Silencing Mary

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Silencing Mary
Silencing Mary.jpg
Directed by Craig R. Baxley
Written bySteve Johnson
Produced byKay Hoffman
Starring Melissa Joan Hart
CinematographyJoão Fernandes
Edited bySonny Baskin
Music by Gary Chang
Production
companies
Distributed by NBC
Release date
March 8, 1998
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Silencing Mary is a 1998 American television film directed by Craig R. Baxley and written by Steve Johnson. It stars Melissa Joan Hart as a college newspaper reporter determined to get justice after her best friend is raped by one of the school's star athletes.

Contents

The film was produced by Hartbreak Films and Viacom Productions and filmed in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It aired on NBC in the United States on March 8, 1998.

Plot

Mary Stuartson is a college student who works as a reporter for the college newspaper. She is involved with a case, regarding possibly a few football players having hacked the computer of a professor to steal an upcoming test. Her best friend Holly is involved with one of the hackers, Billy, and one night at a party, she is raped by Clay Roberts, one of the athletes. She admits to Mary what happened, telling her that she tried to push him away and scream. She refuses to report it to the police and starts to think it was her own fault. She does go to the dean, however, but he seems to respond in Clay's favor. Holly took a test after the rape, for further proof, but she made the mistake of first taking a shower. Because of this, there is no physical evidence that she was raped.

Holly tries to forget what happened, but Mary is determined that justice is served. She goes to the police, but they can't help her because the university system found Clay innocent. She discovers that last year, there were twenty-six reports of rapes, but only two of them resulted in charges. The mild university system frustrates Mary, and she thinks that Clay is especially treated softly because he is an important quarterback. She confronts him, but he states that Holly wanted to sleep with him and that he turned her down. She soon starts writing an article about the rape, but one of the student reports finds it and shows it to Clay. Not much later she is first attacked by a group of men wearing balaclavas. She is convinced Clay is responsible, but they all have alibis.

Meanwhile, Holly starts receiving threat letters and she is almost going over the edge. Mary decides to quit the investigation, but she soon starts to feel as if she has failed. Her parents suggest her to apply for another university, offering their retirement money. Mary refuses, however, explaining she can't leave everything behind. It doesn't take long for Mary to start reporting again and from there on, the threats start coming again. This time Mary's boyfriend David is the victim, getting hard treatment from his fellow basketball players. Meanwhile, Mary angers the dean by printing an article in which she reveals that most rape reports last year didn't result in charges. As a response, her car is dumped at a nearby lake.

Later, Holly announces she will drop out of college. Clay spots Billy talking to Mary and later gets mad at him. Billy confronts him with the rape, but Clay assures him he isn't guilty. Meanwhile, Mary finds the dress Holly wore on the night of the rape and brings it to the police. It is soon discovered that there are sperm samples on the dress. On the night of a big football game, Clay is arrested and Mary is able to stay in college.

Cast

Production

Silencing Mary, originally titled Campus Justice, was based on an idea by star Melissa Joan Hart's sister Trisha Hart, who is credited as co-producer. The film was produced for NBC by Hartbreak Films, headed by their mother Paula Hart, [1] in association with Viacom Productions. [2] Filming took place in Vancouver in May 1997. [3]

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References

  1. Variety Staff (February 27, 1997). "Viacom inks telepic deal with Hartbreak". Variety . Retrieved October 22, 2020.
  2. Horst, Carole (March 5, 1998). "Silencing Mary". Variety. Retrieved October 22, 2020.
  3. Edwards, Ian (May 5, 1997). "B.C. Scene: Kissed by success: Stopkewich film makes necrophilia pay". Playback . Retrieved October 22, 2020.