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Godsend (2004)
by Joe Steiff Joe's last review was of the film 'Hellboy.' Is there a pattern emerging here? Hmmm...
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Okay, by now you've heard me say several times that the best horror films reflect society's (often hidden) anxieties about social issues and technological advancements. The worst - well, they fail to capture the imagination and often become laughable, as they lose faith in their premise and substitute a variety of stock machinations that destroys any sense of credibility. Such is the case of 2004's Godsend (not to be confused with two previous films by that name).
Here's what's depressing about Godsend - it could have been this year's The Sixth Sense or The Omen or The Exorcist or even Frailty or any other film that has effectively used a young child (usually a boy) as the center of a horrific and disturbing story. In fact, the initial premise of the film is timely, evocative and literally haunting: parents clone their dead child, never telling him, until the child reaches the age the original version died and strange things start happening. This premise has a wealth of story material to work with, subject matter worthy of a dramatic treatment (even a fantastical one such as A.I.). That Godsend's approach is horror only adds to the possibilities, at least until the film starts going into negative sums because writer Mark Bomback abandons his original idea to throw in over-the-top evil scientist clichés and a plot twist that is so absurd that it becomes laughable. Let's hope his Die Hard 4 script is better, otherwise Bruce Willis better be running now.
I would talk about the performances, but I'm sure none of these people want to be reminded that they made this film (Robert De Niro especially). Cameron Bright (as both versions of Adam) comes off the best here, in that creepy child-who-knows-too-much kind of way. His performance is the pivot point that's strong enough to make a story like this work. Unfortunately, the writers, directors and other actors left him playing by himself. Joe Steiff has heard that there were 5 different endings considered (or even shot) for this film. That's kind of like taking a vacation road trip with no destination - most people don't do this for a reason: they don't want to end up someplace they don't like or come back feeling like they wasted their precious free time. If only producers operated in the same mode.
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