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Godsend

 
Movies:

Godsend

  • Director: Nick Hamm
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Psychological Thriller, Sci-Fi Horror
  • Themes: Experiments Gone Awry, Doctors and Patients, Death of a Child
  • Main Cast: Greg Kinnear, Rebecca Romijn, Robert De Niro, Cameron Bright, Marcia Bennett
  • Release Year: 2004
  • Country: CA/US
  • Run Time: 102 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Paul (Greg Kinnear) and Jessie Duncan (Rebecca Romijn-Stamos) have barely begun the grieving process when Dr. Richard Wells (Robert De Niro) attends the funeral of the Duncans' eight-year-old son, Adam (Cameron Bright), with a pressing question in tow. Head of the Godsend Fertility Clinic, Dr. Wells claims he can use Adam's rapidly dying cells to clone a replica of the boy, though the necessary DNA will only be viable for another 24 hours. The process in itself is completely illegal; not only must Jessie and Paul be forced to relocate, but they will also be forced to sever all ties with friends and family in order to ensure the secret remains so. Within the space of a day, the Duncans consider the legal and ethical implications of such a procedure, ultimately deciding that their love for Adam is enough to trump the law and any high-minded philosophical questions. After resettling in an idyllic town near Dr. Wells' clinic, Jessie is impregnated with the late Adam's living cells, while Paul is given a beautiful home and a more than suitable job. Shortly afterward, the new Adam -- seemingly identical to the original Adam in every way -- is born and lives a life quite similar to his predecessor until the morning of his eighth birthday. A series of night terrors is the first thing to disturb the Duncans' otherwise serene lifestyle. Adam's violent visions eventually mutate to ill temper, and an aura of menace permeates the aura of a boy who had otherwise been sweetness incarnate from the day of his birth. Eventually, Paul discovers that Dr. Wells is not a pediatrician, but a geneticist, and that their playing God may have been a Faustian bargain of epic proportions. ~ Tracie Cooper, All Movie Guide

Cast

Zoie Palmer - Susan Pierce; Janet Bailey - Cora Williams; Devon Bostick - Zachary Clark Wells; Deborah Odell - Tanya; Merwin Mondesir - Maurice; Raoul Bhaneja - Samir Miklat; Jenny Levine - Sandra Shaw; Jake Simons - Dan Sandler; Elle Downs - Clara Sandler

Credit

Laurie Mirsky - Art Director, Arvinder Grewal - Art Director, Nicholas Lepage - Art Director, Robert Ortiz - Associate Producer, Christopher Briggs - Associate Producer, Randi Hiller - Casting, Sarah Halley-Finn - Casting, Stephanie Gorin - Casting, Steve Mitchell - Co-producer, Mark Bomback - Co-producer, Suzanne McCabe - Costume Designer, Nick Hamm - Director, John Stoneham - Second Unit Director, Steve Mirkovich - Editor, Niven Howie - Editor, Michael Burns - Executive Producer, Michael Paseornek - Executive Producer, Mark Canton - Executive Producer, Eric Kopeloff - Executive Producer, Jon Feltheimer - Executive Producer, Mark Cuban - Executive Producer, Todd Wagner - Executive Producer, Brian Tyler - Composer (Music Score), Doug Kraner - Production Designer, Kramer Morgenthau - Cinematographer, Marc Butan - Producer, Cathy Schulman - Producer, Sean O'Keefe - Producer, Nigel Hutchins - Set Designer, Bill McMillan - Sound/Sound Designer, Mark Bomback - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Demon Seed; Seconds; Created to Kill; The Resurrection of Zachary Wheeler; Coma; The Omen; Damien: Omen II; The Sixth Sense; The Exorcist; Rosemary's Baby; A.I.: Artificial Intelligence; Blue Sunshine; The Omen; Cloned; Case 39
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Wikipedia: Godsend (film)
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Godsend

Godsend film poster
Directed by Nick Hamm
Produced by Marc Butan
Sean O'Keefe
Cathy Schulman
Written by Mark Bomback
Starring Greg Kinnear
Rebecca Romijn
Cameron Bright
Robert De Niro
and Christopher Britton as Dr. Lieber
Music by Brian Tyler
Distributed by Lions Gate Entertainment
Release date(s) April 30, 2004
Running time 102 minutes
Language English

Godsend is a 2004 horror/drama movie, and is directed by Nick Hamm. The score is by Brian Tyler.

