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Mirror, Mirror (1990 film)

Mirror, Mirror is a 1990 American supernatural horror film directed by Marina Sargenti, based on a screenplay by Annette Cascone and Gina Cascone. It stars Karen Black, Rainbow Harvest, Yvonne De Carlo and William Sanderson. The film follows a teenage outcast who finds herself drawn to an antique mirror left in the house she and her mother have moved into. A soundtrack was released in 1990 through Orphan Records. Three sequels followed in 1994, 1995 and 2000.

Mirror, Mirror
Theatrical film poster
Directed byMarina Sargenti
Written by
Produced byJimmy Lifton
Starring
CinematographyRobert Brinkmann
Edited by
  • Barry Dresner
  • Glenn Morgan
Music by
Production
company
Orphan Eyes
Distributed byNew City Releasing
Release dates
  • May 11, 1990 (1990-05-11) (Cannes)[1]
  • August 31, 1990 (1990-08-31)[2]
Running time
104 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot Edit

In 1950s Iowa, Mary Weatherford sacrifices her sister Elizabeth in front of a large mirror, stabbing her to death on a bed. Decades later, Megan Gordon, a shy teenage goth, moves to Los Angeles, California with her recently widowed mother Susan. In her new bedroom, Megan finds the large mirror in the corner left behind by the previous owners. Emelin, the auctioneer in charge of the house clearance, finds a cache of journals that describe the mirror's apparent possession by a demonic force able to grant wishes.

At her new school, Megan is taunted mercilessly by her peers, apart from the friendly Nikki as well as handsome, athletic Ron. Charleen, a bully running for class president against Nikki, quickly targets Megan. Meanwhile, as Megan becomes drawn to the mirror in her room, she's plagued by bizarre incidents at home; her mother's dog mysteriously dies, she's visited by a gruesome apparition of her dead father, and the mirror begins inexplicably dripping blood. Megan becomes convinced that the mirror is responsible for a series of misfortunes involving those around her, including Charleen experiencing a massive nosebleed in the cafeteria, and her teacher, Mr. Anderson, having a severe asthma attack during class.

Realizing the mirror's powers, Megan begins harnessing them herself, using them to manipulate Jeff, Charleen's love interest, into developing a crush on her instead. When Jeff stops a sexual encounter, the demon in the mirror brutally murders him before making his body disappear. The next day, Emelin attempts to retrieve the mirror from the house while Megan and Susan are gone, but her hands are mysteriously impaled, leading her to flee. When Nikki loses the student council race to Charleen, Megan harnesses the mirror's powers to scald Charleen to death in the girls' locker room showers, before killing Charleen's friend Kim in a bathroom.

Nikki becomes discomforted by Megan's change in personality, and is disturbed when Megan suggests she "helped" her usurp the class presidency. Nikki meets with Mrs. Perfili, the local real estate agent, and Emelin to inquire about the history of Megan's house and the mirror. Emelin reveals the content of the journals to Nikki, and explains that Mary Weatherford sacrificed her sister in front of the mirror decades ago hoping to appease it. After Nikki leaves, Emelin is impaled to death with a shard of glass at her antiques store.

That night, Ron is attacked by a doppelgänger of Nikki in his house and brutally murdered. After finding Ron's body, Nikki receives a phone call from Megan asking her to come to her house. Meanwhile, Susan has her hand mangled in the garbage disposal in the kitchen and bleeds to death, leading Megan to turn against the mirror. Nikki arrives armed with a dagger and attempts to shatter the mirror, but it is resistant. She and Megan attempt to flee as a torrent of wind fills the house, but are unable to escape. Megan sacrifices herself to the mirror, thus ending its reign of terror. Nikki invokes the mirror, begging it to restore things back to how they were before. She awakens in the room on the bed, dagger in hand, with Megan's corpse beneath her, in the same position as Mary Weatherford, having been subjected to an apparent time loop. The demon shows itself in the mirror before retreating, and Nikki fearfully covers it with a sheet.

