16 and Missing (TV Movie 2015) Poster

(2015 TV Movie)

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6/10
MOMMY'S JOB IS TO KEEP PEOPLE SAFE
nogodnomasters1 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Mom (Ashley Scott) is an FBI agent. Her first husband (Jay Pickett) was murdered which is something that develops in a subplot as the film goes along. She has remarried Daniel (David Starzyk) a nice guy who hasn't molested his teen step-daughter Abbey (Lizze Broadway) a major league drama queen. After an incident where her half-brothers/step brothers (?) knock an empty plastic dish out of her hands, and they are not flogged, she has a snit and leaves home to go be with her 23 year old on-line boyfriend Gavin (Mark Hapka) who she was never met, but we now get more flashback scenes to that fateful night.

This is a TV-14 Lifetime film meaning the drama is inflated and all the twists have been so overdone before, it is hard not to see them coming. Like an Asylum film, I have come to the conclusion the faux-drama Lifetime Films should have their own rating system for those you like Lifetime films (i.e. I am tied of giving them one star all the time).

The beginning of the film throws at you a bunch of facts and then the drama action comes hot and heavy. Afterwards things settle down mom quickly finds out where her daughter went, who she is with, and has the FBI backing her up, not waiting for 24 hours, or the fact she is technically a runaway and not abducted. Yes, such is the real world.

TV-14. implied sex. Lizze Broadway bra. And why do I always meet Chris Hansen on my Internet dates? 6 stars on the Lifetime Scale
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5/10
Finally, believable motivations and situations from a TV movie! Good job Michael Feifer!!
vnssyndrome895 September 2023
"16 AND MISSING" Should be called, "When Parenting Goes Wrong..." (TV Movie 2015) People! If You Don't Understand the Art Form of MELODRAMA, STOP WATCHING THEM!

BASIC PLOT: Abby (Lizze Broadway), is a confused, miserable girl, who just turned sixteen. It should be a happy time, her mother even bought her a car, but it's not. Abby is haunted by the death of her father, a trauma she witnessed, when she was only six. He was murdered right in front of her, and she would have been killed too, if not for a thunderstorm, which hid her from the killer.

Like most people who experience traumatic loss, Abby has never gotten over it. Her mother, Julia (Ashley Scott) who was not present when her father, Lucas (Jay Pickett), died, has moved on, and remarried. Abby wants her mother to be happy, but unfortunately, her stepfather, Daniel (David Starzyk), came with two bratty step-siblings. It has not been a happy blending, and Abby has sought solace in an online friendship with an older man. His name is Gavin (Mark Hapka), and he says he's a police officer from Arizona. They've been online friends for over two years, and he promised she could come visit once she turned sixteen. After a huge family blow-up at Abby's sixteenth birthday party, she decides the time is right, and takes off to see Gavin. He's always been caring and supportive, but is Gavin really who he says he is?

WHAT WORKS: *Decent cover art. It's not the greatest, but definitely not the worst.

*This movie has a good trailer! Wow! I'm shocked, normally, made-for-tv movie trailers are so bad, they're laughable, but this one's decent!

*Young Abby (Elle Broadway) is cast very well, she really looks like the older actress, Lizze Broadway.

*These are believable plotlines about teenagers and step relationships. Abby overreacts to her step-siblings bratty behavior, but her stepfather's defense of his own children, is a realistic scenario. Daniel (David Starzyk) has no compassion for Abby, and doesn't seem to have much interest in her, other than when her negative behavior affects him (or his children). These scenes are written well by Michael Feifer.

*As someone who's lived in grief, for the better part of my life, I would recommend avoiding Daniel's (David Starzyk) pitfall, and NEVER tell someone you know what their dead loved one, would want. Also, NEVER tell someone who's grieving, it's been enough time, get over it. Grief NEVER goes away, time heals nothing, and you'll be carrying that bag of bricks, till the day you die. People who have never experienced loss, are uncomfortable when confronted by it. They say hurtful and insensitive things, so they won't have to deal with the disstressing and awkward elephant in the room. It's upsetting and wounding to those who are grieving, and in this situation, makes the character Daniel (David Starzyk), even more unlikable, but very realistic.

*Daniel tells Julia (Ashley Scott), she has no control over her daughter. Then, his own children, let Abby run away, and say terrible things about her. This is classic transference, putting your problems on someone else, so you don't have to deal with them yourself. Daniel lets his children eat cookies for dinner, and sit on the cabinets, with only the admonition, "Don't tell Julia!" This movie works so well, because the blended family dynamics, are so realistically dysfunctional.

*This movie should have been called, "When Parenting Goes Wrong," Janelle (Stella Hudgens), Abby's best friend, demonstrates trustworthiness, by helping Abby's parents with tricks to find her. Instead of being rewarded, her parents punish her out of fear. This is also a believable trope, but the wrong thing to do as a parent.

*Julia (Ashley Scott) tells her old partner, Monte (Greg Evigan), her daughter can't be in love, because she's only 16. That's a fallacy many parents fall into, and should avoid. It will only push your child further away. But it's another plausible plot line, from Michael Feifer.

WHAT DOESN'T WORK: *Ashley Scott cannot play a badass to save her life! I am a fan of hers, but in this role (as the FBI agent, not as a mother), she's laughable. I can forgive this, because it's only a miniscule part of the movie.

