– $34.99 | December 27, 2016Ĭast: Morris Chestnut, Regina Hall, Jaz Sinclair, Romany Malco, Michael Kenneth Williamsįeatures: Commentary, Featurette, Deleted ScenesĪudio: English (DTS-HD MA 5.1), Russian (Dolby Digital 5.1), Thai (Dolby Digital 5.1)
There Ally Walker’s role was inherited by Kelly McGillis.When the Bough Breaks is a laughably bad and overly clichéd thriller with a story that has been done numerous times, especially on the Lifetime Movie Channel and if not for Morris Chestnut who tried so hard to rise above the awful screenplay, this would be an absolute chore to sit through, and even so, it was still rough sledding. The sequel, made for cable, was Perfect Prey (1998), which was released to video as When the Bough Breaks II. Despite the excellence of both these film, neither were successes and Cohn has remained silent for nearly two decades until he made the thriller Sacrifice (2015). The film at first seems to set her up alongside Martin Sheen as a classic city slicker dealing with the locals relationship but Sheen, despite top-billing, is unexpectedly dropped about halfway into the film and the relationship between Ally Walker and Tara Subkoff allowed to take over.ĭirector Michael Cohn later went onto make the fascinating dark fairytale Snow White: A Tale of Terror (1997). Indeed, When the Bough Breaks could almost have served as a pilot episode for Profiler.
Her character is well sketched and as a result she was subsequently cast in an almost identical role in the first three seasons of the tv series Profiler (1996-2000). (l to r) The mysterious mute patient Jordan Tomas (Tara Subkoff) and Ally Walker as forensic profiler Audrey McLeahĪlly Walker gives a good and convincing performance, certainly a great deal better than the non-performance she gave in her previous film Universal Soldier (1992). However, due to the effectiveness of the film, one is prepared to accept these substantial stretches of dramatic licence. These do nevertheless exist – the telepathic relationship between Jordan and his twin is never explained we never find out what drives the killer to abduct a child and cut off their hands every July 16th and why he has chosen to alter his pattern now or the frankly unbelievable coincidence that a second paedophile who stalks victims in an ice cream truck just happened to be present and mistakenly caught on videotape the day that one of the other children was abducted. It is due to the effectiveness of these thrills and the emotion engendered that one never questions the many holes in the script until you sit down to think about the film afterwards. The growing relationship between the two, triumphing in his speaking for the first time, is conducted with enormous emotional power. Each of the twists – the moment Ally Walker finds the word ‘Mine’ written on the wall the time Jordan starts mimicking Ally’s voice with perfectly mimed mouthed movements the eerie scene where he writes that his name is Jennifer Lynn Eben and that he is underground – all contain a genuinely spooky thrill.
It is structured around the relationship between profiler Ally Walker and the autistic boy (actually played by a girl, Tara Subkoff) and the provision of a series of eerie twists. The film’s success is entirely due to a strong and absorbing thriller plot. Despite such, When the Bough Breaks is surprisingly good – one may even hazard the heretical suggestion that it is a better film than the overrated The Silence of the Lambs. It is probably safe to say that without the success of The Silence of the Lambs then When the Bough Breaks would never have emerged. When the Bough Breaks owes an enormous debt of inspiration to The Silence of the Lambs (1991).