Metacritic Film

Godsend

Starring Greg Kinnear, Rebecca Romijn-Stamos, Robert De Niro, Cameron Bright, Merwin Mondesir, Sava Drayton, Jake Simons, and Elle Downs

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for violence including frightening images, a scene of sexuality and some thematic material

Lions Gate Films Inc.
Drama  |  Fantasy  |  Horror  |  Suspense/Thriller
102 minutes | Color
USA / Canada
Released In Theaters April 30, 2004

Paul and Jessie Duncan (Kinnear, Romijn-Stamos) have lost their beloved eight year-old son Adam (Bright) in a tragic accident. As they are arranging for his burial, Dr. Richard Wells (De Niro) approaches with the incredible offer to clone, and bring back their boy. (Lions Gate Films)

WRITTEN BY
Mark Bomback

DIRECTED BY
Nick Hamm

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

24 / 100

Critic Reviews

50 Chicago Tribune
Downright scary in some places, Godsend might be more potent if it wasn't watered down by religious trope predictability.
50 Entertainment Weekly
The umpteenth recycled shocker about a mystical dark child with an aura of disaster.
50 Philadelphia Inquirer
Unravels in a series of spooky dream sequences, dopey detective work, and a couple of richly hambone-ian De Niro soliloquies.
50 USA Today
The best that can be said about the film is that its naturalistic look and dark hues are occasionally intriguing, and its twist is fairly unpredictable, if far-fetched.
50 Chicago Sun-Times
It's a thriller, a bad thriller, completely lacking in psychological or emotional truth.
50 Baltimore Sun
Godsend is two-thirds of a good movie, with a final third that's just downright awful. So much wasted potential only makes the whole thing that much more painful.
42 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
To its credit, the film has an engagingly bleak and minimalist look, and a brisk pace. But the chills are few. Every step seems contrived, predictable or unintentionally funny.
40 Variety
Solid performances, handsome production values and a few genuinely creepy scenes are not enough to save Godsend.
40 Film Threat Pete Vonder Haar
When is a horror movie not a horror movie? When it’s a strained, by-the-numbers production that limps to an unlikely conclusion like Godsend.
38 Premiere
With its cheap scares, its defiant lack of special effects, and the most blatant usage of a red coat as a stand-out prop since Schindler’s List, Godsend is as much an experiment-gone-wrong as its Frankensteinesque plot.
38 ReelViews
Godsend is godawful.
38 Charlotte Observer
De Niro wears a shamefaced look most of the time, as if doubly embarrassed: He agreed to a movie he knew was worthless, yet he's too lazy or indifferent to give us his best.
30 Washington Post
As the film's boo! moments get spookier and more frequent, Godsend gets more and more inane.
30 Los Angeles Times
A consistently underused and often underrated actor, Kinnear gives one of those sympathetic performances that prevent you from believing the worst about a movie despite the sounding alarms.
30 The Hollywood Reporter
This thin concoction of domestic drama and thriller suspense won't hold up after the curiosity factor runs its brief course. Neither Robert De Niro nor a phalanx of a dozen producers can deliver Godsend from unintentional comedy.
30 TV Guide
Despite its provocative premise, this throwback to deliberately paced, low-tech chillers of the pre-CGI era is a dreary slog through haunted-child movie cliches -- portentous dreams, glassy-eyed stares, cryptic pronouncements.
30 LA Weekly
Kinnear and Romijn-Stamos appear to be vying for the title of filmdom's least-convincing married couple, while Robert De Niro, as the movie's modern-day Dr. Frankenstein, takes his own expert career slumming to a new depth -- he's become an evil clone of a once-great actor.
30 Chicago Reader
As in most bad thrillers, the number of pointless shocks increases in direct proportion to the drama's decreasing vitality, like defibrilator paddles jolting a dying man.
30 The New York Times
The picture, which fails to achieve its ambitions or to fulfill our expectations, is ultimately worse than a violent piece of hack work, in which the director isn't interested in displaying his integrity -- or taste. You'd be better off downloading the trailer: a much more convincing piece of storytelling.
25 New York Post
There's no excuse for a thriller as lame, leaden and unthrilling as Godsend, which manages to take a potentially interesting subject - human cloning - and use it to put audiences to sleep.
25 San Francisco Chronicle
In Godsend, we have the spectacle of three good actors tied to the mast of a sinking premise.
25 Rolling Stone
Every scare is telegraphed. Every surprise is recycled from a better thriller. Even the devil would send this one back.
25 New York Daily News
At the half-hour mark, Godsend falls off the edge of reason, veering wildly away from what seems the promising beginning of a drama about the ethics of human cloning and instead becomes the cheesiest of hallucinatory horror movies.
25 Christian Science Monitor
How could such a high-octane cast produce such low-octane horror?
25 Miami Herald
An unsatisfying, overly restrained bore, capped off by an ending so strange and inconclusive, it feels like something you'd find on the ''deleted scenes'' portion of a DVD.
20 Austin Chronicle
Neither very scary nor very interesting, Godsend is an unresurrectable muddle.
20 Village Voice
The pivotal plot twist isn't hard to predict, and Brit theater vet Hamm and screenwriter Mark Bomback rely on jolts that date back to the silent era.
20 The Onion (A.V. Club)
It mostly serves as a warning to stay away from future films involving director Nick Hamm and screenwriter Mark Bomback.
20 Empire Mark Dinning
Godsend is based on an intriguing premise. Sadly, it's mangled into an Omen-lite disaster area, thanks to a script torn between making a moral point about cloning and cheap shocks.
12 Boston Globe
Godsend makes swill of religion, science, family, and morality. It has the sensitivity of a cactus, the ingenuity of a square wheel, and the integrity of a CEO.
10 Slate
Turns into a pea-brained hodgepodge of "The Omen" (1976), "The Sixth Sense" (1999), and about 30 Grade-Z Bela Lugosi mad-scientist movies.
10 Washington Post
Not just a bad thriller but also a thing of pain.

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