The Unborn
2009 -
Rated
PG-13 (MPAA)
Release Date: 07/07/2009
Features:
Blu-ray Disc Features:
Region [unknown]
Audio:
DTS 5.1 Surround French, Spanish
English DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Subtitles: English, SDH, French, Spanish
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes
BD Live - Download Center
BD Live - My Scenes Sharing
Original Language:
N/A
Time:
88
mins.
J&R Item # 1202166_2
UPC # 025195054652
Label: Universal Studios Home Video
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Buying Info
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The Unborn
2009 -
Unrated
Release Date: 07/07/2009
Features:
DVD Features:
Region [unknown]
Anamorphic Widescreen - 2.40
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround English, French, Spanish
Subtitles: English, SDH, French, Spanish - Unrated, Rated
Additional Release Material:
Deleted Scenes
Original Language:
N/A
Time:
88
mins.
J&R Item # 1202166_3
UPC # 025195054645
Label: Universal Studios Home Video
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Buying Info
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| Plot Credits Reviews Related Shipping |
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A horror film combining ghostly children, Nazi experiments, and the Kabbalah, THE UNBORN also features a strong female heroine and plenty of surprisingly gruesome shocks. Writer-director David S. Goyer (BLADE: TRINITY) has seemingly taken inspiration from classics like ROSEMARYS BABY (1968) and THE EXORCIST (1974), as well as the more recent THE EYE (2002), during the creation of this slick thriller featuring an attractive young cast and some disturbing effects work.
College student Casey Beldon (Odette Yustman, CLOVERFIELD) begins having dreams about a spooky little boy with bright blue eyes. She thinks nothing of it as first, but when the image becomes a recurring motif and the boy she babysits for hits her in the face and tells her "Jumby wants to be born now," she begins to get frightened. After learning that she had a twin brother who died in utero, she finds a photo of her late mother with the same ghostly child looming in the background. A newspaper clipping then leads Casey to visit an elderly Holocaust survivor (Jane Alexander) in a nursing home. The woman clues her in to a dark family secret extending back to WWII, which prompts her to employ the services of Rabbi Sendak (Gary Oldman), whose skepticism about evil spirits is vanquished when he sees what he is up against.
Goyers pacing is brisk, and the THE UNBORNs jolts start right out of the gate. Yustman is an appealing lead, and the surprising presences of veterans Oldman and Alexander add some weight to the proceedings. The violence is never too graphic, but a few of the sequences are surprisingly icky, as are some of the supernatural beings that pop up. The result is a fun thriller that crams a lot of spookiness into its PG-13 rating.
Cast:
"[THE UNBORN] comes across like a Jewish EXORCIST....[Director Goyer] does make sure you're never far away from a big 'Boo!'" -- Grade: B-
-- Clark Collis
, (Entertainment Weekly)
3 stars out of 5 -- "[Goyer] manages to sustain an effective, doom-laden mood....Goyer also invests in a barrage of genuinely unsettling images..." -- Tom Ambrose , (Empire) |