HD · HDR
Glass House: The Good Mother
Overlook Pick

Glass House: The Good Mother

A mother's love is unconditional.
57
User Score95 ratings
TMDB 5.716+20061h 34mEnglish
DramaThriller

Synopsis

One year after losing their son David, Eve Goode and her husband Raymond Goode adopt the orphan Ethan Snow (and his teenager sister Abby Snow and bring them to their mansion nearby a lake. Abby faces difficulties of adaptation in her new home, and she confronts Eve, who proves to be deranged and unstable. When Ethan gets sick, Abby tries to contact their friend, detective Ben Koch, and she realizes that her brother and she are trapped in the house.

Director
Steve AntinFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Shouldn't Throw Stones2 production companies
Release
October 3, 2006Released
Box Office

Top Cast

6 of 6
Angie Harmon
Angie Harmon
Eve Goode
Joel Gretsch
Joel Gretsch
Raymond Goode
Jordan Hinson
Jordan Hinson
Abby Snow
Bobby Coleman
Bobby Coleman
Ethan Snow
Jason London
Jason London
Ben Koch
Tasha Smith
Tasha Smith
Caseworker

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
Wuchak
Aug 8, 2019

***An idyllic house (mansion) is not necessarily a home*** An orphaned teen girl (Jordan Hinson) & her little brother start a new life in remote Simi Valley, Ca, with their adoptive parents (Angie Harmon & Joel Gretsch), a seemingly-ideal couple who tragically lost their son a year earlier. Jason London is on hand as the kid’s acting-godfather. “Glass House: The Good Mother” (2006) naturally has a similar plot to the first film, but the kids are a little younger here and, as the title implies, the mother is now the key adversary. Being a direct-to-video release it lacks the budget of the first film with Leelee Sobieski and Stellan Skarsgård (2001) and therefore lacks the theatrical pizazz thereof, having a Lifetime movie vibe. As with that first movie, the awesome mansion itself is a highlight, located just a dozen miles north of the Glass manor used in the previous flick (in real-life). Unlike the first film, however, the actors are all no-names. Yet they rise to the challenge, especially Harmon as the increasingly not-good mother and Hinson as the formidable girl, who essentially becomes the “final girl” à la slasher flicks. Not that this is a horror movie, but there is that element. It’s more realistic than the conventional slasher, which typically involve some eye-rolling psycho wearing a mask and brandishing a machete, etc. Here, the diabolic individual is more every-day and perfectly harmless on the surface, which somehow makes it more chilling. The flick effectively addresses the mental illness factitious disorder imposed on another (FDIA), aka Munchausen syndrome by proxy (MSbP). These types of psychos actually exist, unfortunately. The film runs 1 hour, 34 minutes, and was shot in Simi Valley, Ca, with some stuff done in Hollywood. GRADE: C

More Like This

Browse all