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Joshua

 
Movies:

Joshua

 
  • Director: George Ratliff
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Psychological Thriller
  • Themes: Evil Children, Child Prodigies, Mind Games
  • Main Cast: Sam Rockwell, Vera Farmiga, Celia Weston, Dallas Roberts, Michael McKean
  • Release Year: 2007
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 105 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Sam Rockwell and Vera Farmiga star in director George Ratliff's uncomfortable psychological thriller Joshua, as Brad and Abby Cairn, an affluent young stockbroker and his wife, raising children in New York City. Their firstborn, the nine-year-old Joshua (Jacob Kogan) is a frighteningly intelligent child - to such a degree that he thinks and acts decades ahead of his age. Nearly always clad in formal wear and demonstrating limitless brilliance as a pianist - with a marked predilection for "dissonant" classical pieces - Joshua gravitates toward his gay aesthete uncle (Dallas Roberts) as a close friend, but distances himself from his immediate kith - particularly when Abby brings a newborn baby sister home from the hospital and unwisely alienates the young tyke. As the days pass, one at a time, the mood at the house regresses from healthy and happy to strange, unsettled and disorienting; meanwhile, bizarre events transpire. As the baby's whines drive an already strained Abby to the point of a nervous breakdown, Joshua devolves from eccentric to downright sociopathic behavior, discarding all of his toys, disemboweling a stuffed animal, and killing off pets. One at a time, family members also begin to suffer tragic fates - but are they Joshua's fevered and psychotic doings or merely the result of happenstance? ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide

Review

The psycho kid flick -- from The Bad Seed to The Good Son -- tends to wallow in precocious camp and cheap devil child thrills. George Ratliff's Joshua attempts to revitalize the genre by injecting an element of realism. When his mom Abby (Vera Farmiga) and dad Brad (Sam Rockwell) give birth to a baby girl, Joshua (Jacob Kogan) starts to worry that not only will he have to share attention with his sister, but that his flowering sociopath tendencies will alienate him from his parents. A Bartok-loving piano prodigy who is terrible at sports and a model student, Joshua is the kind of sensitive but bright young boy routinely ostracized for his intelligence. He worries about being "weird," a stranger in his own home. Could such a kid really be ripe for serial killing? At its scariest, during the slow build of off screen "accidents," Joshua plays off the neuroses of the child's neo-yuppie Upper East Side parents. Abby, acting out a kind of post-partum Rosemary's Baby, gradually goes insane trying to care for the newborn, who won't stop crying, and Brad soon follows. Is Joshua threatening the baby? Rockwell delivers the most tonally appropriate performance as Brad, the kind of well-meaning iPod sporting dad, who is sympathetic and annoyingly self-centered at the same time. There is a dirty thrill in watching his world fall apart. But the insanity quickly gets irritating. There's a lot of screeching. Whether or not a parent is acting "crazy" in a given scene is indicated by their hair sticking up in thick-gelled clumps. But the primary problem is that Joshua's psychological manipulations takes place almost entirely off screen. This works at the beginning, when the slow moving dolly shots and teasing frames play with our anxieties. But the tension never builds past the first act, there are no confrontations with the child, and all we are left with is his silent presence -- no longer enigmatic but frustratingly inert. The end result is neither realistic, campy, or scary, just boring and ridiculous. ~ Michael Buening, All Movie Guide

Cast

Jacob Kogan - Joshua Cairn; Nancy Giles - Betsy Polsheck; Linda Larkin - Ms. Danforth; Alex Draper - Stewart Slocum; Stephanie Roth Haberle - Pediatrician; Ezra Barnes - Fred Solomon; Jodie Markell - Ruth Solomon; Rufus Collins - Henry Abernathy; Haviland Morris - Monique Abernathy; Tom Bloom - Joe Cairn; Antonia Stout - Museum Staffer; Randy Ryan - Soccer Dad; Evan Seligman - Soccer Teammate; Patrick Henney - Singing Boy; Gurdeep Singh - Cabbie; Nicholas Guidry - Bike Messenger; Darrill Rosen - Homeless Man; Daniel Jenkins - Minister; Erik M. Solky - Park Patron; Shianne Kolb - Cairn, Lily; Lacey Vill

