The Children (2008 film)
The Children | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Tom Shankland |
Produced by |
Allan Niblo James Richardson |
Written by |
Tom Shankland (screenplay) Paul Andrew Williams (story) |
Starring |
Eva Birthistle Hannah Tointon |
Music by | Stephen Hilton |
Cinematography | Nanu Segal |
Edited by | Tim Murrell |
Production company | |
Distributed by |
Vertigo Films (UK) Icon Productions (Australia) Ghost House Underground (US) |
Release dates |
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Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Children is a 2008 British horror thriller film directed by Tom Shankland and starring Eva Birthistle and Hannah Tointon.[1]
Plot
Casey (Hannah Tointon), a rebellious teenage girl, is travelling with her mother Elaine (Eva Birthistle), her stepfather Jonah (Stephen Campbell Moore), and her two younger half-siblings, Miranda (Eva Sayer) and Paulie (William Howes), to spend the New Year holiday at the secluded home of Elaine's sister, Chloe (Rachel Shelley). Chloe, her husband Robbie (Jeremy Sheffield), and their two young children, Nicky (Jake Hathaway) and Leah (Raffiella Brooks), welcome their visitors. Shortly after arriving, Paulie begins vomiting, which the adults believe is due to travel sickness.
As the night progresses, Nicky and Leah also begin to show symptoms of an illness. Leah's vomit has strange bacteria in it. As everyone goes to bed, the family cat, Jinxie, goes missing. Casey back at the woods, makes plans with her friends to escape and attend a party when she hears Jinxie snarl. But she is not able to locate the cat. By the next day, all of the children have become infected. At dinner, Miranda becomes violent, scratching Chloe and ruining the food. While Jonah tries to comfort Miranda upstairs, Robbie takes the rest of the children outside to play in the snow. Nicky places a garden rake in Robbie's path while he is sledging, which slices open Robbie's head on impact. The children scream, drawing the attention of Casey, Jonah, Elaine and Chloe. Elaine phones an ambulance, but Robbie quickly dies of his injuries.
Elaine locks the front door of the house to prevent the children getting in. She climbs up the stairs to release Casey. As Elaine reaches the door, Leah and Nicky sneak into the house through the cat flap and corner her. Elaine realises she cannot kill the children. Casey breaks through the door and impales Nicky with a piece of wood. Leah escapes. Casey and Elaine escape from the house in another car. They find Jonah's car has crashed into a tree. Casey exits the car and finds that Jonah has been thrown through the windscreen by the impact and is slowly dying. Miranda then ambushes her but Elaine kills Miranda with the car. Casey begins vomiting. As Elaine and Casey speed away from the scene, other infected children begin to appear in the woods, together with Leah. Meanwhile, Casey begins exhibiting signs that she also is infected.
Cast
- Eva Birthistle as Elaine
- Stephen Campbell Moore as Jonah
- Hannah Tointon as Casey
- Eva Sayer as Miranda
- William Howes as Paulie
- Rachel Shelley as Chloe
- Jeremy Sheffield as Robbie
- Rafiella Brookes as Leah
- Jake Hathaway as Nicky
Critical response
The film opened to generally positive reviews from UK critics. The Guardian writer Phelim O'Neill said, "the violence is skilfully enough executed to make you think you see much more than you actually do and the fundamentally disturbing and creepy aspects about such random and unpredictable child-centric mayhem are always present, no matter how ludicrously intense and darkly humorous things get".[2]
As of February 2011, review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives it a 79% approval rating based on 14 reviews.[3]
Box office
The film opened at no.10 in the UK, grossing only £98,205 at 132 cinemas. In the weeks after its release, the film dropped to no.13 and then again to no.22.
References
- ↑ "Tom Shankland Talks The Children". DreadCentral.
- ↑ O'Neill, Phelim (5 December 2008). "Film review: The Children". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
- ↑ The Children at Rotten Tomatoes
External links
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