The Calling

The Calling

200089 min
4.8/10
HorrorThriller

Plot Summary

On her wedding night, a young woman conceives a child during an hallucinatory encounter. Several years later, as her friends and family begin to behave strangely, she pieces together clues that lead to one conclusion...her son is the Antichrist

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Official trailer from TMDB

👥Cast (30)

Laura Harris

Laura Harris

Kristie St. Clair

Richard Lintern

Richard Lintern

Marc St. Clair

Francis Magee

Francis Magee

Carmac

Alex Roe

Alex Roe

Dylan St. Clair

Alice Krige

Alice Krige

Elizabeth Plummer

John Standing

John Standing

Jack Plummer

No Image

Peter Waddington

Priester Mullin

Nick Brimble

Nick Brimble

Police Inspector Oliver Morton

Rachel Shelley

Rachel Shelley

Shelly

Camilla Power

Camilla Power

Lynette

Deborah Baxter

Deborah Baxter

Receptionist

No Image

Jack McKenzie

Norman

🎬Crew

Director

Richard Caesar

Writers

John Rice, Rudy Gaines

Producers

Bernd Eichinger, Robert Kulzer, John Rice, Rudy Gaines, Matthias Deyle

🖼️Gallery (1 images)

The Calling backdrop 1

💬Reviews (1)

W

Wuchak

11/8/2023

**_Atmospheric but ambiguous tale of the birth of the antichrist_** A newlywed woman on the Isle of Man (Laura Harris) becomes increasingly suspicious when her son reveals coldhearted-ness while her friend and boss (Alice Krige) seems to be taking her place. Then there’s the mysterious taxi driver (Francis Magee). What’s going on? "The Calling” (2000) is a well-made supernatural thriller with the same plot as the contemporaneous “Bless the Child,” but is way more low-key. It mixes the set-up of “Rosemary’s Baby” with the spooky tone and muddled storytelling of “Nomads,” along with bits of “The Seventh Sign” and “The Wicker Man.” Unfortunately, it’s the least of these because it’s the least compelling and the last act leaves too many questions, but I was able to figure things out after getting help online. I usually like challenging films that make you put the pieces of the puzzle together, but I just didn’t find this one absorbing enough, although the locations and mood are great. I’d put it on par with “To the Devil a Daughter.” Despite its cartoonish CGI, “Bless the Child” is the better film because it’s more thrilling and sensical. The movie runs 1 hour, 29 minutes, and was shot in Cornwall and London, England. GRADE: C

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Production Companies

Constantin Film
Fanes Film