Mother, May I Sleep with Danger?

Mother, May I Sleep with Danger?
Directed by Jorge Montesi
Written by Edmond Stevens, based on a novel by Claire R. Jacobs
Starring Tori Spelling
Ivan Sergei
Music by Irwin Fisch
Cinematography Philip Linzey
Edited by Pia Di Ciaula
Distributed by The Sokolow Company
Mandeville Productions
Columbia TriStar Television
Release dates
September 30, 1996
Running time
90 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Mother, May I Sleep with Danger? is a 1996 television film starring Tori Spelling and Ivan Sergei.

Plot

Laurel (Spelling) has the boyfriend of her dreams, Kevin (Sergei). He can and will do anything for her. He is totally devoted to her but the downside is that he won't leave her alone. When she tries to get some distance he responds with aggressiveness. It finally dawns on Laurel that he is not good for her. Laurel's mother Jessica has already started to suspect that something is wrong with his background.

Cast

Release

Although originally planned to be released in theaters, the film failed to find a distributor and finally made its United States debut on NBC 30 September 1996. It was later released in cinemas in both Sweden and Argentina in 1999 and 2000, and it was released direct to VHS in Japan in 1998.

DVD release

In January 2004, Tori Spelling began a campaign to get Mother, May I Sleep With Danger? released on DVD worldwide. Seven years later, on June 6, 2011, Sony Pictures Entertainment finally issued a DVD release.

DVD Name DVD Release Date Run Time Discs Format Region Studio Extras
Mother, May I Sleep With Danger? June 6, 2011 90 minutes 1 NTSC All Regions SPE -Cast Interviews
-Behind-the-Scenes Featurettes on the movie's ending, history, and climax
-Alternative ending
-Trailer

Remake

Lifetime announced a remake of the film in December 2015 with James Franco serving as executive producer although not much else was known about the project.[1] In April 2016 Vulture revealed that Franco had reimagined the film as a "a same-sex vampire love story." [2] Franco had stated that he was partly inspired by Will Ferrell's Lifetime movie A Deadly Adoption to make a "a very non-Lifetime movie on Lifetime."[2]

References

External links


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