As a part of the movie's promotional campaign, Lions Gate Entertainment set up a website for the fictional Godsend Institute in the movie, which claimed to be able to resurrect the dead. Lions Gate changed the website to inform people that it was only an advertisement, due to the large number of inquiries asking if they really resurrect dead family members.

The movie was evaluated by critics as being poor, receiving only 4% positive reviews on Rottentomatoes.com, and is noted for implausible plot devices.

Contents

Plot

Jessie and Paul Duncan are a happily married couple who have an eight-year-old son named Adam. However, the day after his eighth birthday, Adam is killed in a roadside accident. While leaving a church, Jessie and Paul are confronted by Dr. Richard Wells, an old teacher of Jessie's. Dr. Wells offers to clone Adam to which the Duncans reluctantly agree. Everything seems fine with the new Adam until he reaches his 8th birthday. That night he experiences a violent night terror. Dr. Wells tells Paul it is probably not serious and that after Adam II reached the age when the original Adam died his life would not be predictable anymore. From that moment on, Adam II continues to have night terrors until they become visions and he starts having them when he's wide awake.

Adam's visions are always the same: a boy named Zachary walks around in a school building while being laughed at by other children. These images alternate with images of the school burning and children screaming and the image of a woman being attacked and killed with a hammer.

One night at dinner, Jessie gets a telephone call from a parent of one the other children that goes to Adam's school, the child is missing. She tells Paul. Paul then asks what Adam was doing that day. Adam says that he was at the river, playing, when Paul asks who he was playing with Adam responds that he's, "...not supposed to say".

The next day, as the Duncans are driving on their way home over a bridge, they are slowed by a police officer. They hear over the side of the bridge the screams of a woman shouting, "My baby, my baby!" They walk to the side of the bridge to see the woman who had telephoned about her missing child the previous night screaming at the sight of her son, being retrieved by paramedics from a river where he had drowned.

By examining Adam and talking to him about his visions Paul finally finds out that the school is called Saint Pius and that Zachary's last name is Clark. With this information he manages to find a former nanny of Zachary who informs Paul that Zachary was deeply disturbed; he was bullied at school, burned it down and, in the end, he killed his mother with a hammer before setting fire to their house. Through information that the nanny reveals about Zachary's father, Paul discovers that this was none other than Dr. Wells. He realizes then that Dr. Wells mixed Adam's DNA with that of Zachary with the hope of bringing his own son back to life.

After discovering this, Paul races home and finds Adam and Jessie in the shed in the woods, he arrives just in time to stop Adam (with Zachary's personailty in control) from killing Jessie with an axe, in nearly the exact same way Zachary's mother was killed with the hammer. Adam's personality manages to regain control and everything seems to be okay.

In an attempt to shake the psychological transitions from Adam to Zachary, the Duncans move to a different neighbourhood. All seems well, Adam is friendly and happy, but as soon as his dad leaves him alone in one of the rooms, Adam hears a noise in the closet. He goes over to it, opens it, and sees nothing; he then turns around to leave, but then a slightly burnt and decayed arm, wearing the jersey that Zachary always did in the vision, reaches out from the darkness of the closet and pulls him in. Paul comes back to check on him, looks in the closet, and doesn't see anybody, but Adam is behind him. It's indicated that Zachary has regained control.

Trivia

The filmmakers included a scene from the 1977 Robert Wise film "Audrey Rose," a film with a similar plot.[1] This scene was included in one of the night terrors.

Cast

References

External links


 
 

 

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