Do No Harm (TV Movie 2012) Poster

(2012 TV Movie)

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Decent Television Thriller
gnowaczek4 August 2017
The first time I saw this movie was on Lifetime channel in 2014, it's at best a popcorn thriller with a simple plot that somehow manages to work well.

Do No Harm tells the story of an up and coming fashion designer who suffers a tragic loss when her fiancé dies in a plane accident, then for the next year is placed under the care of a psychiatrist who as the film continues begins to show a dark and obsessive side.

Lauren Holly as Dr. Thorne makes for an OK villain, she appears to be caring and compassionate , but later on she oversteps the line between doctor and patient when she begins stalking Emily (Russo), following her at the mall, sneaking into the spa when she's getting a massage, destroying her drawings at work and even planting seeds of doubt in the head of her new boyfriend Ian (Greene).

Sarah Allen as Gillian Stewart is supportive. She's the only one who stands by Emily and believes her, When she discovers the reason behind Thorne's motives for interfering in her best friend's life is shocking.

For fans of simple films watch Do No Harm. Give it a 5.2/10
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Not too bad
nightroses12 June 2021
It was a decent thriller, with some twists here and there. I was distracted by the fact the majority of actors have grey eyes, and the colour theme is brown, white, grey. The beginning was very sad, when Emily's boyfriend is killed in an accident. This movie is okay, at first, but later the film turned bat crazy. It lost itself.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Ok 4 stars
destinyres29 January 2021
It was ok movie. Could have given more details on what actually happened to the Psychiatrist daughter.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
No Harm Done
alanpriest-5391610 November 2020
I can't really understand the lowly rating given to this pretty good thriller which, though far from perfect, provides an overall decent watch and, in particular, a fine vehicle for the beautiful Deanna Russo and convincingly menacing Lauren Holly. Ok, it's not the sort of movie to win too many awards, but surely the most important issue is to entertain which it does achieve in abundance. Once again, movie snobbery seems to win.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A Case of Counter-Transference
lavatch18 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Dr. Rachel Thorne attempts to explain to a couple of bumbling police detectives the nature of transference, wherein a patient begins to identify the therapist with an important figure in his or her life. But one of the detectives reads Dr. Thorne's book in which she describes in chapter 9 the theory of counter-transference, in which the therapist associates a neurotic connection with the patient.

Such is the drama of Emily Edmunds, a fashion designer whose fiancé was killed in a plan crash. Emily makes an attempt on her life and becomes a patient of Dr. Thorne, who treats her for acute melancholy depression. But Dr. Thorne soon becomes obsessed with her patient, whom she sees a replacement for her own daughter named Emily, who currently lies in a comatose state.

The sensitive Emily catches on to Dr. Thorne's game, but the police and even her new beau Ian Brock do not find it credible that a therapist could be stalking a patient. Emily's new psychiatrist Dr. Rosen does begin to investigate Dr. Thorney, but he ends up dead in his office after a visit paid to him by Dr. Thorne.

Emily's bestie Gillian Stewart, a savvy attorney, goes undercover, becoming a new patient of Dr. Thorne. In one of the best scenes in the film, the quick-thinking Gillian tells Dr. Thorne a sob story about her dear, dead cat named Scooter. While in the doctor's office, Gillian learns about Dr. Thorne's daughter when she sees a photo of the mother and daughter, then discovers the daughter in a nursing home. Subsequently, Gillian is nearly killed when she is run off the road by the fiendish Dr. Thorne.

The filmmakers deserve kudos for imagination in the homestretch of the film. Dr. Thorne gives Emily an injection that places her in the temporary state of a vegetable. The doctor then takes Emily to her ranch with the pipe dream of living with her new daughter. "It's your mother, pumpkin!" A mad scramble ensues in which Detective Wallers meets his end and Ian arrives on cue.

Ironically, one of the topics the arose in Emily's therapy was the relationship with a mother she never had. Emily's mother abandoned her as a toddler. Then, at age sixteen, Emily received a birthday call from her mother in which she refused to speak to her. She regretted that decision ever since. But she had no desire for a surrogate mom the likes of the demented shrink, Dr. Rachel Thorne. In this case, the therapist needed the patient more than the patient needed the doctor.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed