BOTTOM
LINE:
A highly effective
horror premise is poorly handled in this mis-directed and clumsy
piece of filmmaking about a family who get their dead son back through
an ill-advised cloning experiment.
THE
GOOD: Paul (Kinnear)
and Jesse (Romijn-Stamos) are grief-stricken parents who lose their
beloved son Adam (Bright) in a tragic car accident. Not long after
the incident, an ambitious old teacher of Jesse’s, Professor
Wells (De Niro) approaches the couple with an extraordinary proposition;
to produce an exact clone of their son through an ambitious stem
cell experiment, and in essence, return their son to them. Although
outraged at first, the couple implausibly agree and the procedure
goes smoothly. Adam is back, but after he turns eight, the age at
which the original Adam died, strange and terrible things start
to happen, all leading to a terrible truth hidden by Wells. What
makes this premise so intriguing is that it manages to hook you
on wanting to find out what is actually going on. The film follows
some conventional horror film devices which seem to suggest either
a supernatural, demonic or otherworldly connection to the new Adam,
leading to a moment or two of genuine thrills. The ultimate revelation
that Wells mixed DNA from his own son in to Adam which is what is
causing his split-personality behaviour is another good and surprise
addition to the plot, and unexpected given the supernatural overtones
to the scenes. Cameron Bright is great as Adam; he does not look
right from the outset and manages to act in a very chilling way
when the film calls for it. The film has some nice images, particularly
set in the country-side town that Wells practices in, and overall
establishes an unsettling but mysterious atmosphere.
THE
BAD: “Godsend”
suffers from a number of implausibilities and a clumsily executed
climax. One might find it hard to believe that a couple would willingly
agree to an illegal cloning experiment to resurrect their child who
just died, but the filmmakers fail to make this believable, even though
they hint at the emotional vulnerability of the couple in question
and how they might be susceptible to a suggestion from a seemingly
old friend in Wells. Plot points are never followed up on, like how
Adam kills a class mate but no police or any one else asks any questions
as to what happened, or how the family move to a new city to make
a new start but fail to remember that the evil DNA is still part of
Adam and can re-surface at any time to start everything all over again
(hint, sequel). Wells must have an endless supply of money as once
he is found out, he moves to another location, sets up his cloning
shop (presumably an expensive shop to setup!), to prey on a new unsuspecting
couple out of the spotlight of any one who may question what he doing.
The subplot involving Wells’ son and his evil deeds is not effectively
tied in to the plot, leaving a number of unanswered questions, starting
with the Nanny who felt she had to kill him. The climax is a horrid
mess, suggesting that the filmmakers were split on how to end the
film. At one point, Wells bashes Paul with a big crucifix, and you
saw lots of blood spilling from the back of his head on the floor,
and then a few short scenes later, Paul is up and well and arrives
just in time to save Jesse from Adam, apparently all stitched up as
there are no signs of blood any where around his head or neck. Issues
like these kill what could have been an intriguing film, but unfortunately,
they do just that.