A Deadly Adoption

A Deadly Adoption is a 2015 American made for television black comedy thriller film[1] directed by Rachel Lee Goldenberg and written by Andrew Steele. The film aired on the Lifetime Network on June 20, 2015. It stars Will Ferrell, Kristen Wiig and Jessica Lowndes.

A Deadly Adoption
Poster
Genredramatic-thriller comedy
Screenplay byAndrew Steele
Directed byRachel Lee Goldenberg
StarringWill Ferrell
Kristen Wiig
Jessica Lowndes
Composer(s)MJ Mynarski
Country of originUnited States
Original language(s)English
Production
Producer(s)Fritz Manger
Max Osswald
Adam Silver
Adam McKay
CinematographyAdam Silver
Editor(s)Bill Parker
Running time84 minutes
Production company(s)Gary Sanchez Productions
MarVista Entertainment
National Picture Show Entertainment
DistributorMarVista Entertainment
Release
Original networkLifetime
Original release
  • June 20, 2015 (2015-06-20)
External links
Website

Plot

Sarah Benson (Kristen Wiig) is a successful organic food vendor. Her husband Robert (Will Ferrell) is a best-selling author and finance guru. They're also the parents of a one-year-old daughter named Sully, and Sarah is pregnant with their second child.

During a gathering with friends for Sully's first birthday, Sarah gets an urge for Robert to take her on a boat ride on the lake behind their home, the fictitious Storm Lake. Despite Robert's repeated warnings for Sarah to get off the unsafe dock, she leans against its railing, causing it to break away. She hits her head on the boat as she falls into the water. Robert dives in, pulling her to safety and successfully resuscitating her. The resulting trauma from the experience causes Sarah to lose the baby. As a result, they can no longer have children.

Five years later, Robert has become a recluse, but has been sober for six months following an alcohol addiction which began after the loss of his child. He has also become over-protective of their now-six-year old diabetic daughter Sully. Robert and Sarah plan to adopt an unwanted child, but are not satisfied with any of the birth mothers they have met. They ultimately decide to house and care for an attractive young woman named Bridgette Gibson (Jessica Lowndes) during the final months of her pregnancy. Robert is currently writing his new book, but is struggling for inspiration.

After Bridgette tells the Bensons that she is living in a homeless shelter, Robert and Sarah decide to offer her a bedroom they had built onto the house for their lost child. Bridgette accepts the offer. Once left alone in her room, she pulls out a magazine with the Bensons on the front cover and rips off the half containing Sarah.

Sully discovers through Bridgette's cracked bathroom door as she's showering that her enlarged belly is fake. Bridgette explains to Sully that because of her small and slender build, she was worried that the Bensons wouldn't believe that she was pregnant. The impressionable youngster accepts this, and agrees to keep this secret from her parents. Another secret is when Bridgette removes the training wheels from Sully's bike (without Robert's knowledge or approval) and pushes her down the driveway where she's almost struck by a car. She steers away from the vehicle and into the path of Dwayne Tisdale, Bridgette's tattooed hoodlum boyfriend. Sully is unhurt and Bridgette persuades her to keep this a secret as well.

One day, Robert opens the door to Bridgette's room and discovers a copy of one of his books among her belongings. He opens the front cover and recognizes the autograph as his own...to "Joni". Robert then realizes that Bridgette is really Joni, a fan with whom he slept while on his last book tour and in the depths of his alcoholism. After Sully turns up missing, Robert and Sarah are questioned by the police, who produce a photo of the real Bridgette and confirm her identity.

Bridgette and Dwayne bring Sully back to their cabin across the lake, where Dwayne is led to believe Bridgette is with him on a plot to blackmail Robert in order to get Sully back. But Bridgette has an agenda all her own: to kill Sarah and have Robert and Sully for herself. Charlie, an employee of Sarah's who's had suspicions of Bridgette, follows her and Dwayne back to the cabin. He is discovered and fatally shot by Dwayne.

After Sully begins to feel ill from not having her insulin, Bridgette speeds up her plan and confronts Robert and Sarah. A struggle breaks out and Bridgette shoots Robert in the shoulder moments after she overpowers Sarah. Bridgette then sets Sarah in the driver's seat of her running car in the garage, making it look like a suicide attempt. Robert regains consciousness, finds Sarah and quickly moves her to fresh air. He then runs off to find Bridgette.

Bridgette is driving Dwayne's truck with Sully next to her, when she comes upon Robert standing in the middle of a bridge. She does not stop, and Robert dives out of the way just in time, but Bridgette halts the vehicle and aims her gun at him. Sully jumps out of the truck and runs to him. Holding them at gunpoint, Bridgette orders Sully to return to her or she will kill Robert. Her father whispers something in Sully's ear before she turns to make her way back to Bridgette. On her way, Sully darts to the bridge's railing and dives off the bridge. Distracted, Bridgette shifts her gaze, allowing Robert to dive off the bridge after his daughter, as Bridgette fires her pistol after them. Bridgette looks over the railing as Robert and Sully climb into a small boat with an outboard motor, which Robert tries frantically to start. Completely losing it, Bridgette gets ready to pull the trigger to kill them both, until another shot rings out, and Bridgette is struck below her right shoulder blade. The shot is from another gun that Bridgette left at the Benson home...now held by Sarah, having regained consciousness and followed her family to their would-be murder scene. Fatally wounded, Bridgette falls to her death into the water below.

Six months later, the Benson family is restored and intact. Robert and Sarah dance in the kitchen with their daughter.

Cast

Production

On April 1, 2015, it was revealed that Will Ferrell, Kristen Wiig, and Jessica Lowndes were set to star in the film as a parody of the genre of Lifetime films, with Rachel Lee Goldenberg directing and Andrew Steele writing the screenplay. Adam McKay's production company Gary Sanchez Productions and Ferrell are executive producing.[1] The next day, Ferrell issued a statement regarding the film saying "We are deeply disappointed that our planned top-secret project was made public, Kristen and I have decided it is in the best interest for everyone to forgo the project entirely, and we thank Lifetime and all the people who were ready to help us make this film." shooting down the prospect of the film being released.[2] However, in June 2015, a billboard for the film was spotted with a release date of June 20, 2015.[3]

The premiere of the film coincides with the 25th anniversary of Lifetime’s movie franchise.[4]

According to James Franco, Ferrell revealed to him that he was inspired to do the project by Franco's guest starring stint on General Hospital.[5] Franco would go on to say that Ferrell performing in the movie inspired him to helm a remake of the 1996 movie, Mother, May I Sleep with Danger?[5]

Marketing

On June 12, 2015, a teaser trailer was released.[6] On June 15, 2015, a full length trailer was released.[7]

Reception

Joshua Alston of The A.V. Club gave the film a B−, commenting on the straight dramatic acting by the principals, "Everything about Adoption is right visually, and Ferrell and Wiig are close enough to where they should be tonally, but it’s all a bit too earnest."[8]

In an interview with Conan O'Brien, Ferrell explains that the joke lay in the absurdity of producing a straight Lifetime movie. Ferrell cites Rolling Stone, which Ferrell claimed understood the joke, while the New York Times had not.

gollark: But ææææ Rust.
gollark: I now assume it's just something like "the stack.push borrow lasts throughout the entire line".
gollark: My borrow checker model™ isn't actually great.
gollark: Somehow.
gollark: If that did actually break I would wildly speculate that it's because they have a mutable reference to the vector and not the vector itself.

See also

References

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