High Noon | |
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Promotional poster
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Based on |
High Noon by Nora Roberts |
Screenplay by | Terri Kopp |
Directed by | Peter Markle |
Starring |
Emilie de Ravin Ivan Sergei |
Theme music composer | Stuart Michael Thomas |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Salli Newman |
Cinematography | Joel Ransom |
Editor(s) | Michael Ruscio |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Production company(s) | Mandalay TV |
Release | |
Original network | Lifetime |
Original release |
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High Noon, also known as Nora Roberts' High Noon, is a 2009 television film directed by Peter Markle, which stars Emilie de Ravin and Ivan Sergei. The film is based on the Nora Roberts novel of the same name and is part of the Nora Roberts 2009 movie collection, which also includes Northern Lights, Midnight Bayou, and Tribute. The film debuted April 4, 2009 on Lifetime Television.
Divorced crisis negotiator police lieutenant Phoebe MacNamara (de Ravin) struggles with the pressures of her job, raising her young daughter Carly, facing mounting bills, and taking care of her agoraphobic mother Essie (Shepard).
While talking down a distraught armed suicidal man threatening to jump from a rooftop, Phoebe meets his ex-boss, Duncan Swift (Sergei), who can't resist her take-charge attitude, not to mention her physical attractiveness. He attempts to earn her affections repeatedly, and though she tries to resist his charms, Phoebe soon realizes no amount of negotiation will keep Duncan at arms length. It's also not so bad when she finds out he won $138 million in a state lottery, and is a successful investor.
After being brutally attacked and handcuffed by an unknown assailant in the staircase of her precinct, Phoebe receives a series of mysterious and threatening messages. She soon learns she is the target of a psychopathic killer, an ex-SWAT cop, out to destroy her after the death of his fiancee in a bank robbery. He believes that her death is Phoebe's fault, as she was the negotiator working the incident.
The film was executive produced by Stephanie Germain and Peter Guber, who also 'e.p.-ed' seven other Roberts films for Lifetime in 2007 and 2009.