IMDb RATING
7.2/10
8.4K
YOUR RATING
A couple of English tourists arrive on an island where all the children have gone crazy and are murdering the adults.A couple of English tourists arrive on an island where all the children have gone crazy and are murdering the adults.A couple of English tourists arrive on an island where all the children have gone crazy and are murdering the adults.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 2 nominations total
Maria Druille
- Niña que llora
- (as María Druille)
José Luis Romero
- Niños
- (as José Luís Romero)
Marián Salgado
- Niños
- (as Marian Salgado)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
While on vacation, a man and his pregnant wife visit an island that the former knows from his past. They arrive to find that the place is not how he remembered. In fact, it appears to be quite deserted aside from several children. It isn't too long before they come across an adult. Pity the kids get to him first, killing him and stringing his body up for use as a human piñata. You see, adults are no longer welcome on this island. At least not if they're still among the living.
For my money, "Who Can Kill a Child?" is a masterpiece of the genre. It makes other killer kid films look like jokes in comparison. Originally seeing it via the "Island of the Damned" cut, it's a very tense and unsettling film with some interesting socio-political subtext as relates to child violence. The likable main characters really struggle here, both physically and morally, in a picture as bleak as they come. It has such an impeccable mood and atmosphere to it. The closest comparison I can make is to that of Werner Herzog's short documentary, "La Soufrière". The isolated, disquieted feel of the island is very predominant.
It's unfortunate that director Serrador faded into the land of television after this film. He clearly had a lot to offer the genre.
For my money, "Who Can Kill a Child?" is a masterpiece of the genre. It makes other killer kid films look like jokes in comparison. Originally seeing it via the "Island of the Damned" cut, it's a very tense and unsettling film with some interesting socio-political subtext as relates to child violence. The likable main characters really struggle here, both physically and morally, in a picture as bleak as they come. It has such an impeccable mood and atmosphere to it. The closest comparison I can make is to that of Werner Herzog's short documentary, "La Soufrière". The isolated, disquieted feel of the island is very predominant.
It's unfortunate that director Serrador faded into the land of television after this film. He clearly had a lot to offer the genre.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaNarciso Ibáñez Serrador wanted Tom and Evelyn to speak English to each other throughout the movie. This would add to Evelyn's communication troubles since she isn't able to speak any Spanish at all. However, since the producers feared that the public would get distracted by the subtitles, they made a last minute decision and had both characters dubbed into Spanish for the original version. Ibáñez Serrador has always been very critical of this decision, he felt that it damaged the atmosphere of the film.
- GoofsThe other female tourist trapped on the island is supposed to be Dutch, yet she clearly speaks German into the phone.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Versión española: ¿Quién puede matar a un niño? (2001)
- How long is Who Can Kill a Child??Powered by Alexa
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By what name was Would You Kill a Child? (1976) officially released in India in English?
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