Bless the Child
Maybe Michelle Pfeiffer was onto something when she invoked the beyond to
resurrect her career in What Lies Beneath. Kim Basinger, another older
actress, and with an Oscar to boot, tries the same in Chuck Russell's Bless
the Child, but this feeble pastiche of supernatural thrillers makes Robert
Zemeckis's waterlogged hit look like Ingmar Bergman.
Basinger is Maggie O'Connor, a spinsterish child therapist whose charity is
tested when her strung-out sister Jenna (Angela Bettis) pays a visit on
Christmas Eve and leaves Maggie with her newborn daughter. Six years later,
Cody (Holliston Coleman) is an autistic cutie with the knack for bringing dead
pigeons back to life and making plates spin. This doesn't escape the notice of
Eric Stark (Rufus Sewell), a part-time celebrity self-help guru and full-time
Satanist who enlists his army of trenchcoat-mafia types to kidnap the kid and
switch her from Second Coming to Antichrist. Along the way, in addition to
goth-ish teens, the film demonizes women who deviate from the ways of maternal
nurturing and anyone else who doesn't pack a set of rosary beads. A
frighteningly fundamentalist vision of contemporary society that's shamelessly
and ineptly manipulative, Bless the Child hasn't a prayer. At the
Harbour Mall, Holiday, Showcase, Tri-Boro, and Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Peter Keough
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