Child of Mine

Last updated

Child of Mine
ChildofMineITV.jpg
Genre Thriller
Written byCaleb Ranson
Directed byJamie Payne
Starring
ComposerNick Bicât
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes1
Production
Executive producers
  • Jane Featherstone
  • Jörg Westerkamp
ProducerAlison Jackson
CinematographyJeremy Hiles
EditorNick Arthurs
Running time120 minutes
Production company Kudos
Original release
Network ITV
Release13 November 2005 (2005-11-13)

Child of Mine is a British television drama thriller, written by Caleb Ranson and directed by Jamie Payne, that first broadcast on ITV on 13 November 2005. [1] Starring Joanne Whalley and Adrian Dunbar in the title roles, Child of Mine follows childless couple Tess (Whalley) and Alfie Palmer (Dunbar), who adopt two sisters from Canada whose mother was murdered by an unknown intruder. Older sister Heather (Hannah Lochner) is having trouble coming to terms with her mother's death, and Tess begins to wonder if it was Heather herself who killed her mother, and travels with her back to Canada to discover the truth. [1]

Contents

Child of Mine attracted 6.25 million viewers on its debut broadcast. [2] Child of Mine was released on Region 1 DVD in the United States on 8 September 2006 via Koch Vision.[ citation needed ]

Plot

London couple Tess and Alfie Palmer cannot have their own children. They adopt two girls who are orphans from a Canadian, non-state-recognised placement agency. The mother of the children was murdered two years ago. Four-year-old Grace looks carefree, bright and fun-loving, whereas ten-year-old Heather is more depressed and serious. As time goes on, Heather proves stubborn and even violent. But adoptive mother Tess does not despair, as her training as a child psychologist leads her to believe that Heather appears to have a secret. Therapy talks with a colleague bring no progress, so she decides on a daring venture - a return to the scene of the crime in the hope of getting Heather to talk. She now considers it a possibility that Heather could have murdered her own mother.

Tess travels to Canada with Heather, and decides they should visit the empty house of Heather's mother, which proves very uncomfortable for Heather. Nevertheless, she begins to describe the scene with tears to Tess. During the subsequent short visit to the adoption agency, Heather recognises the culprit by means of a gesture. It is the owner of the agency, Alvin. Meanwhile, in an unattended moment, Tess rummages through a number of files. Astonishingly, each file consistently includes the note that the parent of the child being mediated is dead. Tess becomes suspicious. When the police sheriff arrives to interview him, Alvin shoots him dead. He also wants to eliminate Tess and Heather as witnesses. But Tess proves defensive, using the weapon used to kill the sheriff to injure Alvin and put him out of action, allowing her and Heather to escape.

Cast

Reception

Both the Lexicon of International Film and Prisma praised the convincing play by Hannah Lochner, commenting; "In addition to Joanne Whalley in the role of the new mother, Hannah Lochner in the role of Heather is especially convincing. With her expressive yet sensitive game, she steals the show off Whalley in every scene they perform together." [3]

Prism added; "Unobtrusive but solid staged crime drama, played convincingly especially in the role of the older daughter." [4] Hannah Lochner was nominated for Best Performance in an International Feature Film - Leading Young Performer at the 27th Young Artist Award for her role as Heather McGill. [5]

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References

  1. 1 2 "Child Of Mine (ITV 2005, Joanne Whalley, Adrian Dunbar)". Memorable TV. 5 November 2017. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  2. "Weekly Top 30 Programmes". BARB. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  3. "Child of Mine". Lexicon of International Film. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  4. "Blick zurück ins Verderben". Prisma. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  5. "27th Annual Young Artist Awards". YoungArtistAwards.org. Archived from the original on 4 July 2010. Retrieved 4 August 2011.