An Oregon woman vanishes. In her wake remains a single black rose & a note reading gone but not forgotten. Now a man stands accused: a private eye has gone missing: a detective knows more than she lets on: & a tough female attorney has entered a web of duplicity revenge & multiple murder.
This two-part television film was based on a Phillip Margolin novel, which has been deemed "better than this movie" in almost every film review I read. In New York state, Peter Lake's (Scott Glenn) wife and young daughter are murdered in a very jumbled opening half hour to the film. Fast forward ten years later, and Lake is now known as Martin Darius, a millionaire developer in Sacramento. Copycat crimes to the New York slayings pop up again, and women's rights lawyer Betsy (Brooke Shields) is now Darius' defense attorney, up against prosecutor Alan (Lou Diamond Phillips). What follows is a two hour thriller dragged out to almost three hours as women are kidnapped and killed, and THIS time, Darius swears he's innocent.
The film takes the old adage "show, don't tell" and turns it on its head. A good hour of screen time, and many characters, could have been dropped by telling, and NOT showing. Darius is already evil enough but when his wife Lisa (Alla Korot) recalls his assault of her, do we really need to see it, too? Lake's wife and daughter are shown being murdered twice, in case we didn't remember it happening the first time around. The name cast tries, Phillips and Glenn come off best (although Phillips delivers more lines into a cell phone than to a live character), but the plot lurches along without a steady pace or suspense. Henner and Shields try, but they're both in over their heads. Watch for the scene at a New York suspect's house- I swear Henner tries an accent out of nowhere, and it never occurs again. The film is so padded, I forgot Morton and Atherton were in this until the second half of the film. I'm not sure the novel is as silly as the plot, and don't look up the film's credits online or else a big plot twist will be ruined. The novel's plot might make for a challenging screenwriting exercise. This should have been tightened up, recast, and written with two strong female leads instead of what we get- a semi-edgy basic cable "event." I'll gladly forget "Gone But Not Forgotten."
-Contains strong physical violence, gun violence, some sexual violence, gore, mild profanity, brief sexual content, sexual references, adult situations, drug abuse, alcohol and tobacco use