The Dayton Family Hand That Rocks the Cradle

1992 film by Curtis Hanson

The Hand That Rocks the Cradle
Handrockscradle.jpg

Theatrical release affiche

Directed by Curtis Hanson
Written by Amanda Silverish
Produced by David Madden
Starring
  • Annabella Sciorra
  • Rebecca De Mornay
  • Matt McCoy
  • Ernie Hudson
Cinematography Robert Elswit
Edited by John F. Link
Music by Graeme Revell

Product
companies

  • Hollywood Pictures
  • Interscope Communications
  • Nomura Babcock & Brown
Distributed by Buena Vista Pictures Distribution

Release date

  • Jan ten, 1992 (1992-01-10)

Running fourth dimension

110 minutes
Country U.s.
Language English
Box part $140 million

The Hand That Rocks the Cradle is a 1992 American psychological thriller film directed by Curtis Hanson, and starring Annabella Sciorra, Rebecca De Mornay, Matt McCoy, Ernie Hudson, and Julianne Moore. Its plot follows the pregnant wife of a Seattle obstetrician who kills himself after he is accused of sexual misconduct past his patients. The shock leads the wife to miscarry, afterward which she poses as a nanny for one of her husband's accusers, and slowly begins to infiltrate the family unit. The title is taken from an 1865 poem by William Ross Wallace and there are several nods to the comic opera The Pirates of Penzance. The Mitt That Rocks the Cradle grossed approximately $140 one thousand thousand worldwide.

Plot [edit]

In Seattle, housewife Claire Bartel is happily married and pregnant with her 2nd child. At a routine check-up, she is sexually molested by her new obstetrician, Dr. Victor Mott. Traumatized, she tells her husband Michael, who encourages her to report Dr. Mott to the land medical board. Her accusation prompts 4 more women to come forrard about Dr. Mott assaulting them, and multiple charges are prepared against him. Dr. Mott commits suicide to avoid being arrested. Lawyers tell Mott'south pregnant widow that her husband'south avails have been frozen because of the lawsuits, he voided his life insurance contract by committing suicide, and she will lose her luxurious home. Stressed, Mrs. Mott goes into pre-term labor, loses her baby, and undergoes an emergency hysterectomy. While recovering, she sees a news story identifying Claire as the i who reported her husband.

Six months later, Claire has given birth to a male child, Joey. Looking for a nanny, she unknowingly hires Mrs. Mott, who is going under the alias "Peyton Flemish region". Mott wages a campaign to undermine Claire in her household, seeking revenge against Claire for reporting her husband in spite of his behavior, as her husband was her just hazard to have children. She oftentimes breastfeeds Joey in secret; this causes him to stop taking Claire's milk. Mott tries to turn Claire's daughter Emma against Claire, and secretly destroys Michael's part proposal. Knowing that Claire's close friend Marlene had been Michael's ex-girlfriend earlier he married Claire, Mott suggests to Michael that he arrange a surprise political party for Claire, leading Marlene and Michael to see in secret. Claire accuses Michael of having an affair with Marlene just to find the party-goers waiting in the next room.

Solomon, an intellectually disabled handyman who has been assisting the Bartels, discovers Mott breastfeeding Joey. To prevent him from exposing her, Mrs. Mott implies to Claire that she believes Solomon may be molesting Emma. Mott plants a pair of Emma's panties in Solomon'south toolbox, leading Claire to burn him. Despite Emma telling Claire that Solomon never did anything bad to her, Claire doesn't believe Emma, causing her to turn against her mother every bit Mott had planned. Unknown to the family unit except for Emma, Solomon keeps a watchful middle over them.

A now wary Claire begins to suspect "Peyton's" hand in all of these incidents and suggests to Michael that they should accept a family holiday without "Peyton". Mott overhears this and boobytraps the greenhouse for Claire. Marlene discovers Mott's identity, but before she can tell Claire, Mott tricks her into going into the greenhouse, where she is killed by the falling glass ceiling. Knowing that Claire suffers from asthma, Mott empties all of her inhalers. When Claire finds Marlene's bloodied body, she has an asthma attack and is briefly hospitalized. Michael is left distraught over Marlene'south death and his wife's condition; Mott attempts to seduce him, but he rejects her.