Cast Edit

Production Edit

The film (initially titled The Black Glass) was shot in Los Angeles, and Zelda Rubenstein was originally slated to make an appearance in the film.[3] The cast and crew were approximately sixty-percent female.[4] The film's production company, Orphan Eyes, was based in Detroit, Michigan.[2]

Release Edit

Mirror, Mirror screened theatrically at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1990, and was released theatrically in the United States on August 31 that year, opening first in Detroit.[2] It also screened at the Chicago International Film Festival on October 19, 1990.[5]

Critical reception Edit

Overall reception for the film has been mixed to positive, with Entertainment Weekly giving Mirror, Mirror a "B−" rating.[6] In his book Generation Multiplex, Timothy Shary called Mirror, Mirror "one of the best teen horror films in general" and citing it as an example of "the tyranny of teen popularity."[7] Creature Features panned the film, giving it two stars and criticizing it as a "compendium of cliches."[8]

Soundtrack Edit

Mirror, Mirror
Soundtrack album by
Jimmy Lifton / Various artists
Released1990
GenrePop, Rock and Roll
LabelOrphan Records
ProducerVirginia Perfili

A soundtrack for Mirror, Mirror was released on CD through Orphan Records in 1990. Jimmy Lifton composed and performed the movie's orchestral tracts, with the movie also featuring songs by Scott Campbell, Jim Walker, and Gene Evaro.

Track list Edit

No.TitleWriter(s)PerformerLength
1."The Fury"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:25
2."A Theme Within"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:49
3."Emelin, An Introduction"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:36
4."A Premonition"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:49
5."Prelude to a Friend"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:05
6."The Story Unfolds"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2:49
7."A Tail is Tolled"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton0:59
8."Daddy"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton3:12
9."A Sculpture Waltz"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:50
10."Pages Revealed"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:34
11."The Birth"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton3:06
12."Ghosts Do Not Exist"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2:36
13."The Seduction"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton3:06
14."Megan's Room"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton3:08
15."Variation of a Changeling"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton0:54
16."The View From Within"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:22
17."The Day Is Long"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:07
18."Control"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2:03
19."A Plan"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:57
20."The Storm"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2:25
21."And the Door Opens"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:52
22."A Theme Finale"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2:21
23."To the Other Side"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1:41
24."In My Arms"Jim WalkerJim Walker2:38
25."Touching You At Night"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton5:12
26."Calling Your Name"Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton4:10
27."I Am An Accident Waiting to Happen"Scott CampbellScott Campbell3:21
28."Oh What a Love, Oh What a Life"Gene EvaroGene Evaro4:50

Home media Edit

The film was released on DVD on October 28, 2000 by Anchor Bay Entertainment.[9] On March 6, 2004, it was re-released as part of a four-film set featuring the film's three sequels, called the "Mirror, Mirror Collection," also by Anchor Bay. The set was packaged in a reflective foil case.[10] Both releases are out of print.[11]

Sequels Edit

Mirror, Mirror was followed by three sequels, Mirror, Mirror II: Raven Dance (1994), Mirror, Mirror III: The Voyeur (1995), and Mirror, Mirror IV: Reflection (2000). Reception for the sequels was largely negative, with the Orlando Sentinel criticizing Raven Dance as "reflect[ing] poorly on [the] classic original".[12] William Sanderson was the only actor from the first film to return for the second movie, albeit in a different role. The second film notably featured an early film appearance for Mark Ruffalo.

References Edit

  1. ^ Benjamin, Sid (May 13, 1990). "Name's the same (Scranton version)". The Times-Tribune. p. 68 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ a b c Huffhines, Kathy (September 5, 1990). "'Mirror' joins Michigan film tradition: start with horror". Detroit Free Press. p. 52 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "New film starts". The Victoria Advocate. November 11, 1988. p. 45 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ Huffhines, Kathy (August 31, 1990). "'Mirror' reflects well on the Detroit horror genre". Detroit Free Press. p. 38 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Staff (October 19, 1990). "International Film Festival In Its Last Week". The Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  6. ^ "Review: Mirror, Mirror". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
  7. ^ Shary 2002, p. 173–74.
  8. ^ Stanley 2000, p. 344.
  9. ^ "Mirror, Mirror". Second Spin. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  10. ^ Kipnis, Jill (January 24, 2004). "Glittering Jewel Cases Can Sell More DVDs". Billboard. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  11. ^ R., Wes (April 9, 2008). "Reviews - Mirror Mirror (1990)". Oh, the Horror!. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  12. ^ "MIRROR, MIRROR 2' REFLECTS POORLY ON CLASSIC ORIGINAL". Orlando Sentinel. June 24, 1994. Retrieved 19 January 2013.

Bibliography Edit

  • Shary, Timothy (2002). Generation Multiplex: The Image of Youth in Contemporary American Cinema. University of Texas Press. ISBN 029277771X.
  • Stanley, John (2000). Creature Features: The Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror Movie Guide. Berkley Trade. ISBN 0425175170.

