
Robert is an art photographer who is totally controlled by his wife Hallie. When they go on vacation in New York, they leave their house to their friends, Zack and Sophie. When they return, they find their house a total mess, but Zack and Sophie ask to stay a little longer, and they agree.... (Full plot summary below)
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Robert is an art photographer who is totally controlled by his wife Hallie. When they go on vacation in New York, they leave their house to their friends, Zack and Sophie. When they return, they find their house a total mess, but Zack and Sophie ask to stay a little longer, and they agree.
Leave your thoughts about Cleopatra's Second Husband.
| Los Angeles TimesKevin ThomasA diabolically clever psychological suspense movie. |
| Internet ReviewsSteve RhodesShot in a house in an 18-day shoot, it still backs the wallop of a movie with much bigger stars and budget. |
| ReelViewsJames BerardinelliFor anyone who doesn't mind being exposed to something a little dark and unsettling, Cleopatra's Second Husband offers 90 minutes of intriguing cinema. |
| Reeling ReviewsRobin CliffordPaul Hipp ... garners no sympathy from the viewer as he allows, without reason, everyone to walk over his emotions and needs. |
| Village VoiceMark HolcombAn engagingly grim psychological thriller. |
| Nitrate OnlineElias SavadaTaking a branch off the (early) Neil LaBute tree of filmmaking, Jon Reis has planted a fashionably disturbing offshoot, fertilized with heavy doses of "Rod-Serlingesque" irony |
| Ozus' World Movie ReviewsDennis SchwartzA tough thriller to find enjoyable or completely satisfying no matter how well crafted the story is by writer-director Jon Reiss ... |
| Film ThreatRon WellsIt becomes a quite interesting tale of co-dependency, and the illusions of control people can construct in their lives. |
| New York PostLou LumenickOne of those potentially interesting movies that takes its sweet time getting to the point -- by which time many audience members will likely have bailed out or dozed off. |
| New York TimesStephen HoldenWell acted, but it doesn't enrich its metaphor beyond giving an old story a sour contemporary resonance. |