Popularity: 4 (history)
Director: | Yorgos Lanthimos |
---|---|
Writer: | Yorgos Lanthimos, Efthymis Filippou |
Staring: |
Dr. Steven Murphy is a renowned cardiovascular surgeon who presides over a spotless household with his wife and two children. Lurking at the margins of his idyllic suburban existence is Martin, a fatherless teen who insinuates himself into the doctor's life in gradually unsettling ways. | |
Release Date: | Oct 20, 2017 |
---|---|
Director: | Yorgos Lanthimos |
Writer: | Yorgos Lanthimos, Efthymis Filippou |
Genres: | Drama, Mystery, Thriller |
Keywords | husband wife relationship, hostage, psychopath, insanity, blackmail, surgeon, paralysis, dysfunctional family, paranormal, revenge, hospital, cruelty, brutality, cafe, cardiologist, recovering alcoholic, open heart surgery |
Production Companies | Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland, HanWay Films, Element Pictures, Film4 Productions, TPC, New Sparta Films, Limp |
Box Office |
Revenue: $10,700,000
Budget: $3,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
---|---|
Colin Farrell | Steven Murphy |
Nicole Kidman | Anna Murphy |
Barry Keoghan | Martin Lang |
Raffey Cassidy | Kim Murphy |
Sunny Suljic | Bob Murphy |
Bill Camp | Matthew Williams |
Alicia Silverstone | Martin's Mother |
Herb Caillouet | Ed Thompson (Hospital Director) |
Barry G. Bernson | Dr. Larry Banks |
Denise Dal Vera | Mary Williams |
Drew Logan | Principal |
Ming Wang | Doctor (Abdominal) |
Michael Trester | Elderly Man |
Anita Farmer Bergman | Nurse (uncredited) |
Lea Hutton Beasmore | Conference Guest (uncredited) |
Dylan Keith Adams | Doctor at Conference and Event Dinner (uncredited) |
Charles Poole | Patient / Fisherman (uncredited) |
John W. Harden | Conference Guest / Paramedic (uncredited) |
Bryant Bentley | Paramedic (uncredited) |
Aaron Pullins IV | Medical Conference Attendee (uncredited) |
Joanne Popolin | Medical Conference Attendee (uncredited) |
Carly Tamborski | Doctor at Conference (uncredited) |
David Pittinger | Student's Dad (uncredited) |
Michael Lee Bailey | Conference Guest (uncredited) |
John Newsom | Doctor at Banquet (uncredited) |
Robert Gerding | Visiting Consultant (uncredited) |
William C. Ingram | Janitor (uncredited) |
Beverly Kristy | Doctor (uncredited) |
Derek Polen | Conference Guest (uncredited) |
John E. Brownlee | Coastal Walker (uncredited) |
Name | Job |
---|---|
Kenneth Coyne | Visual Effects Producer |
Kelvin R. Trahan | Hair Department Head |
Tina Roesler Kerwin | Makeup Department Head |
Jonathan Collard | Digital Intermediate |
Charlotte Barnes | Digital Intermediate |
Mark Neale | First Assistant Editor |
Steve Browell | Sound Effects Editor |
Emily Kacere | Unit Production Manager |
Atilla Salih Yücer | First Assistant Director |
Verity Wislocki | Post Production Supervisor |
Niall Brady | Dialogue Editor |
Caoimhe Doyle | Foley Artist |
Brendan Rehill | Foley Editor |
Emer O'Shea | Production Coordinator |
Jodi Byrne | Makeup Artist |
David Greathouse | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
Benedict Baldauff | Second Assistant "A" Camera |
Richard S. Crumrine Jr. | First Assistant "A" Camera |
Kyriacos Karseras | Translator |
Holly Fisk | Set Decoration |
Pamela Ford | Craft Service |
Nick Payne | Music Supervisor |
Daniel Baker | Art Direction |
Belle Francisco | Script Supervisor |
Sarah Giles | Music Supervisor |
