Taken Too Far

2017

Action / Drama / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Christina Cox Photo
Christina Cox as Jeanette Grayson
Beverley Mitchell Photo
Beverley Mitchell as Beth Hoyson
Oluniké Adeliyi Photo
Oluniké Adeliyi as Officer Daniels
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
844.98 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 32 min
P/S ...
1.7 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 32 min
P/S 0 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by rsyung8 / 10

A fun indulgence

Deadly Dance Mom is one of those movies you have to be in the mood for. If you want women-in-jeopardy, Lifetime Channel-type fare, it might be just the ticket. Acting is adequately over the top when it needs to be, the production values are surprisingly good for a low budget TVM, and the story moves along at a healthy clip. Beverley Mitchell is sweet but not saccharine as the mother of the more talented dance girl, and Christina Cox as the malicious titular dance mom is so out of control she almost elicits sympathy. As she weaves her tangled web of malice and deceit, we are swept along for the ride, wondering what evil deed she has next up her sleeve. When she receives her comeuppance (and a probable prison term) at the end, the ultimate family tragedy of a broken home is made good by the dad's renewed commitment to her daughter, and the bond of friendship now reaffirmed between the two girls. Perfectly suited to a "personal day" at home with a hot tea or glass of chardonnay, some fluffy pillows, and a turned-off cell phone.

Reviewed by wilsonlatonya1 / 10

Worst one out of all of them

I generally enjoy Christina Cox movies but this was awful. No real plot. And the girl from 7th Heaven is annoying.

Reviewed by rkprice-464918 / 10

A thrill ride with a message

"Taken Too Far" launches the viewer into the bizarre yet all too familiar world of unstable, unseemly parents living vicariously through their talented offspring. Parents whose own failures can easily turn them into monstrous criminals destroying the lives of many all for the sake of "advancing their babies to stardom". Ms. Rogers examines this phenomenon with adept skill. Short, sweet and to the point her 90- minute action-packed treatise is a thrill ride to be sure, yet she finds the time to explore, once again, this tragic underworld culture whose culprits are many and victims many more. From dads slinging fists and clubs at pee-wee soccer games to the murder of Jon Benet Ramsey, American society becomes a battlefield where the kids stand helpless on the sidelines while their parents fight it out for their own selfish gratification. Ms. Rogers is to be commended for a fine cinematic achievement. Bring us more like this.

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