I Didn't Kill My Sister (TV Movie 2016) Poster

(2016 TV Movie)

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6/10
Big Sis, Little Sis
lavatch13 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"I Didn't Kill My Sister" (a.k.a, "Murder Unresolved") is a story about two sisters so alike and so different. Yet there is a deep bond between Carmen Campbell and her younger sister Heather Pearson that endures long after the violent death of Carmen.

In the City View newscast, Carmen was a superstar alongside her dashing husband Mason Campbell. The team had vowed to continue their partnership on air even through a bitter divorce. Then, the unthinkable happened when Carmen was discovered floating in her swimming pool by her daughter Brooke and her sister Heather.

The film was routine in an odd assortment of forgettable secondary characters. The scenes at the news studio were sluggish, and the filmmakers introduced Seth, an addiction counselor at the Compassion Substance Abuse Center as a plot device to provide the clincher to Heather about who murdered her sister.

It was also never very convincing that Heather would be a suspect in the case. The detective was unconvincingly suspicious due to the lack any physical evidence. Young Brooke always seems to be on the verge of nervous breakdown. The sleazy attorney Sandra Conroy first tells Heather than she cannot represent her while Mason is her client. But we are then expected to believe that Heather would confide in Sandra anyway.

The most intriguing character was Heather, who was an aspiring news broadcaster herself. It was clear at the outset that the sensitive Heather was not jealous of her older sibling. To the contrary, she was loyal to Carmen while she lived, and she honored her memory in death. The bond of two sisters knows no bounds.
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2/10
Laughably Inept
emoac128 April 2020
Please don't waste your time on this movie. If you paid to watch it, you should ask for a refund. The plot has so many holes that you could figuratively drive a truck through them, and the production crew should turn in their union credentials.
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3/10
This made for TV film deserves the "Peanut Gallery" award
Ed-Shullivan24 May 2018
This made for TV film could not even decide on a title thus the two different movie titles "I Didn't Kill My Sister" and/or "Murder Unresolved". The killer plot of a well known TV newscaster named Carmen (Gina Holden) who dies under suspicious circumstances and is found by her assistant who also happens to the murdered woman's only sister Heather (Nicholle Tom) drowned in her own swimming pool is a whodunit for the peanut gallery.

Carmen was going through a divorce and child custody battle with her TV news co-anchor Mason (Chris William Martin). Of course Mason is involved in a love triangle with someone (I won't divulge) whom his murdered wife Carmen knew quite well. The keystone cop lead Detective Cruz (Sharon Taylor) has quickly established who the main suspect is in Carmen's murder and that is Carmen's only sister, her devoted assistant Heather who is portrayed as a submissive and dowdy woman who would not harm a fly and without a mean bone in her body.

So for approximately the next 80 minutes we the audience are subjected to witnessing this cheaply made peanut gallery neo-noir thriller watch the evidence continue to point solely towards the dead Carmen's sister Heather and the only one who can solve this crime is none other than the submissive and dowdy Heather herself.

I just wasted 90 minutes but I can recover from this waste of time by recommending this cheap film be awarded a big bag of peanuts and the annual Peanut Gallery award. I give the film a 3 out of 10 rating.

Peanuts anyone?
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3/10
Tedious and obvious
phd_travel27 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Most Lifetime thrillers don't require much guesswork to find out the killer. Usually it's fun to see the journey. But this one is tedious and obvious.

