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Secret Window
This film captures the story of Mort Rainey, a newly created author who has decided to repeat all memories by spending time at home. Unfortunately for Rennie, there is a strange man who decided to accuse Mort of literary theft, and then he starts chasing him because of that case.


















30 January 1951, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

29 October 1948, Montreal, Québec, Canada





28 February 1957, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA

1950, Norway

1980, Nelson, British Columbia, Canada



16 September 1978

30 September 1939, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

18 April 1967, Norristown, Pennsylvania, USA

9 June 1963, Owensboro, Kentucky, USA

16 August 1960, Malibu, California, USA


April 29, 2009
Johnny Depp is the saving grace of a sub-par, often boring mystery film with a spirited performance.
October 11, 2006
This is, in short, a mystery story that has very little actual mystery.
March 16, 2004
Adapted from a Stephen King novella, the film lurches tiredly through the author's favorite masochistic-narcissistic fantasy, subjecting a woebegone writer to a gauntlet of abuse.
January 29, 2005
...an enjoyable little genre picture -- tense and stylish and full of Johnny Depp.
December 28, 2010
It all feels recycled and re-recycled.
May 04, 2005
Depp's ... wonderfully frazzled portrait of seething resentment almost makes this minor thriller seem fresh.
March 21, 2004
The story is so basic that it makes a fine template for an exercise in style, and Koepp layers on the details with great relish.
September 23, 2007
Once again, Depp slouches into a piece of mainstream entertainment and takes every opportunity to amuse himself.
March 15, 2004
[I]t's so refreshing to see a thriller that doesn't compromise itself with a pat Hollywood ending.
March 18, 2004
Has no story, no ending and no redeeming value.
April 01, 2004
Mr. Depp demonstrates once again that he never disappoints as an actor, even in something as fraudulent as Secret Window.
March 16, 2004
The plot certainly has possibilities, but far too many of them are botched by writer-director David Koepp, who's a better writer than director.