Before I Say Goodbye
Before I Say Goodbye
PG-13 | 01 January 2003 (USA)
Before I Say Goodbye Trailers

Nelly McDermott, the granddaughter of a prominent politician, loses her husband, architect Adam Cauliff, in a fiery boat explosion. When she's informed that he was murdered, Nell is compelled to find the killer by searching for the truth, with the help of a psychic, which could solve the mystery — or end her life.

Reviews
helen2153

In the scene where Nell is telling Adam she is running for her Grandfather's seat in Congress, Adam gets angry and gets up to leave. Just as he stands up and then walks to where his jacket is you can clearly see that something is showing that should not be. The viewer can see that his fly is wide open and his underwear is showing. I am surprised that they didn't pick up on this when they looked at the daily's. Maybe now that I have pointed it out more people will watch this one to see if they can catch it. I would think with all the crew they have on a set someone would have noticed. Unless of course they all fell asleep during the filming. Over all this is not one of the better Mary Higgins Clark movies. I was disappointed in the this production. The book was much better.

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Cristi_Ciopron

Why are the comments about "Before ..." so negative?I grant the script is rubbish,and the dialogs are crap,each ingredient is banal,the story is the standard slap-dash,but the movie is interesting.In a word,it is a movie badly written,but enjoyable done.First of all,it's good Mrs. Young got a leading role,albeit that only in a decent B thriller;she remains an interesting and ... actress.She makes an aloof and alluring character as "Nell",a strong woman that decides to enter the electoral campaign and to run for her grandfather's chair in the Congress.Nell had a quite rough life and is sometimes pained by panic attacks;she sees a therapist.She feels an intense need to love,and "loves the idea of loving".Nell's grandfather,Mac,the congressman, encourages her to run for the Congress chair.Her husband,"Adam", is an incompetent architect and a quite envenomed man,a boor;he opposes Nell's hopes for a political career.The two have a fight just before "Adam" dies on board his boat,together with some business partners;the boat exploded.(On board was also Winifred,Adam's assistant,and Ryan,his employee that he used for some dirty deeds,such as torching an old mansion).Was the boat's blow-out an accident?A detective does not think so.Adam's widow is soon contacted by Ryan's widow,that found a large sum of money in her husband's things,and by a the detective;she tracks Winifred's mother.A purse with a key is found at shore,and the purse is not so damaged,this suggests someone escaped from the blow-out.Nell goes to a psychic,"Bonnie" (Claudette Mink,a sexy girl),to contact "Adam" through a séance.The movie is about Nell meeting her grandfather,or a policeman,or Bonnie,or Winifred's mother,or Ryan's widow,or Lang,or being threatened by Kaplan.There is a story of pay-offs, a realty,etc..The first 3/4 of "Before ..." have indeed a certain Hitchcockian touch,in a low-brow way,and all proportions kept.The denouement is worse than the rest of the movie (beginning with Nell's second séance at Bonnie's,when the widow takes the key with her,hoping to obtain a confession from Bonnie).The moment Nell enters Bonnie's house to get a second séance and to unmask her,the movie becomes really crap and ridiculous;but not until then.An interesting movie with a spoiled climax.Mrs. Young looks graceful as a distinguished and good-hearted woman;she has many of the requisite endowments (physical as well as interpretative) for making suspenseful Hitchcockian flicks.She has her distinctive character,that of a distant,rather instinctual and tough woman,very lucid and quite sexual;so,Mrs. Young doesn't care much about the script or the written character she gets;in "Before ...",she's not so busy on looking vulnerable,etc..(Must I add that even here she looks far more roguish,glacial,strange than the poor dopey sottish romps and hicks they casted as "villains"?Like another underused actor,Dourif,Mrs. Young is often in the situation to be the only actor in a movie able to provide some thrills,she has to do it all by herself;in "Before I Say ..." she is not just the only star that could be afforded,but also the only experienced thrillers actor.)At least,Mrs. Young is making a picturesque career,with such cheap,B-thrillers,where everyone seems at ease and a certain sense of fun does not miss.Such movies are so obviously destined to anonymity that the intelligent persons don't even try pretending they are in a top movie,but allow themselves a certain pleasing easiness that is absent from the pretentious crap.No sex scenes,not even a kiss,and no shower scene,not even one sensual frame.I've seen far worse and stupid movies (Final Analysis (1992),Sliver (1993)...) being a lot more successful.This film or another,it's good that Mrs. Young works and gets leading roles.Like the major dames of the great thrillers (e.g.,Gloria Grahame),she knows the job is not so much about acting,as it is about looking.This able woman,with her type of beauty, came some 50 years too late for the movies that would have needed her.

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voyageur0713

I wanted to start this review by writing something positive about the movie. I'm trying to think of something. I really am. While it's certainly not the worst movie I have ever seen, there is also nothing there to make up for the time I lost watching it.The writing was very bad. There was no suspense. Every plot point could be seen miles ahead of time, even by TV movie standards, which are pretty low. Characters seemed to learn things magically, as there was nothing shown to give basis to their conclusions.The acting was so bad. Sean Young was just painful. She showed the emotional range of mold. Even her scenes of grief over losing her husband were very cold and completely without feeling.The other actors - weren't great but they didn't make me cringe as Young did.Something positive -- hmm -- the photography was adequate and I didn't see any equipment get caught in any shots.

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budikavlan

She's down to starring in run-of-the-mill made-fors on PAX. As another Mary Higgins Clark adaptation, the story is fine. Sean is a decent actress, so she comes off fine. The overall effect, however, is not something to write home about. It's the story of a woman who finds out after her husband's death in a boat explosion that all is not as it seems. She and another widow work to unravel the mystery. While I wouldn't expect anyone to seek this one out, it makes for OK entertainment on a slow night.

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