External links Edit

mirror, mirror, 1990, film, mirror, mirror, 1990, american, supernatural, horror, film, directed, marina, sargenti, based, screenplay, annette, cascone, gina, cascone, stars, karen, black, rainbow, harvest, yvonne, carlo, william, sanderson, film, follows, tee. Mirror Mirror is a 1990 American supernatural horror film directed by Marina Sargenti based on a screenplay by Annette Cascone and Gina Cascone It stars Karen Black Rainbow Harvest Yvonne De Carlo and William Sanderson The film follows a teenage outcast who finds herself drawn to an antique mirror left in the house she and her mother have moved into A soundtrack was released in 1990 through Orphan Records Three sequels followed in 1994 1995 and 2000 Mirror MirrorTheatrical film posterDirected byMarina SargentiWritten byAnnette Cascone Gina Cascone Marina Sargenti Yuri ZeltserProduced byJimmy LiftonStarringRainbow Harvest Karen Black Yvonne De Carlo William SandersonCinematographyRobert BrinkmannEdited byBarry Dresner Glenn MorganMusic byScott Campbell Jimmy LiftonProductioncompanyOrphan EyesDistributed byNew City ReleasingRelease datesMay 11 1990 1990 05 11 Cannes 1 August 31 1990 1990 08 31 2 Running time104 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglish Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 4 1 Critical reception 5 Soundtrack 5 1 Track list 6 Home media 7 Sequels 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksPlot EditIn 1950s Iowa Mary Weatherford sacrifices her sister Elizabeth in front of a large mirror stabbing her to death on a bed Decades later Megan Gordon a shy teenage goth moves to Los Angeles California with her recently widowed mother Susan In her new bedroom Megan finds the large mirror in the corner left behind by the previous owners Emelin the auctioneer in charge of the house clearance finds a cache of journals that describe the mirror s apparent possession by a demonic force able to grant wishes At her new school Megan is taunted mercilessly by her peers apart from the friendly Nikki as well as handsome athletic Ron Charleen a bully running for class president against Nikki quickly targets Megan Meanwhile as Megan becomes drawn to the mirror in her room she s plagued by bizarre incidents at home her mother s dog mysteriously dies she s visited by a gruesome apparition of her dead father and the mirror begins inexplicably dripping blood Megan becomes convinced that the mirror is responsible for a series of misfortunes involving those around her including Charleen experiencing a massive nosebleed in the cafeteria and her teacher Mr Anderson having a severe asthma attack during class Realizing the mirror s powers Megan begins harnessing them herself using them to manipulate Jeff Charleen s love interest into developing a crush on her instead When Jeff stops a sexual encounter the demon in the mirror brutally murders him before making his body disappear The next day Emelin attempts to retrieve the mirror from the house while Megan and Susan are gone but her hands are mysteriously impaled leading her to flee When Nikki loses the student council race to Charleen Megan harnesses the mirror s powers to scald Charleen to death in the girls locker room showers before killing Charleen s friend Kim in a bathroom Nikki becomes discomforted by Megan s change in personality and is disturbed when Megan suggests she helped her usurp the class presidency Nikki meets with Mrs Perfili the local real estate agent and Emelin to inquire about the history of Megan s house and the mirror Emelin reveals the content of the journals to Nikki and explains that Mary Weatherford sacrificed her sister in front of the mirror decades ago hoping to appease it After Nikki leaves Emelin is impaled to death with a shard of glass at her antiques store That night Ron is attacked by a doppelganger of Nikki in his house and brutally murdered After finding Ron s body Nikki receives a phone call from Megan asking her to come to her house Meanwhile Susan has her hand mangled in the garbage disposal in the kitchen and bleeds to death leading Megan to turn against the mirror Nikki arrives armed with a dagger and attempts to shatter the mirror but it is resistant She and Megan attempt to flee as a torrent of wind fills the house but are unable to escape Megan sacrifices herself to the mirror thus ending its reign of terror Nikki invokes the mirror begging it to restore things back to how they were before She awakens in the room on the bed dagger in hand with Megan s corpse beneath her in the same position as Mary Weatherford having been subjected to an apparent time loop The demon shows itself in the mirror before retreating and Nikki fearfully covers it with a sheet Cast EditRainbow Harvest as Megan Gordon Karen Black as Susan Gordon Yvonne De Carlo as Emelin William Sanderson as Mr Veze Kristin Dattilo as Nikki Chandler Ricky Paull Goldin as Ron Charlie Spradling as Charleen Kane Tom Bresnahan as Jeff Dorit Sauer as Kim Ann Hearn as Mrs Perlili Stephen Tobolowsky as Mr Anderson Pamela Perfili as P E Teacher Scott Campbell as Class Smart Aleck Traci Lee Gold as Mary Weatherworth Michelle Gold as Elizabeth WeatherworthProduction EditThe film initially titled The Black Glass was shot in Los Angeles and Zelda Rubenstein was originally slated to make an appearance in the film 3 The cast and crew were approximately sixty percent female 4 The film s production company Orphan Eyes was based in Detroit Michigan 2 Release EditMirror Mirror