Claire uncovers the truth about Mott, confronts her, and reveals the truth to Michael merely as Mott claims that she and Michael are having an affair. Michael denies this, kicks her out, and tells Claire to get Emma and Joey then they tin can caput to a hotel for safety. Mott breaks into the house and hits Michael with a shovel, knocking him down the stairs and breaking his legs. She and then attempts to fulfill her true goal: taking Emma and Joey for herself, merely after seeing Mott attack her mother, Emma outsmarts Mott and locks her in the nursery, declaring that Mott will never be her mother. Mott escapes and finds Solomon in the attic, aiding the kids' escape. She attempts to kill Claire only stops after Claire appears to exist having another asthma attack, prompting Mott to mock her. As she tries to take Joey, Claire gets upwards, having faked her asthma attack, and viciously attacks a stunned Mott, and Solomon distracts her enough for Claire to button Mott out of the window, impaling her on the lookout fence and killing her. Touched at how Solomon risked his life to protect her family unit, Claire welcomes him back, and they all leave the cranium to help Michael upward as the law and paramedics arrive.

Cast [edit]

  • Annabella Sciorra as Claire Bartel
  • Rebecca De Mornay as Mrs. Mott
  • Matt McCoy equally Michael Bartel
  • Ernie Hudson as Solomon
  • Julianne Moore as Marlene Chicken
  • Madeline Zima as Emma Bartel
  • John de Lancie as Dr. Victor Mott
  • Kevin Skousen as Marty Craven

Production [edit]

The Hand That Rocks the Cradle originated as Silver's picture schoolhouse thesis.[1]

In August 1990, it was reported that Interscope Communications was preparing the flick for Hollywood Pictures. By October 1990 Curtis Hanson was on lath to direct.[2] Filming began on April xv, 1991 after being rescheduled from Feb 22. The film shoot was delayed due to the casting of the female leads. The setting and location was originally meant to exist in Atlanta, Georgia, only was filmed in Tacoma and Seattle in Washington.[2]

Filming locations [edit]

House of Dr. Mott which Claire Bartel visits.

Filming locations were Issaquah, Washington; Seattle, Washington (Mott's residence at 2502 37th Ave W in Seattle); and the Bartels' residence at 808 N. Yakima Ave. Tacoma, Washington.[3]

Release [edit]

Box office [edit]

The Manus That Rocks the Cradle opened on January x, 1992, and grossed $7.vii million in its opening weekend,[4] bringing Hook down to #2 at the Us box office from its four-week stay at #1. The film lasted at #one for 4 sequent weeks, then was upended past Medicine Man, which was also released by Hollywood Pictures. By the end of its run, the pic earned a total of $88 million in the U.s. and Canada[5] [half dozen] and $52 million internationally,[vii] for a worldwide full of $140 million.

It was placed at #24 in Bravo's special 30 Even Scarier Movie Moments.

Critical response [edit]

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 63% based on 48 reviews.[eight] On Metacritic the motion-picture show has a score of 64% based on reviews from 26 critics.[9] Audiences polled past CinemaScore gave the picture show an average grade of "A-" on an A+ to F scale.[10]

Cistron Siskel stated that he "had trouble accepting the premise of this picture considering of the casual fashion in which the nanny is hired in an early on scene past the mother," citing that the premise is unrealistic. However, he gave praise to Julianne Moore's character, maxim, "much more than conceivable, is the supporting grapheme of the female parent's best friend" and that "the friend is a terrific character, it's too bad she doesn't have more than scenes in the motion picture." He mentioned that his "biggest objection to Paw That Rocks the Cradle is to its scenes with the children in jeopardy or psychic pain." Siskel finally remarked that "there are some fun thrills in The Hand that Rocks the Cradle to be sure, simply I establish a lot of it distasteful, too." Roger Ebert had a higher stance of the picture, stating that he "establish this film worked" and that "It touches on a fear and that'southward why information technology appeals to us." Ebert praised De Mornay's functioning in the picture show, maxim, "she does, I call up, a very good job, a very, very sound job of existence the villainess in this film and I call up it'southward an effective functioning" and that he establish the scenes of the children "very interesting considering I saw them equally a portrait of the evil of that woman."[11]

