BBC HomeExplore the BBC
Just to let you know, we're no longer updating this site. More information here

29 November 2009
Accessibility help
Text only
WiltshireWiltshire

BBC Homepage
»BBC Local
Wiltshire
Things to do
People & Places
Nature
History
Religion & Ethics
Arts and Culture
BBC Introducing
TV & Radio

Sites near Wiltshire

Berkshire
Bristol
Dorset
Gloucestershire
Hampshire
Oxford
Somerset

Related BBC Sites

England
 

Contact Us

Like this page?
Send it to a friend!

 
Godsend
15 Godsend (2004)

updated 30 June 2004
reviewer's rating
3 out of 5
Reviewed by Jamie Russell
average user rating
3 Star


Director
Nick Hamm
Writer
Mark Bomback
Stars
Greg Kinear
Rebecca Romijn-Stamos
Robert De Niro
Cameron Bright
Jenny Levine
Length
102 minutes
Distributor
Pathe
Cinema
02 July 2004
Country
USA
Genre
Horror
Thriller
Web Links
Official site


Rate This Film
What did you think of this film?
Select your star rating from the options below
 

Star Rating: 1  1
Star Rating: 2  2
Star Rating: 3  3
Star Rating: 4  4
Star Rating: 5  5
Average star rating: 3 from 297 votes

Welcome to the clone zone: splicing together the celluloid DNA of The Omen, Jacob's Ladder and The Sixth Sense, Godsend is a supernatural chiller that's so formulaic its tagline could have been e=mc2. Greg Kinnear and Rebecca Romijn-Stamos star as bereaved parents who foolishly let Robert De Niro clone their dead son Adam (Cameron Bright), using some dodgy genetics. Somewhere along the way, X and Y-chromosomes get blended into alphabet soup and the nipper returns with an evil stare that even the demonic Damien would be frightened of.

"If you lost what you loved most in this world, what would you be willing to do to get it back?" is the question posed by the script as it toys with ripped-from-the-headlines fears about genetic engineering. It's a high concept premise, but it's one that the movie quickly drops in favour of an old-fashioned spookfest in which ghosts replace genomes, and Adam Mk II starts seeing dead people.

"EERIE SENSE OF MENACE"

Crafting some sphincter-tightening shock sequences, British director Nick Hamm is more interested in establishing an eerie sense of menace than in grappling with the film's mad science (given just how mad the science is, that really is a godsend). An expert at the kind of jumpy scares that will make most audiences spend more time in the air than their seats, Hamm turns everyday locations like bathrooms and bedroom closets into sites of terror, as hands, faces, and claw hammers loom into frame at unexpected moments.

Major kudos deserves to be given to the cast, who approach the material with lip-tight seriousness. As the bereaved identikit parents, Kinnear blubs his eyes out manfully while Romijn-Stamos (better known as blue-painted Mystique from X-Men) proves that she can act with her clothes on. Best of all, De Niro manages - for the first time since Jackie Brown - to look more like an actor than a sleepwalker. Pint-sized Bright, meanwhile, plays the spooky, sallow-faced nipper to perfection.

Find out more about "Godsend" at
Movie Review Query Engine
The Internet Movie Database


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites

line
Top | Films and TV Index | Home

Search for a film
Listings for all Wiltshire's cinemas

Search by film name
Search by cinema e.g. Odeon

All of tonight's films (alphabetical list)
Tomorrow's films

The BBC cannot be held responsible for any changes to cinema showings and times not indicated here.

CONTACT

BBC Wiltshire
Broadcasting House
56-58 Prospect Place
Swindon
Wilts
SN1 3RW
Telephone: 01793 513626
E-mail: wiltshire@bbc.co.uk

 




About the BBC | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy