family; Anne Bradshaw (Daphne Zuniga, whose best-known previous credit was in Mel Brooks' "Spaceballs") is sending her husband Dale (Robert Underwood) to work. She solemnly reminds him that he's supposed to pick their teenage daughter Casey (Nicole Muñoz — and kudos to the film's casting directors, Dean E. Fronk, Donald Paul Pemrick and Edward D. Rea, for finding a girl who looks enough like Daphne Zuniga they're believable as mother and daughter) up from school that night since she'll be working too late on her own job to do so herself. Then we see a mysterious black van with an unseen driver following Dale on his way to work, blocking his way and forcibly taking him out of his own car. Anne doesn't know anything untoward has happened to her husband until that night, when Casey calls to tell her she's been waiting for an hour for dad to pick her up and he hasn't shown. Anne calls Dale's company — he owns his own business with a partner named Mel Davidson (David Lewis) and it's not quite clear what business they're in; at one point we're told it's a software company but later we see a warehouse full of hard goods — and it turns out Dale hasn't shown up for work either. Then Anne gets a video purporting to show Dale in the hands of a gravelly-voiced kidnapper — obviously he's running his voice through a filter so it can't be recognized — and she calls the police.

    The police arrive in the person of a sheriff's deputy (the setting is an unincorporated town in Washington state — a common location for Lifetime movies since it's just south of British Columbia, Canada, and so the one can easily "play" the other) named Barry Matthews (Aaron Pearl), and there's an understated but powerful sexual attraction between him and Anne that becomes important later on in the plot. Only another law enforcer shows up, Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs agent Sarah Pullman (played by Johannah Newmarch with a perfect I-don't-give-a-hoot-about-people-skills attitude that's by far the best piece of acting in the film), and she and Matthews end up in an all-out jurisdictional war because she's been on the trail of Dale's and Mel's company for over a year as a front laundering money for Mexican drug cartels. She's convinced not only that both partners are in on it but Anne is too. Barry also has an associate on the case named Mike Ferrit (Christopher De-Schuster, a tall, gangly but really cute blond "twink" type), whom he busted for computer hacking and, like the folks on "CSI: Cyber," was able to avoid punishment by coming over to the other side and doing his hacking on behalf of law enforcement.

    Though not exactly the freshest or most original movie ever made, "My Husband Is Missing" — actually filmed in 2015 under the odd working title "Abducted Love" (for once Lifetime's title department actually came up with a better title than the one it replaced!) — is coherent, makes sense and has a number of appealing characters we want to see prevail (though I was sorry to lose Mike well before the end), and the conflicts within the Bradshaw family, especially between mom and daughter, add credibility and nuance to the characterizations. There are also some artful touches in Jennifer Studer's script, particularly the home movie of the Bradshaws Anne and Casey re-view twice during the action — showing a banal but happy suburban existence that will be revealed by the end of the film as a lie — and the media feeding frenzy Casey ends up on the receiving end of after Mel leaks his video of Anne and Barry smooching to the local media. My Husband Is Missing is quality entertainment with something of a film noir feel, and it's definitely several cuts above the usual Lifetime fare!
  • edwagreen30 October 2016
    10/10
    ****
    Warning: Spoilers
    Terrific plot twists will keep you guessing as to what is going on with the alleged kidnapping of a business executive.

    We soon find out that all was not roses between the married couple, the husband the victim of the kidnapping. We see affairs, money laundering via the drug cartels and a cop falling for the victim's wife. We see his former partner and flame ready to see him off the case and that happens when a picture surfaces showing him kissing the victim's wife.

    The ending is a complete surprise and please note that I used the term alleged kidnapping.

    Until the last moment, you really don't know who the real culprits are until everything is ironed out. Gritty, with good acting and a premise well worth watching.
  • lavatch25 January 2021
    Warning: Spoilers
    Poor Anne Bradshaw cannot catch a break. First, her husband goes missing, the apparent victim of a kidnapping. Then, records are discovered that her husband Dale was not only a philanderer but had cooked the books at his company's business. Now, Anne and her daughter Sarah may be on the hit list of a drug cartel!

    "My Husband is Missing" (a.k.a., "Abducted Love") was a well-crafted drama with an interesting set of characters. The most intriguing relationship that unfolds is that the police detective, Barry Matthews, and Anne. At one moment, they are caught on camera smooching, which leads the overzealous DEA agent Pullman to take Det. Matthews of the case.

    When the quick-thinking Anne checks the medical records at her clinic, she learns that her husband's partner, Mel Davidson, had received inoculations suggesting that he is planning to leave the country. The race is now on to locate Mel and solve the mystery of Dale's "staged" kidnapping. There was also a lively moment when the sassy Sarah laughed when she learned that Pullman had placed her name on an amber alert.

    There was good dramatic tension and an effective conclusion that closes the file on the shady business partnership of Mel Davidson and Dale Bradshaw. It also ends with finality the marriage of Anne and Dale, opening the door to a budding romance between Anne and her devoted detective.