THIS IS THE ORIGINAL PERSONAL SIGNED SCRIPT OF COREY HAIM FROM THE MOVIE "WITHOUT MALICE".
RECEIVED DIRECTLY FROM THE SET WITH COA BY COREY HAIM
PLOT SUMMARY:
Two men try to cover up an accident with a lie and find that the lie makes the accident seem that much worse in this tense drama. Paul Venters (Craig Sheffer) is a self-centered plastic surgeon who is soon to be married to beautiful Susan (Gabrielle Anwar), but doesn't get along very well with his fiancée's family, particularly Susan's brother Marty (Corey Haim), an ex-con who is trying to stay clean after beating a nasty drug habit.
To appease his future wife, Paul tries to mend fences with Marty by inviting him along for a camping trip in the Canadian wilderness. While looking for elk, Paul sees a large bear that's heading towards Marty; thinking the animal is about to attack, Paul fires several shots at the bear, but one of them manages to kill a nearby forest ranger on patrol.
Afraid that no one will believe the truth -- especially given Marty's past arrest record -- Paul and Marty cook up a fraudulent story to explain the ranger's death, but when park warden Samantha Wilkes (Jennifer Beals) looks into the case, their web of lies begins to unravel, with dangerous consequences.
Filmed on location in Canada, Without Malice also features Ian Black and Blaine Hart.
BIOGRAPHY OF COREY HAIM:
A teenage heartthrob in the 1980s, baby-faced Corey Haim appeared to be the kinder and gentler of the two Coreys; he was the good guy whereas Corey Feldman was the rebel. As a child, the "Haimster" appeared in TV shows and commercials in his native Canada until he made his film debut in the drama Firstborn at the age of 11.
Many TV movies followed, including his award-winning role as Liza Minelli's son dying of muscular dystrophy in A Time to Live. After playing Sally Field's son in Murphy's Romance, he was old enough to star in the teen drama Lucas with Charlie Sheen and Winona Ryder.
In 1987, Haim made his first co-starring appearance with Feldman in Joel Schumacher's teen vampire movie The Lost Boys. Whether they were friends or rivals, the Coreys co-starred in two more teen movies together: License to Drive and Dream a Little Dream.
They later reunited for Blown Away, National Lampoon's Last Resort, Dream a Little Dream 2, and Feldman's directorial debut, Busted. At the peak of their popularity with preteen audiences, rumors began circulating about their apparent drug and alcohol addictions. In order to combat this image, Haim released a video diary in 1990 called Me, Myself & I, which featured him in an array of family-friendly activities. For the rest of the '90s, he laid low in straight-to-video teen movies, including The Dream Machine, Oh, What a Night, Just One of the Girls, and Fast Getaway. In 1997, he declared bankruptcy and wouldn't make another movie until 2000, when he played an ex-con trying to kick drugs in the thriller Without Malice.