Dead Babies (2000)
Director: William Marsh
Movie review
From Time Out Film Guide
Long before Martin Amis' mid-'70s novel reached the screen, the shock value masking a country house whodunit in the Agatha Christie mould was already dated. Admittedly, there's rather more sexual and chemical mayhem, but the basic outline provides assorted English toffs, sundry visiting Yanks, and a mystery assailant in their midst. Writer/director Marsh's update on the material to a post-millennial near-future adds the Conceptualists, an anarchic terror group who advertise their atrocities on the Web, and whose deadly graffiti signature, 'Johnny', signals imminent danger for the drug-fuelled revellers at Appleseed Rectory. If 'Johnny' doesn't get them first, acid guru Marvel's pharmaceutical cocktails just might pitch them all over the edge. Presumably there's a satirical intent: the path of youthful excess leading not to freewheeling hedonism but further psychological turmoil. Yet the film hardly encourages us to engage with its woolly debate on how we pursue our freedoms when it's so gruellingly tiresome to sit through.Author: TJ
Cast & crew
Director: William Marsh
Producer: Richard Holmes, Neil Peplow
Cast: Paul Bettany, Katy Carmichael, Hayley Carr, Charlie Condou, Alexandra Gilbreath, William Marsh, Kris Marshall, Andy Nyman, Cristian Solimeno, Olivia Williams full cast
Duration: 101 mins
Most popular on this site
Features
Holiday gift guide
Instructions on how to get your own customized soda machine (and other, slightly more rational gifts for your film-loving friends).
Holiday film preview
Are you more interested in seeing the Daniel Craig movie, the Steven Soderbergh movie or the Freddy Rodriguez movie? Answer carefully.
Boyle's orders
The director of Slumdog Millionaire talks about the joys of filming on the cheap in India after having worked under Hollywood's thumb.
Time and again
Wong Kar-wai spruces up his underseen martial-arts epic, Ashes of Time.
Mergers and acquisitions
A new deal between the Underground Film Festival and IFP pays off.
Chicago Festival of Israeli Cinema
The films we previewed offer very few reasons to kvetch.



What do you think?
Post your review now