Genre: Thriller/Suspense
Director: George Ratliff
Cast: Sam Rockwell, Vera Farmiga, Celia Weston,
Dallas Roberts, Michael McKean, Jacob Kogan
RunTime: 1 hr 46 mins
Released By: 20th Century Fox
Rating: NC-16
Opening Day: 20 September 2007 (Exclusively
at GV Plaza and GV VivoCity)
Synopsis:
JOSHUA is the tale of Brad (Sam Rockwell) and Abby (Vera Farmiga)
Cairn, perfect Manhattan parents in a perfect Manhattan apartment
whose perfect life begins to crack after the birth of their
second child Lily. Shortly after Lily arrives home, a dark
side of prodigy son Joshua slowly begins to reveal itself.
Movie Review:
“Joshua” uses the tropes left behind by “The
Good Son” and “The Omen” (mostly resembling
the latter, more yuppie-centric remake) to hollow effect but
has the sort of suggestive, campy thriller sensibility that’s
plainly derivative while also being surprisingly bent upon
highbrow preoccupations of upper-middle class anxieties and
the latent dissimulations of family dynamics.
Wall
Street pays for Brad Cairn and his wife Abby’s (Sam
Rockwell, and a wildly unhinged Vera Farmiga) West Side apartment
next to Central Park and their precociously talented son,
Joshua’s (Jacob Kogan) intellectual pursuits that consist
of music, museums and mummification. Clearly working from
the tempestuous redirections of a child’s angst and
emotive lashings from perceived insecurities of being alienated
and misunderstood, director George Ratliff forges a none too
subtle mystery surrounding Joshua’s predilection for
creepiness that involves musical-theatre loving Uncle Ned
(Dallas Roberts).
When
taken as a straightforward thriller, Ratliff’s often
clunky and overwrought depictions of dour little boys in mini-suits
start to wear thin as soon the film begins boldly implicating
Joshua’s self-fulfilling prophecy down the path of a
sociopath. It’s just all the more disappointing when
the film doesn’t realise how to explore its most thought
provoking aspects of familial discords stemming from neglect
and self-involvement and instead veers from one outlandish
scene to the next in order to justify each preceding scene.
Being
different is akin to being evil in the case of this film.
While bible thumpers get the short shrift by deranged Hebrews
with postpartum depression, homophobia rears its ugly head
and introverted children that prefer higher minded hobbies
are mocked and self-labelled as nothing short of “weird”.
By the time its end credits start to roll, you might have
already made up your mind on whether “Joshua”
is the year’s most subversively funny film or the year’s
most ridiculously offensive.
Movie Rating:
(Try to view this as a satire on the creepy child subgenre
instead of what it really wants to be)
Review by Justin Deimen
|