screened theatrically at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1990 and was released theatrically in the United States on August 31 that year opening first in Detroit 2 It also screened at the Chicago International Film Festival on October 19 1990 5 Critical reception Edit Overall reception for the film has been mixed to positive with Entertainment Weekly giving Mirror Mirror a B rating 6 In his book Generation Multiplex Timothy Shary called Mirror Mirror one of the best teen horror films in general and citing it as an example of the tyranny of teen popularity 7 Creature Features panned the film giving it two stars and criticizing it as a compendium of cliches 8 Soundtrack EditMirror MirrorSoundtrack album by Jimmy Lifton Various artistsReleased1990GenrePop Rock and RollLabelOrphan RecordsProducerVirginia PerfiliA soundtrack for Mirror Mirror was released on CD through Orphan Records in 1990 Jimmy Lifton composed and performed the movie s orchestral tracts with the movie also featuring songs by Scott Campbell Jim Walker and Gene Evaro Track list Edit No TitleWriter s PerformerLength1 The Fury Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 252 A Theme Within Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 493 Emelin An Introduction Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 364 A Premonition Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 495 Prelude to a Friend Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 056 The Story Unfolds Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2 497 A Tail is Tolled Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton0 598 Daddy Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton3 129 A Sculpture Waltz Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 5010 Pages Revealed Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 3411 The Birth Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton3 0612 Ghosts Do Not Exist Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2 3613 The Seduction Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton3 0614 Megan s Room Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton3 0815 Variation of a Changeling Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton0 5416 The View From Within Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 2217 The Day Is Long Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 0718 Control Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2 0319 A Plan Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 5720 The Storm Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2 2521 And the Door Opens Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 5222 A Theme Finale Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton2 2123 To the Other Side Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton1 4124 In My Arms Jim WalkerJim Walker2 3825 Touching You At Night Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton5 1226 Calling Your Name Jimmy LiftonJimmy Lifton4 1027 I Am An Accident Waiting to Happen Scott CampbellScott Campbell3 2128 Oh What a Love Oh What a Life Gene EvaroGene Evaro4 50Home media EditThe film was released on DVD on October 28 2000 by Anchor Bay Entertainment 9 On March 6 2004 it was re released as part of a four film set featuring the film s three sequels called the Mirror Mirror Collection also by Anchor Bay The set was packaged in a reflective foil case 10 Both releases are out of print 11 Sequels EditMirror Mirror was followed by three sequels Mirror Mirror II Raven Dance 1994 Mirror Mirror III The Voyeur 1995 and Mirror Mirror IV Reflection 2000 Reception for the sequels was largely negative with the Orlando Sentinel criticizing Raven Dance as reflect ing poorly on the classic original 12 William Sanderson was the only actor from the first film to return for the second movie albeit in a different role The second film notably featured an early film appearance for Mark Ruffalo References Edit Benjamin Sid May 13 1990 Name s the same Scranton version The Times Tribune p 68 via Newspapers com a b c Huffhines Kathy September 5 1990 Mirror joins Michigan film tradition start with horror Detroit Free Press p 52 via Newspapers com New film starts The Victoria Advocate November 11 1988 p 45 via Newspapers com Huffhines Kathy August 31 1990 Mirror reflects well on the Detroit horror genre Detroit Free Press p 38 via Newspapers com Staff October 19 1990 International Film Festival In Its Last Week The Chicago Tribune Retrieved July 4 2016 Review Mirror Mirror Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 19 January 2013 Shary 2002 p 173 74 Stanley 2000 p 344 Mirror Mirror Second Spin Retrieved July 4 2016 Kipnis Jill January 24 2004 Glittering Jewel Cases Can Sell More DVDs Billboard Retrieved July 4 2016 R Wes April 9 2008 Reviews Mirror Mirror 1990 Oh the Horror Retrieved July 4 2016 MIRROR MIRROR 2 REFLECTS POORLY ON CLASSIC ORIGINAL Orlando Sentinel June 24 1994 Retrieved 19 January 2013 Bibliography EditShary Timothy 2002 Generation Multiplex The Image of Youth in Contemporary American Cinema University of Texas Press ISBN 029277771X Stanley John 2000 Creature Features The Science Fiction Fantasy and Horror Movie Guide Berkley Trade ISBN 0425175170 External links EditMirror Mirror at IMDb Mirror Mirror at AllMovie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mirror Mirror 1990 film amp oldid 1165888462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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