Strand & Rawiszer’s Goodbye Honey Takes Audiences Captive 5/11 – The Thriller Follows Two Women Who Must Trust Each Other To Survive the Longest Night of Their Lives – Available Across North America on Digital HD and Cable VOD. Here’s the trailer:
Freestyle Digital Media has announced the cable, satellite and Digital HD release of the tension-ridden thriller Goodbye Honey, from director/co-writer Max Strand and co-writer/producer Todd Rawiszer. Pamela Jayne Morgan (Just Say Goodbye) and Juliette Alice Gobin (Look At Me), headline the cast in a balancing act of mistrust, fear and reliance. Goodbye Honey will be available May 11th on a number of digital and cable platforms. Morgan and Gobin are joined onscreen by Peyton Michelle Edwards (Weekenders), Paul C. Kelly (Driftwood), and Rafe Soule (Menagerie) as the plot simmers to a boil and the layers of the mystery are peeled back. Goodbye Honey was produced by Strand, Rawiszer and Josh Michaels.
Freestyle Digital Media has announced the cable, satellite and Digital HD release of the tension-ridden thriller Goodbye Honey, from director/co-writer Max Strand and co-writer/producer Todd Rawiszer. Pamela Jayne Morgan (Just Say Goodbye) and Juliette Alice Gobin (Look At Me), headline the cast in a balancing act of mistrust, fear and reliance. Goodbye Honey will be available May 11th on a number of digital and cable platforms. Morgan and Gobin are joined onscreen by Peyton Michelle Edwards (Weekenders), Paul C. Kelly (Driftwood), and Rafe Soule (Menagerie) as the plot simmers to a boil and the layers of the mystery are peeled back. Goodbye Honey was produced by Strand, Rawiszer and Josh Michaels.
- 4/30/2021
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Director Matt Walting’s “Just Say Goodbye” can trace its lineage to the old after-school specials that dealt with such evergreen topics as alcoholism, bullying, and suicide. However, this story about a physically and mentally abused teen who decides his only option for personal freedom is to commit suicide falls short in its delivery compared to those network-produced parables. This melodrama, released to coincide with Mental Health Awareness Month, lacks the necessary polish to elevate not just its message, but also the actors’ performances.
Sixteen-year-old Jesse Peterson’s (Max MacKenzie) life hasn’t been easy. When he was six, his mom overdosed on pills, leaving him in the care of his rage-filled father Rick (William Galatis), who made Jesse swear never to utter her name again and destroyed all photographic evidence of her. All Jesse has left is one small pocket-sized photo that he keeps with him at all times.
Sixteen-year-old Jesse Peterson’s (Max MacKenzie) life hasn’t been easy. When he was six, his mom overdosed on pills, leaving him in the care of his rage-filled father Rick (William Galatis), who made Jesse swear never to utter her name again and destroyed all photographic evidence of her. All Jesse has left is one small pocket-sized photo that he keeps with him at all times.
- 5/10/2019
- by Courtney Howard
- Variety Film + TV
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