Birth/Rebirth

2023

Horror / Thriller

IMDb Rating 7.1/10 10 253 253

Plot summary

A single mother and a childless morgue technician are bound together by their relationship to a little girl they have reanimated from the dead.



September 05, 2023 at 08:14 PM

Director

Laura Moss

Top cast

Marin Ireland as
Judy Reyes as Celie Morales
Breeda Wool as Emily Parker
Monique Gabriela Curnen as Rita
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
909.5 MB
1280*536
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
P/S ...
1.82 GB
1918*804
English 5.1
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 38 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by RebelPanda 7 / 10

Daughter of Frankenstein

"Birth/Rebirth" is a psychological horror film that explores the consequences of playing God and the ethics of medical advancements. It follows two mothers, Rose and Celie, with contrasting perspectives on life and death. Their lives intersect when Celie's daughter dies, and Rose's experiments to bring the dead back to life become relevant. The film delves into the emotional impact of this resurrection on both mothers, raising questions about the boundaries of maternal instincts. It features unsettling and graphic scenes, drawing inspiration from David Cronenberg and classic horror literature. Laura Moss approaches the concept of body horror and extreme maternal instincts from a feminist perspective, leaving a lingering impact without relying on jump scares.

Reviewed by chenp-54708 7 / 10

Good Debut Project From Laura Moss

It was pretty good.

It's a solid psychological horror movie with an interesting concept, strong direction and good performances from Marin Ireland and Judy Reyes. Throughout, the camerawork and production design is pretty good as it helps add the creepy atmospheric tones. The direction and writing from Laura Moss was pretty good as Moss was able to provide strong direction and interesting writing concepts into the narrative that were interesting and engaging to observe. Alongside some pretty solid uses of some horror gore and blood moments.

As mentioned, the performances are pretty good and even the child actor had some pretty good moments as well. The narrative definitely is influenced by Frankenstein or something from David Cronenberg as the narrative, while at times could improve, does explore some fun territories. The dialogue is pretty good as well and the characters were interesting to observe. Some of the pacing could have been improved and the characters were interesting although I wish there was a little more to the characters.

Overall, it's a good Midnight movie. There were some pretty good blood and gory looking moments.

Reviewed by ferguson-6 7 / 10

It's alive!

Greetings again from the darkness. When Colin Clive bellowed, "It's alive. It's alive", in James Whale's classic FRANKENSTEIN (1931), it instantly became an iconic moment in cinema history, and inspired many new readers to seek out Mary Shelley's 1818 novel. Since then, there have been numerous takes on the idea of bringing the dead back to life, and this latest is the first feature film from writer-director Laura Moss and their co-writer and collaborator on their award-winning short film, FRY DAY (2017), Brendan J O'Brien.

The film opens with the frantic emergency delivery of a newborn where the mother's life is in danger. This scene bookends the story, and it's not until the end when we realize what's happening and why. As an opener, this throws us a bit off track, and it's followed up by showing us the close mother-daughter bond between maternity nurse Celie (a terrific Judy Reyes, "Scrubs") and six-year-old Lila (AJ Lister). The next morning is a mother's worst nightmare, and this takes us into the depths of the hospital and the story.

Bacterial Meningitis takes Lila's life in a matter of hours, and her body ends up with onsite pathologist Dr Rose Casper (Marin Ireland, "Justified: City Primeval"). Socially awkward doesn't do justice to Rose's personality, as she seems to be incapable of empathy or even a normal conversation. However, she is obsessed with finding a cure. No, not a cure for meningitis or even cancer, but a cure for death. And her latest "patient" is the recently deceased Lila.

When Celie tracks down Rose at her apartment, she is stunned to see Lila in bed attached to monitors, while Rose's pet pig tromps around the kitchen. It's at this point where we realize we have been horror-conditioned to expect Lila to stagger from bed and spread atrocities across the city, wreaking havoc on all who have wronged her. With the creativity of the filmmakers, not only does that not happen, but instead an odd example of teamwork builds between Celie and Rose. It's a brilliant turn of events, and one that elevates the film within the horror-thriller genre.

Rose's obsession and focus is quirky and odd and unconventional, and watching Celie not just join in the mission, but actually contribute, is quite interesting. The contrast between the two women is obvious - Celie sees people (babies) as they are born into the world, while Rose seems them just after they depart ... these are the first and last stages. There is really only one misstep here - involving Muriel the pig - but most of the movie is exceptionally well written and acted. Ms. Ireland's Rose will surely make most viewers quite uncomfortable - especially with her method for gathering fetuses for research.

Playing God or trying to outwit nature and biology is typically a losing battle. The film has bits of Frankenstein, PET SEMETARY, Chucky from the Child's Play franchise, as well as HP Lovecraft's RE-ANIMATOR. As the two women begin to share traits previously only visible in the other, the film harkens back to the old adage - just because we can do something doesn't mean we should - only with a big twist from a unique point-of-view as a final shot. It's a dark movie that certainly isn't for everyone, but here's hoping Laura Moss's film finds a midnight movie audience.

Opens August 18, 2023.

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