Starry Eyes

Starry Eyes

201496 min
6.1/10
HorrorFantasyMystery

Plot Summary

A hopeful young starlet uncovers the ominous origins of the Hollywood elite and enters into a deadly agreement in exchange for fame and fortune.

▶️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (30)

Alex Essoe

Alex Essoe

Sarah Walker

Amanda Fuller

Amanda Fuller

Tracy

Fabianne Therese

Fabianne Therese

Erin

Noah Segan

Noah Segan

Danny

Shane Coffey

Shane Coffey

Poe

Natalie Hauck

Natalie Hauck

Ashley (as Natalie Castillo)

Nick Simmons

Nick Simmons

Ginko

Pat Healy

Pat Healy

Carl

Louis Dezseran

Louis Dezseran

The Producer

No Image

Maria Olsen

The Casting Director

Marc Senter

Marc Senter

The Assistant

No Image

Bridget Colella

The Receptionist

🎬Crew

Director

Kevin Kölsch

Writers

Kevin Kölsch, Dennis Widmyer

Producers

Travis Stevens, Gena Wilbur, Badie Ali, Hamza Ali, Malik B. Ali

🖼️Gallery (6 images)

Starry Eyes backdrop 1
Starry Eyes backdrop 2
Starry Eyes backdrop 3
Starry Eyes backdrop 4
Starry Eyes backdrop 5
Starry Eyes backdrop 6

🏷️Keywords

ambitioncastingelitefamehollywoodlos angeles, californiaauditionevilinitiationdeath cultaspiring actress

💬Reviews (1)

W

Wuchak

9/4/2024

**_Into the diabolical abyss of Hollywood_** A young woman in Los Angeles works at Big Taters (Alexandra Essoe) while trying to land a role in a cutting edge film. Is she willing to pay the unspoken price for fame and wealth? For the first hour, “Starry Eyes” (2014) is a drama with droll humor, but it slowly morphs into psychological horror in the manner of “Rosemary’s Baby” before taking a body horror turn with slasher elements. So, the set-up mixes “Hollywood Boulevard” and “Rosemary’s Baby,” but the flick evolves into something along the lines of “Lillith” (2019). Unlike “Lillith,” which had technical deficiencies, this one’s proficiently made, just marred by a muted palette (which was also the case with “Lillith”). Fabianne Therese stands out on the female front as brunette Erin. Someone criticized that the film glorifies devil worship and selling one’s soul to the dark side. Why Sure! It runs 1 hour, 36 minutes, and was shot in Los Angeles and La Cañada Flintridge, the latter of which is a 30-minute drive northeast of Hollywood. GRADE: B-/C+

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Production Companies

Dark Sky Films
Snowfort Pictures
Title Media