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| © 2004
Columbia Pictures, Sony Pictures Entertainment
All Rights Reserved.
| |  | ![]() | From writer/director David Koepp comes this
filmed adaptation of Stephen King's novella “Secret Window, Secret Garden”, one
of four stories in the collection “Four Past Midnight”. Johnny Depp stars as
Mort Rainey, an almost-divorced author who decides to take some time off at his
remote lakeside cabin after catching his wife sleeping with another man. One
day, a stranger named John Shooter (Turturro) appears at his door and accuses
Mort of plagiarizing his best story idea. Although Mort believes the
misunderstanding can be resolved once he shows Shooter an original copy of the
story, published years before his accuser’s version, he can't seem to find one
in the prescribed time limit. A series of odd incidents prevents him from
receiving the needed original, prompting Mort to investigate Shooter’s real
identity and why he’s terrorizing him.
Animal Action Summary
This film includes a morbid depiction of violence against an animal as well as
mild action involving a mouse and a squirrel. “Secret Window” was filmed outside
the United States and American Humane could not communicate with the animal
trainer because he did not speak English. However, the production did provide
documentation for the fake dog used as Mort’s murdered pet, Chico.
Detailed Animal Action
At his remote cabin in the woods, Mort has only a mixed breed dog named Chico
for company. While the author sleeps on the sofa or works on his latest literary
project, Chico lounges in his doggy bed, or sprawls on the floor or on a worn
arm chair.
In a grisly scene, Mort discovers Chico lying motionless under a sheet on the
front porch. John Shooter (Turturro) has apparently stabbed the dog through the
throat with a screwdriver as a warning not to involve the authorities with their
“artistic” dispute.
Strange noises seem to echo in the rambling cabin one night, and Mort’s dealings
with Shooter have made him as taut as a piano wire as he searches top to bottom
for signs of an intruder. Armed with a row boat oar, Mort bursts into the
bathroom and shatters the shower door when he hears something shuffle inside. It
turns out the trespasser in the tub is a little squeaking mouse, which he places
in a cloth sack and frees outside in the garden.
When Mort discovers the dead bodies of his neighbor Tom and his
lawyer-cum-private investigator, played by Charles Dutton, he notices a squirrel
sitting high on a tree branch nearby.
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