The Afflicted (film)

The Afflicted (also known as Another American Crime) is a 2011 American horror crime film written and directed by Jason Stoddard and starring Kane Hodder and Leslie Easterbrook. It is loosely based on the crimes of Theresa Knorr.[2]

The Afflicted
Film poster
Directed byJason Stoddard
Produced byJason Stoddard
Leslie Easterbrook
Written byJason Stoddard
StarringKane Hodder
Leslie Easterbrook
Narrated byRandi Jones
Music byDege Legg
CinematographyLee Dashiell
Edited byRobert Galloway
Production
company
Afflicted Picturehouse
Distributed byNocturnal Features
Release date
  • 8 May 2011 (2011-05-08) (Dead by Dawn)
  • 1 March 2012 (2012-03-01) (United States)
Running time
83 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$212,940[1]

Plot

Hours after his daughter Carla's sixteenth birthday, Hank attempts to run off in the middle of the night, but is caught by his mentally unstable wife, Maggie. The two argue and accuse each other of infidelity, and when Hank threatens to take their four children away from her, Maggie snaps and beats him to death with a baseball bat; after hiding his body, she tells the rest of the family that he has absconded with his mistress. Maggie subsequently becomes a shut-in and descends into alcoholism and religious mania, spending most of her time obsessing over Pastor Jon Stackwell, an unscrupulous local televangelist nicknamed "the Cowboy Prophet."

Maggie begins abusing her children, and pulls them out of school when one of them, Cathy, tries to get help from the incredulous Principal Walsh. When they run out of money, Maggie coerces her son Bill into becoming a day laborer, and starts pimping Carla out to a man named Randy. Seeing herself as overweight and hideous, Maggie takes her frustrations over this out on Cathy, and one night forces her to eat canned foods blended with lard; when Cathy stands up to her, Maggie shoots her in the shoulder, and leaves her shackled in the bathtub after making an inept attempt at treating her wound.

When Cathy begs to be released, Maggie agrees to let her go, but only on the condition that she be allowed to remove the bullet from Cathy's shoulder. The "surgery" that Maggie performs on Cathy exacerbates the girl's injury, and she dies from the combination of it and the mixture of vodka and pills that Maggie had given her as an anesthetic. While Maggie is asleep and Bill is out disposing of Cathy's body, Carla tries to run away, and stumbles onto her father's remains. Maggie catches Carla, brings her home, and threatens her other children into bludgeoning their sister with a wooden paddle before locking her in a closet, where she is left to die.

After Carla's death, Maggie pimps Grace out to Randy in her place, and orders Bill to dump and burn Carla's corpse. Carla's charred body is soon discovered by the police, and recognized by Pastor Jon, who races to Maggie's home. Grace, traumatized from being raped by Randy, shoots Maggie to death with her own gun, and then fatally stabs Bill, unaware that he had also been planning on killing their mother. Pastor Jon arrives at the house, and tries to talk the suicidal Grace down, offering to take the blame for all of the murders, but Grace shoots herself anyway.

Cast

  • Leslie Easterbrook as Maggie
  • Kane Hodder as Hank
  • J.D. Hart as Pastor Jon Stackwell
  • Michele Grey as Cathy
  • Katie Holland as Carla
  • Randi Jones as Grace
  • Daniel Jones as Randy
  • Cody Allen as Bill
  • Constance Collins as Principal Walsh
  • Ron Stafford as Detective Debose
  • Anthony Garner as Detective McDonald
  • Anthony Osment as Officer Williams
  • Matt Anderson as Officer Salinski
  • Gezelle Flemming as Witness

Reception

Leslie Easterbrook's acting was praised by Ain't It Cool News, which concluded its review of the film with, "The Afflicted is not for everyone, but stands out for its bold performances and its ability to burrow into the viewer's brainpan."[3] Easterbrook was also commended by Corey Danna of Horror News, who gave the "incredibly depressing" The Afflicted a final score of 4/5 while opining that it "captures the very real horror in a way that is more heart wrenching than exploitative."[4] A grade of 1/4 was awarded by Arrow in the Head, which called The Afflicted "unwatchable" and "a complete mess" before ending its review of the film with, "I hate to be heavy-handed, but this is just a bad film. I have nothing good to say about it. The acting is histrionic, the characters lacking any depth or nuance, and the pacing very poor."[5]

gollark: "Maximize happiness" gets you humans continuously on life support and super-heroin or something.
gollark: Not some bad and overly specific parameter, not what you want it to, what it *should* do.
gollark: If you make an AI and make it significantly smarter/more powerful in some relevant way than humans, you need to make *very sure* it will actually do what it should.
gollark: Exactly.
gollark: They won't be "more sensible", they'll do some bizarre thing someone unthinkingly programmed them to as effectively as possible.

See also

References

  1. "The Afflicted (2011)". boxofficemojo.com. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 29 March 2017.
  2. Barton, Steve (16 June 2011). "Midnight Releasing Announces They Are Afflicted". dreadcentral.com. Dread Central. Retrieved 6 April 2017.
  3. bug, ambush (6 April 2012). "AICN Horror looks at new horrors ATM! Forgetting the Girl! Purification! The Afflicted! The Midnight Disease! Plus a look back at Night Train Murders!". aintitcool.com. Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  4. Danna, Corey (5 October 2012). "Film Review: The Afflicted (2010)". horrornews.net. Horror News. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  5. Boy, Zombie. "The Afflicted". JoBlo.com. Arrow in the Head. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
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