A rather frazzled looking Nichol Tom acts as a Heather, a PA to an anchor woman who is also her sister. When the anchor who is getting divorced is murdered, suspicion falls on her. The scheming lawyer of the husband and him plot to frame her. Heather does prove her innocence but by the time you don't really care. Things get mildly interesting as she accuses them in air and they have a studio confrontation.
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1/10
Waste of $ to Make
Cilica16 August 2019
Seriously who was hard up that they thought this was the movie to make. Acting is hideous - worse than worse. DO NOT waste your time watching this BAD Movie.
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1/10
Frowny Faces
agreenskeeperscorp9 February 2024
Two actresses I just don't get. Nicholle Tom. And Chantelle Peloso (Stacey Castor Story) in LMN movies. The two have the same facial expression that never changes that can be interpreted in many ways. Frowny,pouty, angry, sad, angerly confused. I know I'm missing a few more. I literally fast forward when they're on screen. There definitely is not anything appealing about either of their acting skills. I didn't kill my sister is another LMN movie that makes law enforcement look totally clueless. Crime should've been solved in two/three days. And to think the soon too be ex-husband was even close to being attracted to the dead wife's sister was the most unbelievable part of this movie.
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1/10
Hard to watch cheapie
guilfisherjr9 June 2020
This has to be one of the worst on my list of tedious LMN dramas. The story is mundane, so who cares, and the acting even worse. Too bad Nicole Tom grew up. She is not that attractive with a terrible evil mouth and hair that always seems to get in her way on close-ups. If she pulls her hair back a thousand times that is just the beginning. Did she ever hear of bobby pins? Or is the limit of her acting? To this viewer, her presence and acting totally ruined this film, not that it is even that good, but might be passable with a beter lead. Miss Tom give up acting, dear. You are not that good nor attractive. Maybe when you get older you might be a decent character actress, without the stringy straw bleached hair. And definitely a haircut to get that stuff out of your face. Thank you.
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8/10
Surprisingly good neo-noir thriller
mgconlan-116 May 2016
I spent most of the evening Sunday, May 15 watching back-to-back movies on Lifetime, one of which was billed as a "World Premiere" while the other had had the "World Premiere" designation when it had originally been shown on Saturday. They re-aired the Saturday "world premiere," "I Didn't Kill My Sister," at 7 p.m., and followed it up with the new "world premiere," "Trust No One," at 9. Surprisingly, both turned out to be TV-movies made by a company called Odyssey Media in 2015, and both were shot under different titles than the ones Lifetime used when they aired them: "I Didn't Kill My Sister" was originally "Murder Unrecognized" (so they replaced a blah title with a silly one), while "Trust No One" was originally "Corrupt" (and according to one IMDb.com message board poster a trailer for it under the Corrupt title appeared on YouTube before it and all printed references to it on the Internet mysteriously disappeared). What was even more odd was that "I Didn't Kill My Sister," despite that dorky title, turned out to be a quite good crime thriller, a sort of neo-noir set in and around the Los Angeles TV news community, while "Trust No One" was a boring organized-crime story enlivened by a few action scenes but otherwise deathly-dull.

From the title I'd assumed the sisters, one of whom died and the other was accused of murdering her, would be teenagers; instead they were both 30-something women. The one who gets killed was Carmen Pearson Campbell (Gina Holden, turning in a nice bitch performance that makes it unfortunate she exits permanently early on — though writer Gemma Holdway and director Jason Bourque give her a lot more screen time than is common in a plot like this, which was nice), and the sister who's suspected of killing her is Heather Pearson (Nicholle Tom, who began her career as one of the kids Fran Drescher was nanny-ing on The Nanny but has had a decent if unspectacular career as an adult actress). In the opening scene Carmen, home alone, drinks a small glass of wine, then suddenly loses consciousness and ends up taking a fall into her swimming pool, where she apparently drowns — though later on a medical examiner attributes her death to an overdose of Xanax (the wine was "spiked" with the drug) and said she had croaked before she even got to the pool. Then there's a typical Lifetime title flashing us back "Two Days Earlier," and we learn that two days earlier Carmen was the co-host of Citywatch, a phenomenally popular news program on L.A. TV station KPPQ Channel 3. She was also in the middle of a bitterly contested divorce from her husband Mason Campbell (Chris William Martin), and their marriage has so totally disintegrated they're literally not speaking together off camera. Unfortunately for both of them, they're the co-hosts of Citywatch and therefore have to speak to each other on camera, and if that weren't bad enough they're also the parents of a teenage daughter, Brooke (Sarah Desjardins). Also, Carmen has talked to her attorney, Sandra Carson (Ona Grauer), about changing her will so instead of her husband getting her money, it'll go into a trust fund and remain there until Brooke is old enough to inherit it herself.

So when Carmen is found dead in her swimming pool of an overdose of Xanax, the cops at first suspect it was an accident until they find the remaining spiked wine, whereupon they not surprisingly make Mason Campbell the number one suspect — until he's able to prove that he didn't do it (just how he proved he didn't do it — whether he established an alibi or what — isn't really explained in Holdway's script), whereupon they, and in particular Cruz (Sharon Taylor), the lead detective on the case (and it was a neat trick on Holdway'a part to make her seem more intimidating by not giving her a first name), fasten on Heather as a suspect. "I Didn't Kill My Sister" is actually a quite professional piece of filmmaking, not innovative but cunning in its deployment of old clichés, and for once the ending is a genuine surprise but also a believable one instead of a whiplash-inducing reversal that negates all or most of what has gone before. It also had an interesting road-not-taken aspect in that the character I found myself caring most about was Mason's and Carmen's daughter Brooke, and the trauma she's undoubtedly going to face given not only that her mother was murdered but her father was involved in the killing.
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10/10
****
edwagreen17 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Excellent film with great plot twists.

What made this film so good was that they used the idea to condemn the guilty as had been done in the 1957 film with Patricia Neal and Andy Griffith-"A Place in the Crowd." By pulling a switch in both films, the guilty are shown for what they are.

A well known anchorwoman is murdered and suspects include the husband she is currently divorcing who is also her co-anchor on the news show, as well as a rebellious daughter and a sister who may be smitten by her brother-in-law.

The film also reinforces the age old idea of not trusting your lawyer.

Everyone goes through being under suspicion, but the sister really turns the table on those who are really guilty of the heinous crimes.
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