The Bad Seed | |
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Based on | The Bad Seed by William March |
Written by | Barbara Marshall |
Directed by | Rob Lowe |
Starring |
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Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
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Executive producers |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
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Original release | |
Network | Lifetime |
Release | September 9, 2018 |
The Bad Seed is a 2018 American made-for-television horror drama film directed by Rob Lowe for Lifetime. Lowe is also executive producer and stars in the film, alongside Mckenna Grace, Sarah Dugdale, Marci T. House, Lorne Cardinal, Chris Shields, Cara Buono, and a special appearance by Patty McCormack. The horror thriller is based on the 1954 novel by William March, the 1954 play, and the 1956 film. The Bad Seed originally aired on Lifetime on September 9, 2018. This is the second remake of the film, the first being a 1985 film.
On September 16, 2018, a "special edition" of the TV movie was released that features behind the scenes interviews with Lowe, Grace, and McCormack.
A sequel to the film titled The Bad Seed Returns was released on September 5, 2022.
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed.(September 2024) |
Emma Grossman, a nine-year-old girl and daughter of widowed father David Grossman, watches a cat drown in the backyard. At breakfast, she expresses to her father her hope to win a Citizenship medal handed out each year to a student who exemplifies the values of the school.
The "merit day" arrives and Emma is seated in the crowd, certain that she will win the medal. To Emma's shock and disappointment, Mrs. Ellis announces that the winner of this year's medal is Emma's classmate Milo Curtis.
Later, all students and parents are celebrating outside and Emma expresses contempt for Milo to her father, who scolds her for her bitterness. Emma apologizes, but she secretly guides Milo away from the party and through the trees until they reach cliffs overlooking the sea. She slowly moves towards him and pushes him off the cliff, after stealing the Citizenship medal from him, then sneaking back to the party. Milo's body is found shortly thereafter. Emma and David watch from a distance as people desperately try to resuscitate him and his mother breaks down into hysterics.
The next day, David asks Emma if she is feeling okay following what happened to Milo, but Emma acts cheerful and neglects to talk about the matter with any kind of empathy. David's sister Angela, a psychiatrist, suggests to David that Emma is in shock and will find time to grieve whenever she is ready. Chloe, a babysitter David hired, begins work. Emma notices her stealing from David's bedroom, and utilizes this fact to blackmail Chloe.
Milo's funeral is held and Emma and David speak with Mr. and Mrs. Curtis. Emma feigns sadness in front of them. Mrs. Curtis asks David for photos that he took of Milo from the day of the ceremony. That night, as David peruses the photos, he notices Emma in the background of many of them looking at Milo and his medal with a contemptuous scowl.
The next day, Mrs. Ellis and an investigator arrive at David's house to ask him questions, and Emma eavesdrops on the conversation. Mrs. Ellis explains that Emma was the last person to be seen with Milo, having been witnessed taking him into the woods. David becomes anxious and assumes they are insinuating something dark. Chloe appears behind Emma in the next room, deducing that Emma killed Milo. In order to prevent the adults from discussing the matter further, Emma smashes a cookie jar and scratches her arm on broken glass, screaming. Mrs. Ellis and the investigator promptly leave. David asks Emma if she knows anything about being out on the rock-face with Milo, but Emma says she was never there with Milo and that Mrs. Ellis is lying because she has always hated her.
Whilst Emma and Chloe are out on a walk the next day, Chloe talks to Emma about what she did to Milo, but Emma denies everything. Chloe and Emma see Mrs. Curtis and the investigator arrive at Milo's house, and Chloe says that Emma had better get her story straight or they could charge her for murdering him. Back at the house, Chloe and Emma are eating together and Chloe lies to Emma, saying that if she gets caught for murdering Milo she will be put into the electric chair. Emma says she doesn't believe her but appears worried. Later on, Mrs. Ellis gets into her car; a wasp nest has been put in it by Emma and she crashes. Chloe discovers Milo's citizenship medal hidden under Emma's bed and hangs it from a lamp in David's room.
When David returns home, he does not notice the medal and Emma soon arrives. She finds the medal hanging from the lamp and secretly takes it off, hiding it behind her back. David asks her what she is hiding and Emma shows him the medal. Distressed, he interrogates her about where she got it and if she was out on the rock face with Milo. Emma admits that she was, but lies, saying they played a game and Milo let her wear the medal, and she kept it.
Concerned about Emma's behavior, David calls his sister Angela for the number of a child psychiatrist; he is extremely worried that Emma may have been involved in Milo's death. The next day, David makes Emma return the medal to Mrs. Curtis. That night, he researches antisocial behavior in children and seems convinced that Emma's behavior is psychopathic. The next day, Emma visits a child psychiatrist, and acts normal, deceiving her. The psychiatrist, Dr. March, (named after the author of the novel, The Bad Seed,) assures David that Emma is “one hundred percent normal”.
Later, Chloe goes into Emma's room taunting her, telling her that she wants to hook up with David and that one day she may become Emma's stepmother. Emma is disgusted and says she is going to make sure David gets rid of Chloe. That night, as David is preparing for a date, Emma repeats the conversation she had with Chloe. He assures her that what Chloe said isn't true. Emma says she never wants a stepmother.