TO RECOMMEND, OR NOT TO RECOMMEND, THAT IS THE QUESTION: *I would definitely recommend this movie to those who understand and enjoy the art form of melodrama. I'd also recommend this to people who enjoy made-for-tv movies about dysfunctional family dynamics. It does both well, and is an enjoyable ride.

CLOSING NOTES: *This is a made-for-tv movie, please keep that in mind before you watch\rate it. TV movies have a much lower budget, and so your expectations should be adjusted.

*I have no connection to the film, or production in ANY way. I am just an honest viewer, who wishes for more straight forward reviews. Hope I helped you out. I have a background in psychology, hope my insights aren't too clinical.
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2/10
At least try with the geography
jentaulbee31 August 2019
First, it's pronounced Prescut (even though it's spelled Prescott). Second, it's not a farm community west of Phoenix. It's north of Phoenix and a very cool place. Goodness, if you're going to write this drivel of a movie, at least get your geographical facts correct.
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1/10
Laughable. Don't bother.
sybil1121 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Caught this on TV. Wow, it was completely at rock bottom as soon as they did the flashback scene. When the girl's mum shot Wesley Sr. It was a laughably, poorly constructed & dumb scene. I actually laughed out loud. This is a terrible movie & I don't often rate movies poorly.
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Yet again
haroot_azarian27 May 2021
Yet another spoiled ungrateful brat movie. I am just wondering how many movies Ashley and Jay have co-starred in? I think it might be three.
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1/10
Terrible actress
scholula3 March 2019
The movie itself isn't bad except for Abby ....painfully terrible actress
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1/10
I JUST CAN'T! 🙄
bronzesrv7 January 2020
What a sixteen-year-old insensitive ungrateful whiny little brat! After 23 minutes I couldn't take anymore absolutely disgusting let her go missing and stay missing. The way she treats her stepdad and little brother and sister was atrocious. She gets a brand new car with a bow for her birthday, turns around and she mistreats her best friend for warning her not to go off with some guy twice her age who she thinks is a cop she's been talking to on the internet, because her sibling knocked a cup over and didn't get the hell beat out of them. What crap! And the main actress is absolutely hideous! I wanted to knock the hell out of her the first few minutes of the movie.🙄
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1/10
Perfect makeup???
myssmichelepayne4 January 2022
Why is this teens makeup perfect throughout the entire movie even after a long road trip, sleeping a few times and getting kissy kissy with this guy ???? Ugh corny predictable movie.
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8/10
The Truth About Chatterama.com
lavatch10 March 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Julia was a tough-as-nails FBI agent, who was forced to kill her partner, a dirty cop, in a shootout. But she paid the price when the son of the deceased partner returns to kill her husband. Ten years later, the son seeks more revenge by wooing Julia's sixteen-year-old daughter Abbey from a correctional facility on an ap called Chatterama.com.

The naive Abbey believes that she has met her true love in Gavin. Frustrated that her mom remarried and the new husband brought two kids in tow, Abbey is used to being pampered by her overindulgent mom. Clearly, Julia has overcompensated in her child rearing due to the trauma of little Abbey witnessing the brutal beating of her father. In an early scene in the film, we see a spoiled brat who is given a birthday present of a new Chevy SUV.

Unbeknownst to her mother, Abbey has developed a two-year online relationship with Gavin on Chatterama.com. Little does Abbey know that his real name is Wesley Sherman, Jr., the son of Julia's corrupt partner. In reality, Wesley, Jr. is a predator and a pervert, luring Abbey to come live with him in Arizona. The starry-eyed teen jumps in her brand new Chevy and heads to Prescott.

The race is now on for Julia to get back in the saddle with her investigative work and to track down the nefarious creature who has taken advantage of her daughter. The most dicey scene in the film is when Wesley, Jr. attempts to seduce Abbey, but acquiesces to her request to "go slowly." The mom gets a lucky tip from a bystander and makes a beeline for Wesley, Jr.

The most interesting character in the film was Wesley, Jr. who was capable of laying on the charm. He seemed to have a genuine soft side that was never given the opportunity to blossom because of the death of his lout of a father. He then misplaced the blame on Julia without taking a look hard look at the flaws of his father.

The filmmakers made the choice of presenting Abbey's odyssey with some beautiful panoramic footage of Arizona. The saga of Romeo and Juliet is mentioned once by Wesley, Jr. in a grotesque distortion of the reality of his predatory relationship with young Abbey. For her part, Abbey seems contrite enough after the heroic action of her mom. But when the sixteen-year-old makes the vow of "No boys until I'm eighteen" at the close of the film, one senses the hollowness of that resolution. If only she can refrain from logging on to Chatterama.com!
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1/10
Bad casting/acting
matt923731 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Bad casting! There is no way the kidnapper is the the one who killed the girl's dad. That happened ten years prior and he looks younger in the current time. And of course let's not forget to mention the typical horrible acting in another Lifetime movie.
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8/10
Plausible scenario and quite a good lesson
phd_travel27 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
In a not unlikely scenario a 16 year old teen girl is upset with her mother's remarriage drives off to meet her online older boyfriend in small town Arizona. Many years ago father was murdered. Lifetime regular Ashley Scott is mom and former FBI agent. Lizzie Broadway plays the teen quite well she's convincing without being annoying. Mark Hapka plays the older online predator who pretends to be a cop.

This could and probably has happened so it's not one of those far fetched LIfetime thrillers. It's quite fun to see them chase her down. Like the bff who has more common sense and tries to talk her into coming back. Funny how she gets a lesson when she reaches Arizona. There is a link which connects the past to the present.

Worth a watch.
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