IMDb RATING
5.1/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
A seasoned F.B.I. Agent's child-genius son assists him on catching a child-killer, a schizophrenic Moab nutcase who believes he's been chosen by God to be a new Noah.A seasoned F.B.I. Agent's child-genius son assists him on catching a child-killer, a schizophrenic Moab nutcase who believes he's been chosen by God to be a new Noah.A seasoned F.B.I. Agent's child-genius son assists him on catching a child-killer, a schizophrenic Moab nutcase who believes he's been chosen by God to be a new Noah.
- Director
- Writer
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Jan Broberg
- Cindy Lockerby
- (as Jan Gardner)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
I think Scott Glenn could have easily handled this serial killer movie by himself, and "Slaughter of the Innocents" would have been better off for it. The nepotism casting of James Glickenhausus's own son, into a script that didn't need him, is the main problem with this seriously flawed film. Everything involving the kid is totally unbelievable and an insult to the audience's intelligence. At times I don't mind suspending realism for sake of a story, but here it's ridiculous. A kid flies to Salt Lake City on his own, intimidates an adult zoo employee into revealing incriminating information, and manages to use his computer to locate the killer's hideout. There is never any clue how this boy wonder travels all over Utah, other than stealing a mountain bike. Sure the flying ark at the end is kind of intriguing, but getting there is a real brain drain of logic. - MERK
This movie was a good one. I loved the plot line. The movie is about a father that works in law enforcement and his son is helping him track a serial killer of kids. The boy in this movie is portrayed as very intelligent. I found this movie to be very entertaining and thrilling. I give it a high rating. I remember when it was on cable years ago my young nephews loved the boy in this movie because he rode a dirt bike. The boy and his father were very close. This is a father and son action thriller. I would recommend this movie to everyone. There are some very thrilling moments. I rate this movie a 7 because it will have you using your mind to find out the killer. If you get the chance rent or buy this movie it was a very good one!
The story has... well... huge holes! But the relationship between father and son made this movie worth watching!!
The young actor, Jesse, has alot of natural talent and is surprisingly believable in his role as this self-assured young man.
So, set aside reality, get out a large dose of salt and enjoy.
The young actor, Jesse, has alot of natural talent and is surprisingly believable in his role as this self-assured young man.
So, set aside reality, get out a large dose of salt and enjoy.
there is not a single thing about this movie that is believable. More plot holes than you can count. Scott Glenn is somewhat miscast as an FBI agent. Plus, the do-good mentality of the movie is somewhat a put-off. Finally, the female character, Lamar, is very odd. She does not dress like any federal agent has ever dressed, except perhaps at Holloween. Some weird clown-tie and overcoat getup. Whose idea was that? Beyond stupid. This was filmed in 1994. computers of that day could barely turn on, much less do what this movie shows. It is interesting to compare this to Crimminal Minds. Still, it is a one of a kind movie, and so should be seen just for that.
Do you like mysteries? Me too. Here is a big mystery: why Scott Glenn, who worked with Demmi (thrice), Altman (twice) as well as Kaufman, Figgis, Howard, Frankenheimer, Towne and Coppola, agreed to play in such bull****?! In "Slaughter of the Innocents" (directed by James Glickenhaus) Glenn plays an FBI agent who tracks down a ritual killer. The only person who can help him to solve the case is his little son. As the boy is ten times smarter than all the FBI, he alone can create a special multi-search program on his personal computer and find an evil maniac who builds a new Noah's Ark. By the way, young wunderkind is played by some Jesse Cameron-Glickenhaus - have you got it? Naturally, he is cute and fearless. He plays baseball, rides the motorcycle and easily sneaks through the airport controls as he travels by plane to the place of crime. He even chats with his father about pubic hairs in the victim's mouth. Maybe the script looked like a parody on "The Silence of the Lambs" and Glenn decided to dilute his macho image with a little humour? Maybe Glickenhaus decided to turn his opus to dramatic course when he saw that it doesn't work as comedy? Still a mystery.
Did you know
- TriviaDirector James Glickenhaus made his son audition for the part of the second lead just like any other actor. He purposely left his son's name off the audition tape when he showed the footage to Scott Glenn. Out of all the tapes, Glenn said he liked Glickenhaus' son's audition the best. When he was told that it was the director's son, Glenn refused to believe it.
- Quotes
Stephen Broderick: Remember how I taught you after a shower to shake the water off your head like a dog?
Jesse Broderick: Yeah.
Stephen Broderick: Well, Grandpa taught me that and some day you'll teach your kid that.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Blast 'em Up: The Making of 'McBain' (2011)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $5,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Slaughter of the Innocents (1993) officially released in India in English?
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