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      The Cradle

      2007 1h 30m Mystery & Thriller Horror List
      Reviews 17% Audience Score 250+ Ratings Frank (Lukas Haas) and Julie (Emily Hampshire) move to a small town with their infant, Sam (Ellisa Madeline Marks), seeking a peaceful life. But their neighbors are unfriendly, and Frank is plagued by terrifying dreams about the death of his son. When Julie falls ill, Frank turns to a local midwife, Helen (Amanda Smith), for help with caring for their baby -- and he begins to uncover the story of a child buried alive years before, whose evil spirit seeks vengeance on his family. Read More Read Less

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      The Cradle

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      Audience Reviews

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      Audience Member This was a very good movie. It was a movie were I kept wondering whats going to happen next. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/28/19 Full Review Audience Member This is a psychological thriller or psychological terror. It's WONDERFUL but you HAVE to struggle through the very very slow first 45 minutes or so. It's the last 30 or 45 that just RIP out your ?....especially if you have kids, have every dealt with loss, PPD..etc. It's really really good Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/15/23 Full Review Audience Member This one gets usually pretty poor reviews but I found it quite disturbing in places and that is a good sign for any horror. The movie is like a slow burner and it might actually be too slow for most peoples taste but certainly watchable and with an effective ending twist. Although low budget, it's in fact far better than a lot of (expensive) mainstream horror. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/14/23 Full Review Audience Member meh it was an ok movie the best part about it was that it was shot in hamilton ontario :) Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 01/15/23 Full Review Audience Member these baby-room-with-baby-monitor-and-ghost movies are scaring the crap out of me. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 01/21/23 Full Review Audience Member *** SPOILERS AHEAD! * * * This is a lovely and sad film about postpartum depression and young parents pressed beyond endurance by factors outside their control. The negative reception of this film by critical viewers was made possible by the film's own misguided promotion as a supernatural horror tale when it is in fact a strong psychological drama with possible paranormal elements. The picture of a creepy old hand poised menacingly over a cradle on the DVD cover invites the wrong viewing audience who will, of course, be disappointed in the film based on their reasonable expectations. My sense is that this storyline began with one plot and someone during the development of the film decided to intertwine another plot that would boost DVD sales. What a mistake that was! The secondary plot of a reclusive old woman haunted by a childhood memory nearly killed this movie. But if you are able to watch the film without anticipating the arrival of a sinister murderous ghost, you will be rewarded by a very different story. I enjoyed this film more the second time I watched it, knowing that what actually happens at the end of the film explains the importance of everything up to that point. If you don't understand or anticipate the actual ending of the original plot without ideas about evil spirits filling your mind, yes, the film moves too slowly and goes nowhere. But if you are anticipate the acutal ending, you will know that the film was paced perfectly! PLOT: Frank and Julie have lost their previous babies to miscarriage or stillbirth. Finally a baby boy, Sam, is born alive, but Julie is so scarred by her previous losses that she cannot bond with the surviving boy. She falls into a deep and disabling postpartum depression. Frank (played beautifully by the earnest Lukas Haas) wants to be part of a normal young family starting out fresh with their firstborn son. Perhaps in desperation to realize his dream, he brings his depressed wife and infant son to an isolated country home hoping that the relaxing environment will alleviate Julie's symptoms and allow her over time to bond with their baby. OK, enough warnings, here come the SPOILERS: The baby tragically dies (SIDS?) within the first few days of the family's arrival to their new country home. Frank is outside the house when Sam dies. When he returns indoors, he finds his dead son covered by a blanket. Carefully laid atop the blanket is a necklace, the gift he had just given Juli in appreciation of her new motherhood. It is at this point that Sam dives into a psychotic break with reality, beginning with his delusion that his son is still alive. Nearly everything that happens in the film after he discovers his dead son is either hallucination or psychotic delusion. He refuses to accept that Sam is dead. He also refuses to accept that Julie has taken her own life after discovering Sam's dead body in the cradle. He blocks out the fact that he discovered her dead body at the bottom of the waterfalls the night that Sam died. Frank exists in a dark nightmarish world where Sam lives, smiles and coos like any normal baby and Julie continues to struggle bravely with her postpartum depression. In Frank's mind, Julie at first refuses but later insists on caring for Sam. The seemingly paranormal events are probably creations of Frank's psychosis. The psychosis is mixed with actual dreams of how Sam dies. Finally, there may be a haunting in this film, but it is not the evil sister spirit. There is the possibility that Julie's ghost is real to the plot. In this reading of the film, Julie's ghost yearns for reconciliation with her dead infant, but Frank's unwillingness to accept the fact that Sam is dead somehow interferes with Julie's ability to care for Sam in a ghostly afterworld. Haas's portrayal of Frank's sweetness, confusion and great love for his family are what carry this film and make it well worth watching twice. The unnecessary melodrama involoving the old woman and her dead sister keep trying to pull the film under. If only director Brown had not made the old woman's character so frightening, strange and hysterical, The Cradle could have been a really good movie, possibly an 8. All we really needed from this character is a little history of her losses. Her key role in the plot is being the person who forces Frank to realize that his baby has been dead for several days. Brown didn't need to use the old woman to create a supernatural horror plot to wrap around the film's neck to strangle it before it could be born. I hope someday Brown edits this film so that it can emerge as the endearing sad story that makes it memorable. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/19/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      Movie Info

      Synopsis Frank (Lukas Haas) and Julie (Emily Hampshire) move to a small town with their infant, Sam (Ellisa Madeline Marks), seeking a peaceful life. But their neighbors are unfriendly, and Frank is plagued by terrifying dreams about the death of his son. When Julie falls ill, Frank turns to a local midwife, Helen (Amanda Smith), for help with caring for their baby -- and he begins to uncover the story of a child buried alive years before, whose evil spirit seeks vengeance on his family.
      Director
      Tim Brown
      Screenwriter
      Tim Brown
      Production Co
      235 Films, Peace Arch Entertainment Group, Access Motion Pictures
      Genre
      Mystery & Thriller, Horror
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Feb 13, 2017
      Runtime
      1h 30m
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