![]() When is life truly at its best? John Klien (Richard Gere,) a respected Washington Post journalist at the top of his game, recognizes that moment. It comes the day he and his wife Mary (Deborah Messing) are house hunting and find the place of their dreams. It’s a little too big, possibly a little more than he wanted to spend, but one look from Mary tells him this is it. ![]() While removing Mary’s possessions from the hospital, John remembers her last words: “You didn’t see it, did you?” Then he discovers a sketchpad covered with odd drawings, variations of the same eerie apparition. John can’t understand the significance of the drawings but is haunted by the unsettling images. A couple of years later, John’s grief has settled somewhat but he is clearly a man altered by tragedy. He lives his life and performs his job in a fog, an unexplainable presence always with him. While driving one night from Washington to Richmond for an assignment, he loses his way and ends up on a deserted country highway. When his car inexplicably breaks down, he walks to a nearby farmhouse. The homeowner not only threatens John but tells him he has been waiting for him. John is baffled. ![]() His curiosity piqued, John decides to stay in Point Pleasant to explore the reports of unexplained phenomena in the town. He soon realizes that they may all be related – not just to each other, but also to the strange sketches Mary had been obsessively drawing just hours before her death. But what exactly is the connection? The events defy simple explanation and, even more disturbing, seem to predict impending disasters. Plane crashes, earthquakes… surely it must be a gruesome coincidence? The more he unravels, the more John begins to question his own sanity. Are there unknown forces behind the strange sightings? What terrible thing awaits the people of Point Pleasant? For John, it’s a race against time to figure it out – and try to prevent something terrible from happening. Based on the true events in Point Pleasant, Virginia, as chronicled in John Keel’s book of the same title, “The Mothman Prophicies” is a Lakeshore Entertainment and Screen Gems presentation of a Lakeshore Entertainment production. Produced by Tom Rosenberg, Gary Lucchesi and Gary Goldstein, “The Mothman Prophecies” is written by Richard Hatem and directed by Mark Pellington. |
THE MOTHMAN PROPHECIES (12A) 1 hour 58 mins