Common Sense Media Review
By Jeffrey M. Anderson , based on child development research. How do we rate?
age 17+
Dull "killer kid" tale features violence involving children.
Parents Need to Know
Why Age 17+?
Any Positive Content?
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Language
a lot
A couple of uses of "f--k" and "s--t," plus "hell," "ass," and "oh my God."
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Violence & Scariness
a lot
Some violence involving children, including a sequence in which two parents push a girl into an oven and light it. She escapes, but the father pushes his boot into her back to stop her. They duct tape her mouth and smash her hand in the oven door. In another sequence, a boy kills his parents with a tire iron, though no actual "contact" is shown; viewers see blood on the walls and pillows. Adults fight: Viewers see a man with a broken jaw, a man gets stabbed in the neck with a fork, and another man falls on the same fork (it impales him in the eye). Also images of a woman on fire, a dog attack, shooting guns, a speeding car (with a child on board), a burning house, scary demons, and several sudden shocks.
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Products & Purchases
very little
Characters drink Heineken beer in a bar.
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Drinking, Drugs & Smoking
very little
See AlsoThe Ending Of Case 39 Explained - LooperCase 39: Explaining the Monstrous Child and THAT EndingAdults drink a beer in a bar, and the main character enjoys a glass of wine at home. The main character also grinds up sleeping pills into a cup of tea to give to the demon child.
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Sex, Romance & Nudity
none
Some flirting between grown-ups.
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Positive Messages
none
The movie suggests that evil lurks everywhere, even in the sweetest and most innocent of children. You can't trust anybody or anything, and there's never any attempt to learn anything, to turn things around for the better, or to find hope in the world.
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Positive Role Models
none
Emily is a social worker who ostensibly wants to help children, but this doesn't come from a place of generosity. She's frustrated and stressed and apparently incapable of forming any meaningful relationships of her own. She's short and abrupt with people and quick to mistrust them. Once she decides that the child is evil, she never really tries to help; her first impulse is to try to kill the child.
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Parents Need to Know
Parents need to know that Case 39 is part of the "killer children" horror subgenre, in which children are shown to be evil and homicidal; it's a psychologically effective and scary idea, but this movie is mainly out for shocks rather than exploring anything deeper. There's lots of violence, including some scenes involving children (in one particularly disturbing sequence, adults push a girl into an oven and light it), as well as other deaths and injuries. Language includes a few uses of "f--k" and "s--t," while sex, drinking, and drugs aren't prevalent. To stay in the loop on more movies like this, you can sign up for weekly Family Movie Night emails.
Where to Watch
Videos and Photos
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2:00
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Case 39
Parent and Kid Reviews
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- Parents say (5)
- Kids say (23)
age 15+
Based on 5 parent reviews
marnie T. Adult
February 5, 2020
age 12+
Another edge of your seat movie
The movie is well told, kids who are into the "jump scares" will love this, I allowed my 13, 12 and 10 year old to watch this. It is scary but does not have drugs, sex, or extreme violence(as far as gore is concerned) in it. The parents are far from role models which I do like to see in movies however I did review movie before allowing them to watch it.
wonder dove Adult
May 18, 2013
age 14+
Worth watching...
Case 39 definitely has it's scares, but it felt a little cliche most of the time. To me, "demon child" horror movies aren't really that scary and come off more like silly or unrealistic. The little girl was very annoying in this, but apart from that it was enjoyable. Renee is great, she always has this sweet vibe about her. The story is basically about a busy social worker named Emily (Renee) who has to take on another case (39) and investigate a little girl (Lily) who is apparently being abused by her parents. The parents are eventually sent to a mental institution and Lily becomes an orphan. She gets adopted by Emily because of their close bond and also because Emily feels deeply sorry for her, but Emily soon finds out that something isn't quite right with her new "daughter". She goes deeper into investigation and visits the nut house to speak to Lily's father where she finds out the terrible & evil truth behind Lily. Violence is pretty heavy which includes a child being shoved into an oven and lighting it, child's mouth being duct taped, fingers getting slammed into an oven door, the evidence of a murder is seen which shows blood everywhere, a man gets severely attacked my hornets and violently falls to his death, fork fights including stabbing, yelling and arguing, a scary chase scene, guns, dog attack, some fires including a woman hallucinating that she's on fire, speeding car and demon-like voices coming from a child. Sexual content just has some very mild flirting at a bar. Language has a few "f" words, sh*t, hell, @ss, d@mn. There is some drinking but not much, pills are crushed into tea. Fine for 15+ but the violence is sometimes intense.
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See all 5 parent reviews
What's the Story?
Stressed social worker Emily Jenkins (Renee Zellweger) is assigned one more case in addition to the 38 she already has, a young girl named Lilith (Jodelle Ferland). Emily visits the home and discovers that the girl's parents are showing signs of abuse. Emily decides to take Lilith in until a good foster home can be found -- but unfortunately, everyone around Emily quickly begins dying, starting with her psychologist friend, Doug (Bradley Cooper). Emily starts to believe that maybe Lilith is the problem, rather than her parents. Can she get anyone to believe her before it's too late?
Is It Any Good?
Our review:
Parents say (5):
Kids say (23):
The "demon child" subgenre of horror movies is an old one, stretching from The Bad Seed to The Omen to the more recent Orphan, and Case 39 doesn't have anything fresh to add. Completed in 2007, CASE 39 sat around for a long time before being unceremoniously dump in theaters in 2010; in the meantime, director Christian Alvart went on to make the effectively moody Pandorum, but this movie is a dud.
In these movies, the horror springs from the concept that the purest and most innocent of all creatures -- a child -- can harbor murderous evil. But Case 39 doesn't seem to understand this; there's no real emotional draw to the characters, and they don't seem connected to one another. Alvart counts on jump shocks and sudden noises for his scary scenes, and none of it works very well. The movie never digs deeper into its premise.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about the movie's violence. How did it affect you? Why do you think it affected you that way?
As a horror movie, is Case 39 scary? Which scenes worked the best? In general, what's scarier -- blood and gore, or long, slow build-ups?
What makes "killer kids" like Lilith scary?
Movie Details
- In theaters: October 1, 2010
- On DVD or streaming: January 4, 2011
- Cast: Bradley Cooper, Ian McShane, Jodelle Ferland, Renee Zellweger
- Director: Christian Alvart
- Inclusion Information: Female actors
- Studio: Paramount Vantage
- Genre: Horror
- Run time: 109 minutes
- MPAA rating: R
- MPAA explanation: violence and terror including disturbing images
- Last updated: October 9, 2024
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Case 39
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