Vincent Canby of The New York Times said of the pic that "The Hand That Rocks the Cradle is meant to scare audiences more or less in the way that the patrons of the early on nickelodeons were frightened when they saw the image of a train rushing at them. Audiences aren't asked to recall, simply to react" and that "The Manus That Rocks the Cradle proves again that not thinking isn't especially like shooting fish in a barrel fifty-fifty today. Though Mr. Hanson is a slick flick maker, he is non an especially persuasive i here. Don't be gulled by those who would compare The Hand That Rocks the Cradle to Fatal Attraction, which features iii strong characters who, in one way or another, are gear up to answer for their deportment." He added that "Mr. Hanson creates the occasionally effective shock effect to satisfy those who want to squeal in mock fright. More ofttimes the devices he uses are such tired tricks as the crosscutting betwixt two sets of simultaneous, oft innocent, actions to create the illusion of suspense that can't be sustained."[12] Rebecca Hawkes of The Daily Telegraph gave the picture a rating a 3 stars out of five and said that "It's a tense, viscerally unsettling moment, that helps make the film into something more than than just a fun, formulaic thriller",[xiii] while Sue Heal of The Radio Times rated the motion-picture show 4 stars out of 5, stated that "This is pure unbridled hokum, of course, but extremely effective until the terminal 30 minutes, when the plot speedily cocky-destructs."[fourteen]

Washington Mail service reviewer Rita Kempley criticized the movie, arguing that it is anti-feminist.[1]

Home media [edit]

The Hand That Rocks the Cradle was released on VHS on July eight, 1992, on DVD on December 8, 1998 with the original theatrical trailer as the sole special feature. On September four, 2012 Disney/Buena Vista released the flick on Blu-ray Disc with the aforementioned theatrical trailer equally the previous releases. The film was presented in its original widescreen aspect ratio, approximately 1.85:ane.[15]

See also [edit]

  • List of films featuring home invasions
  • List of mental disorders in film

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Kempley, Rita (January ten, 1992). "'The Hand That Rocks the Cradle' (R)". The Washington Postal service . Retrieved June nineteen, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "The Manus That Rocks The Cradle (1992)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Movie Institute. Archived from the original on September xiv, 2020.
  3. ^ Filming locations (IMDb). Retrieved 2013-05-30.
  4. ^ "Nanny-from-hell Thriller 'Cradle' Surpasses 'hook'". Chicago Tribune. Jan 17, 1992. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
  5. ^ The Hand That smashed the Cradle. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved x October 2013
  6. ^ Mathews, Jack (Feb iii, 1992). "COMMENTARY : Why Disney'south 'Cradle' Rocked the Nation : Movies: Savvy marketing turns films from the big screen into hot topics for the pocket-sized screen". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved November eighteen, 2010.
  7. ^ Groves, Don (February 22, 1993). "Hollywood Wows World Wickets". Variety. p. 85.
  8. ^ "The Manus that Rocks the Cradle (1992)". Rotten Tomatoes.
  9. ^ "The Hand That Rocks the Cradle". Metacritic . Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  10. ^ "Cinemascore". Archived from the original on December xx, 2018.
  11. ^ Siskel & Ebert Juice The Mitt that Rocks the Cradle Freejack 1992. Baronial 6, 2015. Retrieved April 7, 2016 – via YouTube.
  12. ^ "Review/Picture; Assistance Wanted: A Nanny, Duplicity & Malice Req'd". The New York Times. January x, 1992. Retrieved April seven, 2016.
  13. ^ Hawkes, Rebecca (December xxx, 2014). "The Hand That Rocks The Cradle, review: 'tense and fun'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  14. ^ "The Manus That Rocks the Cradle". The Radio Times. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  15. ^ "The Paw That Rocks the Cradle Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. September 4, 2012. Retrieved June 4, 2020.

External links [edit]

  • The Hand That Rocks the Cradle at IMDb
  • The Hand That Rocks the Cradle at the TCM Picture Database
  • The Hand That Rocks the Cradle at AllMovie
  • The Mitt That Rocks the Cradle at Box Role Mojo
  • Film stills
  • https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/hand-rocks-cradle-adaptation-works-at-abc-family-651731

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hand_That_Rocks_the_Cradle_(film)

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