Pin, a plastic medical dummy, has been the fixation of Leon since youth. Now grown up and orphaned in an accident, Leon brings Pin home to live with him and his sister Ursula, much to her reluctance. Soon, however, Leon's fixation on Pin spirals out of control, and Ursula must face the devastating consequences.
Jonathan Banks
PIN (voice)
David Hewlett
Leon
Cynthia Preston
Ursula
Terry O'Quinn
Dr. Frank Linden
Bronwen Mantel
Mrs. Linden
John Pyper-Ferguson
Stan Fraker
Helene Udy
Marcia Bateman
Patricia Collins
Aunt Dorothy
Steven Bednarski
Leon - Age 13
Jacob Tierney
Leon - Age 7
Katie Shingler
Ursula - Age 11
Michelle Anderson
Ursula - Age 5
Joan Austen
Nurse Spalding
Jamie Stern
Eddie Morris
David Gow
Officer Wilson
Terrence Labrosse
Dr. Bell
Aline Vandrine
Mrs. Shaver
Joanna Noyes
Mrs. Henry
Andrew Carter
Andy
Leif Anderson
Dave
Joel Johnson
Jack
Shawn Johnson
Tim
Robin MacEachern
Richie
James Quon
Boy
Jeremy Slaney
Boy
Adrian Knight
Student
Alan Mozes
Student
Marty Finkelstein
Teenager
Bruce Ramsay
Teenager
Director, Screenplay
Sandor Stern
Novel
Andrew Neiderman
April 4, 2022
7
_**Interesting and creepy psychodrama/horror involving a mannequin**_
In the Northeast, a doctor uses an anatomically correct medical dummy named Pin (short for Pinocchio) to teach his son & daughter about how the body works. Years later, when they’re adults, they maintain an attachment to the mannequin as the sister (Cynthia Preston) starts dating a guy (John Pyper-Ferguson), which interrupts her uneasy brother (David Hewlett) "Pin" (1988) is a slow burn Hitchcock-ian psychological drama/horror that mixes “Psycho” (1960), “Flowers in the Attic” (1987) and a little “Paper Man” (1971) with the creepy mannequins of several 70's movies/shows, like Kolchak: The Night Stalker’s "The Trevi Collection.”
The low-key commentary on the negative effects of legalism is interesting, augmented by the fact that it’s nonreligious legalism relating to a well-to-do, educated family, which is the opposite of the situation in “Carrie” (1976). Yet legalism is only one of the mental conditions explored.
The flick is smart to not spell everything out, making the viewer seek for answers. For instance, is ventriloquism being used or not? Meanwhile the ending ties everything up with a nigh ‘wow’ factor.
I shouldn’t fail to mention that redhead Helene Udy is on hand for an effective sequence.
The movie runs 1 hour, 43 minutes, and was shot in Iberville, Québec, which is about 15 miles southeast of Montreal and 20 miles north of Lake Champlain & the US border, as well as Saint-Lambert, which is just across the river from Montreal.
GRADE: B+
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00