Chloe is watching a film downstairs and searches for Emma. Seeing that the work-shed lights are on, she goes and looks inside for Emma. Emma locks her in and sets the shed on fire, killing Chloe. David rushes home but the emergency services have already arrived. He later goes into Emma's room, and she is pretending to be asleep; he questions her about the recent deaths. Emma ultimately admits to murdering Milo, Mrs. Ellis, Chloe, and her previous babysitter whom she didn't like. Emma justifies these murders, claiming she didn't do anything wrong. David is heartbroken.
The next day, David drives Emma to a lake house a few miles away, evading the suspicious Sheriff Peterson. He doesn't want Emma to end up in an institution or in prison and plans to kill her and then himself. Emma senses this, and switches on the gas in the house, attempting to kill David.
He wakes up before this happens and brings Emma back to the lake house. He crushes some medicine and puts it into Emma's hot chocolate, but Emma switches the mugs without his noticing. He drinks his and when he is asleep, Emma tries to shoot him with his gun but misses. He chases her and Emma calls 911, screaming for help. The caretaker of the lake house hears the gunshot and arrives with his shotgun to find David about to kill Emma as he claims that Emma is evil. The caretaker shoots David and Emma remains unharmed as the authorities arrive.
The next morning as David's body is being removed, Emma sits solemnly in the back of a car and hugs her aunt Angela, staring into the distance with a cold and victorious grin.
A conventional remake by Barbara Marshal of The Bad Seed, had been in development hell between Lifetime and executive producer Mark Wolper. However, it never survived script stage, until late 2017, when Lifetime gave the green light on production. Warner Bros. Television owns the rights to the title. Actor-director Rob Lowe was also named as director and star of the 2018 release, with additional casting to follow. [2] In February 2018, Mckenna Grace and Patty McCormack were announced as being cast. [1]
The Bad Seed received mixed reviews upon its release. David Feinberg of The Hollywood Reporter said: "Call it The Bad Seed and you tap into a surface-glaze legitimacy that's probably unwarranted, because the movie, notable as co-star Rob Lowe's directing debut, achieves only a baseline amount of trashy fun, nothing more or less." [3] Andrea Reiher from the website Collider said the film "suffers from being neither dark enough nor campy enough—either choice would have been a lot more enjoyable. But it is stuck in a middle area that is devoid of over-the-top absurdity or any real darkness." [4]
Upon its initial broadcast on September 9, 2018, The Bad Seed was watched by 1.87 million viewers, placing it in the top ten most-watched cable programs on that date. [5]
On November 12, 2021, Lifetime ordered a sequel to the film with Grace set to reprise her role as Emma. It was set to be premiered on May 30, 2022, but was premiered on September 5, 2022 due to production delays. [6]
The Bad Seed is a 1954 horror novel by American writer William March, the last of his major works published before his death.
Robert Hepler Lowe is an American actor, television presenter, filmmaker, and podcast host. He made his acting debut at the age of 15 with ABC's short-lived sitcom A New Kind of Family (1979–1980). Following numerous television roles in the early 1980s, he came to prominence as a teen idol and member of the Brat Pack with starring roles in The Outsiders (1983), Class (1983), The Hotel New Hampshire (1984), Oxford Blues (1984), St. Elmo's Fire (1985), About Last Night... (1986), and Masquerade (1988).
Eric James McCormack is a Canadian and American actor known for his roles as Will Truman in the NBC sitcom Will & Grace, Grant MacLaren in Netflix's Travelers, and Dr. Daniel Pierce in the TNT crime drama Perception. Born in Toronto, McCormack started acting by performing in high school plays. He left Ryerson University in 1985 to accept a position with the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, where he spent five years performing in many stage productions.
Patricia McCormack is an American actress with a career in theater, films, and television.
Bad Seed(s) or The Bad Seed(s) may refer to:
Rhoda Penmark is a fictional character in William March's 1954 novel The Bad Seed and the stage play of the same name adapted from it by Maxwell Anderson. She is both the protagonist and antagonist of the story. Penmark is a child serial killer and psychopath who manipulates those around her. She was portrayed by Patty McCormack in the original rendition of the play and later in the 1956 film adaptation. She was also portrayed by Carrie Wells in the 1985 made-for-television adaptation. In the 2018 adaptation and its sequel, she is known as Emma Grossman and portrayed by Mckenna Grace.
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The Bad Seed is a 1954 play by American playwright Maxwell Anderson, adapted from the 1954 novel of the same name by American writer William March.
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Daryl McCormack is an Irish actor. Trained at the Gaiety School of Acting, he made his acting debut in the soap opera Fair City (2015–2016). He appeared in the BBC series Peaky Blinders (2019–2022), the film Pixie (2020), and the Apple TV+ series Bad Sisters (2022). His portrayal of the title role in the sex comedy-drama Good Luck to You, Leo Grande (2022) earned him a nomination for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. In 2023, he won the Trophée Chopard from the Cannes Film Festival.
The Bad Seed Returns is an American made-for-television horror drama film directed by Louise Archambault, written by Ross Burge, Mckenna Grace, and Barbara Marshall, and starring Mckenna Grace, Michelle Morgan, Benjamin Ayres, Marlowe Zimmerman, Jude Wilson, Gabriela Bee, Ella Dixon, Marlee Walchuk, Lorne Cardinal, and a special appearance by Patty McCormack. It is the sequel to the 2018 television film The Bad Seed, which was both a remake of the 1956 film, as well as having been adapted from William March's 1954 novel. The film premiered on Lifetime on September 5, 2022.