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Genre: Thriller
Description: Cincinnati cardiologist Steven Murphy (Colin Farrell) lived an ordinary existence with his wife (Nicole Kidman) and kids... but on the quiet, he maintained an odd, paternal relationship with damaged teenager Martin (Barry Keoghan). As Murphy's children began to manifest strange illnesses, Martin takes the opportunity to insinuate himself into the doctor's home life... and as the shocking true nature of their bond is revealed, so too is the boy's twisted endgame. Yorgos Lanthimos' unnerving thriller co-stars Alicia Silverstone, Raffey Cassidy, Sunny Suljic, Bill Camp. 121 min. Widescreen; Soundtrack English.
Title: The Killing Of A Sacred Deer
Format: Blu-ray
MPAA Rating: R (Motion Picture Association of America's (MPAA) film-rating system is used in the United States and its territories to rate a film's suitability for certain audiences.)
Studio: Lions Gate
Release Date: 01/23/2018
Genre: Thriller
Other
Product Name: The Killing Of A Sacred Deer - BLU-RAY
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Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Lanthimos gives us a disturbing great movie
Iconoclastic Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos has followed up last year’s dark comic gem, “The Lobster”, with another audacious film that bears his twisted mark on every frame: “The Killing of a Sacred Deer”, its title drawn from a line in the Greek play, Iphigenia at Aulis by Euripides. Its story begins rather conventionally before veering off into the bizarre: A skilled cardiac surgeon seemingly befriends a strange teenage boy and introduces him to his family. The boy named Martin seems to have some form of a neurological disorder, and gradually we discover his connection to the surgeon and the threat he brings to the entire family. Colin Farrell plays the surgeon, Nicole Kidman his wife, but it is Barry Keoghan who takes center stage to the drama, playing the intruding boy with a perceptible mental unbalance that grows more sinister as the film goes on. Relying more on the tenants of psychological horror than the societal satire and the Kafkaesque fable of “The Lobster”, “The Killing of a Sacred Deer” is a masterpiece of the absurd, its every frame showing the influence of Stanley Kubrick at his most pristine with its pure cold visuals and precise razor-sharp cutting. It won best screenplay at Cannes, but it is Lanthimos’ perfect compositions and subdued anger that reaches out of the screen and shakes the viewers’ sensibilities that defines it. Disturbing on different levels and perhaps inevitably unpleasant to some, it is a film that will rivet you to your seat until its provocative conclusion, one that could have you thinking about it for days after.
Posted by RBlenheim
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Incredibly Metaphoric But Brilliant.
The Killing of a Sacred Deer is a bizarre film that give its audience a unique experience. Definitely one of A24’s more art based films, it’s a film that keeps it’s audience wondering about the mystery in it. Even after finishing, a discussion can go on for hours about its meaning. Certainly a beautiful film. It’s worth watching to see the strange story told.
Posted by Hector
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
A Great Movie!!!!!!!!!!
Yorgos Lanthimos, the director has directed another masterpiece.
The Favorite is a witty, satire on power, that begins as a delightful costume drama and slowly closes in, becoming darker and and more bleak as it progresses. The costumes are great, the music is great and the technical aspects of the movie are superb.
Posted by Apollo2325
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
Lanthimos gives us a thriller you won't forget
Iconoclastic Greek filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos has followed up last year’s dark comic gem, “The Lobster”, with another audacious film that bears his twisted mark on every frame: “The Killing of a Sacred Deer”, its title drawn from a line in the Greek play, Iphigenia at Aulis by Euripides.
Its story begins rather conventionally before veering off into the bizarre: A skilled cardiac surgeon seemingly befriends a strange teenage boy and introduces him to his family. The boy named Martin seems to have some form of a neurological disorder, and gradually we discover his connection to the surgeon and the threat he brings to the entire family. Colin Farrell plays the surgeon, Nicole Kidman his wife, but it is Barry Keoghan who takes center stage to the drama, playing the intruding boy with a perceptible mental unbalance that grows more sinister as the film goes on.
Relying more on the tenants of psychological horror than the societal satire and the Kafkaesque fable of “The Lobster”, “The Killing of a Sacred Deer” is a masterpiece of the absurd, its every frame showing the influence of Stanley Kubrick at his most pristine with its pure cold visuals and precise razor-sharp cutting. It won best screenplay at Cannes, but it is Lanthimos’ perfect compositions and subdued anger that reaches out of the screen and shakes the viewers’ sensibilities that defines it. Disturbing on different levels and perhaps inevitably unpleasant to some, it is a film that will rivet you to your seat until its provocative conclusion, one that could have you thinking about it for days after.
Posted by RobertB
Rated 4 out of 5 stars
Interesting Film
A really interesting movie and it looks very good on blu ray. Not for young viewers.