Credit

Katya DeBear - Art Director, Thomas Fatone - Associate Producer, Julie Stalker-Wilde - Boom Operator, Patricia Kerrigan DiCerto - Casting, Cory Azriliant - Consultant/advisor, Nico Muhly - Conductor, George Paaswell - Co-producer, Astrid Brucker - Costume Designer, Thomas Fatone - First Assistant Director, George Ratliff - Director, Jacob Craycroft - Editor, Daniel O'Meara - Executive Producer, George Paaswell - Executive Producer, Temple Fennell - Executive Producer, Ryan Smith - Location Manager, Nico Muhly - Composer (Music Score), Ludovic Littee - Camera Operator, Manuel Billeter - Camera Operator, Roshelle Berliner - Production Designer, Benoit Debie - Cinematographer, Johnathan Dorfman - Producer, Dan Bora - Recording, Ken Ishii - Sound/Sound Designer, Abigail Savage - Sound/Sound Designer, Manny Siverio - Stunts Coordinator, Bergen Swanson - Unit Production Manager, George Ratliff - Screenwriter, David Gilbert - Screenwriter, Susan Humphrey - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Birds & Animals UK - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Ludovic Littee - First Assistant Camera, Shawn Greene - Gaffer, Aida B. Artieda - Grip, Vance Tucker - Grip, Girolamo Tuzzolino - Grip, Caswell Cooke - Key Grip, Nick Mongelli, Jr. - Key Grip, Dan Bora - Music Producer, Mia Lee - Post Production Supervisor, Betty Chin - Production Coordinator, Yolan Fisher - Properties Master, Tom Efinger - Re-Recording Mixer, Sharon Watt - Script Supervisor, Patrick Gibbons - Second Assistant Director, Jo Jo Whilden - Still Photographer, Adriano Valle - Art Department Assistant, Jacci Fredenburg - Assistant Costumer Designer, Nathaniel Braeuer - Assistant Location Manager, Marisa Vrooman - Assistant Location Manager, Joseph Farulla - Assistant Makeup, Jeremy Crane - Assistant Production Coordinator, Bentley Wood - Assistant Properties, Josh Taylor - Best Boy Electric, Luis Colon - Best Boy Grip, Randy Schwartz - Camera Loader, Yueni Zander - Camera Loader, Lois Drabkin - Casting Associate, Richard Tenewitz - Construction Coordinator, Dave Ellinwood - Dialogue Editor, Jon Vendetti - Dolly Grip, Jeff Niggemeyer - Electrician, George Selden - Electrician, Sean Taylor - Electrician, Lee Genick - Extra Casting, Syliva Fay Casting - Extra Casting, Amyjoy Clark - First Assistant Accountant, Les Bloom - Foley Artist, Craig Spencer - Foley Editor, Sharon Ilson - Key Make-up, Stephen Finkin - Leadman, Niya Allen - Post Production Assistant, Stephanie Wu - Post Production Assistant, William Gilfillan - Production Accountant, Noreen Ward - Production Accountant, John Bjerklie - Scenic Artist, Christopher Kay - Scenic Artist, Brett Walters - Second Assistant Camera, Kimberly Anne Thompson - Second Second Assistant Director, Michael Dickman - Set Dresser, Michael Oberholtzer - Set Dresser, Brian Wray - Set Production Assistant, Matt Maisto - Set Production Assistant, Anne Marie Dentici - Set Production Assistant, Ilana Rotenberg - Set Production Assistant, Vincent Spencer - Storyboard Artist, Mike Fennimore - Transportation Captain, Amanda Carroll - Set Decorator, Kenny Becker - Color Timing, Patrick Barile - Craft Service/Catering, EAT Catering - Craft Service/Catering, Gourmet to U - Craft Service/Catering, Angelo Pina - Craft Service/Catering, Danielle Wilson - Craft Service/Catering, Mark Dolce - Driver, Robert T. Donovan - Driver, Biyami Sak - Driver, Gabe Turiello - Driver, Mark Beattie - Generator Operator, Stan Sztaba - Negative Cutter, World Cinevision - Negative Cutter, Dennis Green - Video Playback, Navesync Incorporated - Video Playback, Jennifer Basnyat - Title Design, Jason Miller - Art Department Coordinator, Charity A. Thomas - Art Department Coordinator, Matt Giordano - Assistant Editor, Colleen Callaghan - Department Head Hair, Melissa Adeyemo - Producer's Assistant, Jeff Longo - Producer's Assistant, Andrew Rossig - Carpenter, John Jack Curtin - Additional Hair Stylist

Similar Movies

The Omen; Rosemary's Baby; The Bad Seed; The Children; The Good Son; Birth; One Hour Photo
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Wikipedia: Joshua (film)
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Joshua

Theatrical release poster
Directed by George Ratliff
Produced by Johnathan Dorfman
Written by George Ratliff
David Gilbert
Starring Sam Rockwell
Vera Farmiga
Celia Weston
Dallas Roberts
Michael McKean
Jacob Kogan
Music by Nico Muhly
Cinematography Benoît Debie
Editing by Jacob Craycroft
Release date(s) July 6, 2007
Country United States
Language English

Joshua is a 2007 psychological horror/thriller film about an affluent young Manhattan family and how they are torn apart by the increasingly sadistic behavior of their mentally disturbed son, Joshua. The film was directed by George Ratliff and stars Sam Rockwell, Vera Farmiga and Jacob Kogan. It was released on July 6, 2007 in the United States.

Plot

The movie centers around the lives of an affluent young stockbroker and his wife, Brad and Abby Cairn, raising children in New York City. Their firstborn, the nine-year-old Joshua (Jacob Kogan) is a prodigy — to such a degree that he thinks and acts decades ahead of his age. Nearly always clad in formalwear and demonstrating limitless brilliance as a pianist — with a marked predilection for "dissonant" classical pieces — Joshua gravitates toward his gay aesthete uncle (Dallas Roberts) as a close friend, but distances himself from his immediate kin — particularly when Abby brings a newborn baby sister home from the hospital.

As the days pass, bizarre events transpire as the mood at the house regresses from healthy and happy to strange and disorienting. As the baby's whines drive an already strained Abby to the point of a nervous breakdown, Joshua devolves from eccentric to downright sociopathic behavior, but the question of whether or not they are Joshua's fevered and psychotic doings or merely the result of happenstance.

Joshua causes a fight between his mother and grandmother, when he tells his parents he wants to become a Christian, even though Abby is Jewish. Abby gets very angry and swears at the grandmother, telling her to leave her house immediately.

He convinces his mother to join him in a game of hide and seek, and when she has her eyes closed counting, he takes his baby sister from her crib to hide with him, causing his mother to panic and pass out while searching for them in the empty penthouse above them, before he puts the baby back into the crib to make it look as though his mother was hallucinating the entire incident.

Later, after discussing Abby's psychological problems with his brother-in-law Ned, Brad takes two weeks off from his job to look after Abby and his children. When he arrives home, Joshua has gone to the Brooklyn Museum with his grandmother and sister. Joshua frightens his grandmother by describing to her in detail about Seth, the Egyptian God of Chaos, and his violent acts. While they are at the museum, Brad watches a video tape of Joshua scaring his baby sister with a light, making her cry. He arrives at the museum, just in time to see Joshua attempt to push his sister in her carriage down a large flight of stairs, but he stops when he is caught by his grandmother, whom he proceeds to push down the large staircase, killing her and disguising it as an accident. However, Brad is convinced Joshua pushed her and confides in Ned at the funeral.

That night, Brad installs a lock on his bedroom door and tells Joshua that Lilly will be sleeping with him, fearing Joshua will attempt to do something to his sister. That night, Joshua builds a house of blocks in the living room and provokes his father. Brad tells him he won't be able to hurt anyone else, as he now realizes he is causing trouble. Later that week, on Ned's recommendation, Brad brings a psychologist (Betsy) into the home to meet Joshua. Betsy comes to the conclusion that Joshua is being abused. Later Brad tells him he is being sent away to a boarding school, causing Joshua to run away. When Brad arrives home, he finds Joshua hiding in a cupboard, crying hysterically with a large bruise on his back. The next morning, he and Joshua go for a walk with his sister, but Joshua has stolen her pacifier, causing her to cry. When Brad confronts him, he begins to mock him, causing Brad to strike him. After Brad realizes what he did, he tries to say he is sorry, but Joshua further taunts him which drives Brad to beating his son in public, strengthening Joshua's case of abuse, and sending Brad to jail for three days, leaving Ned to take care of Joshua and his sister.

In the last scene, where the movie is concluded, it is revealed through a song that Joshua composes impromptu that everything was part of his plan to drive his parents away as he wants to live with his uncle Ned.

Music

The song featured at the end of the film and during the end credits entitled, "The Fly", was written especially for the movie by singer Dave Matthews. Matthews wrote the song as the production company of which he is a partner, 'ATO Pictures', was the production company behind the film.

Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 12 (Funeral March movement) was used widely in the film, and was learned and played by 12-year old Jacob Kogan. The Soundtrack for the movie has been written by Nico Muhly and can be downloaded via iTunes.

External links


 
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