Jaclyn Laravie | Key Costumer |
Chris Salamone | Dolly Grip |
Atsushi Nishijima | Still Photographer |
Ed Bruce | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Crystal Lewis | Hairstylist |
Anna Richardson | Makeup Artist |
A. Patrick Storey | Property Master |
Claudia Sarbu | Assistant Costume Designer |
Matt Fleischmann | Steadicam Operator |
Scott Lipez | Best Boy Electric |
Joseph Arena | Steadicam Operator |
Russ Faust | Gaffer |
Vadim Draempaehl | 3D Artist |
Nicholas Murphy | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Tanya Tieman | Hairstylist |
Andrea Vieth | Makeup Artist |
Georgina Cranmer | Digital Intermediate |
Max Behrens | Sound Effects Editor |
Ed Downham | Sound Effects Editor |
Neil Harrison | Digital Intermediate |
Maria Chamberlain | Digital Intermediate |
Simon Carroll | Sound Effects Editor |
Peter Wolf | Second Assistant Director |
Jean McGrath | Foley Mixer |
Taylor Morgan | Production Coordinator |
Yorgos Lanthimos | Writer, Director |
Thimios Bakatakis | Director of Photography |
Yorgos Mavropsaridis | Editor, Music Editor |
Jade Healy | Production Design |
Adam Willis | Set Decoration |
Nancy Steiner | Costume Design |
D. Lynn Meyers | Casting |
Johnnie Burn | Sound Designer, Supervising Sound Editor, Music Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Patrick Malone | Digital Intermediate |
Efthymis Filippou | Writer |
Francine Maisler | Casting Director |
Vasilis Marmatakis | Title Designer, Graphic Designer |
Ariane Labed | Thanks |
Sofiya Gubaydulina | Sound |
Lauren Claret | Production Accountant |
Ashley Smith | Sound Mixer |
Name | Title |
---|---|
David Kosse | Executive Producer |
Sam Lavender | Executive Producer |
Amit Pandya | Executive Producer |
Marie-Gabrielle Stewart | Executive Producer |
Will Greenfield | Co-Producer |
Atilla Salih Yücer | Co-Producer |
Keith Potter | Executive Producer |
Daniel Battsek | Executive Producer |
Peter Watson | Executive Producer |
Kamen Velkovsky | Associate Producer |
Ed Guiney | Producer |
Yorgos Lanthimos | Producer |
Andrew Lowe | Executive Producer |
Nicki Hattingh | Executive Producer |
Anne Sheehan | Executive Producer |
Paula Heffernan | Co-Producer |
Organization | Category | Person | |
---|---|---|---|
Venice Film Festival | Best Supporting Actor | Barry Keoghan | Nominated |
Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 4 | 33 | 44 | 26 |
2024 | 5 | 41 | 59 | 27 |
2024 | 6 | 37 | 61 | 28 |
2024 | 7 | 43 | 82 | 25 |
2024 | 8 | 28 | 36 | 22 |
2024 | 9 | 28 | 47 | 20 |
2024 | 10 | 31 | 70 | 18 |
2024 | 11 | 24 | 32 | 16 |
2024 | 12 | 24 | 34 | 17 |
2025 | 1 | 30 | 40 | 20 |
2025 | 2 | 19 | 30 | 4 |
2025 | 3 | 9 | 28 | 2 |
2025 | 4 | 5 | 7 | 3 |
2025 | 5 | 4 | 6 | 3 |
2025 | 6 | 3 | 4 | 3 |
2025 | 7 | 3 | 4 | 2 |
2025 | 8 | 3 | 5 | 2 |
2025 | 9 | 6 | 8 | 4 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 8 | 622 | 855 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 5 | 922 | 952 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 4 | 792 | 837 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 3 | 167 | 656 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 2 | 368 | 368 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | 1 | 830 | 898 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
---|---|---|---|
2024 | 8 | 593 | 738 |
My immediate response as soon as this finished was "MASTERPIECE." Lanthimos is back to _Dogtooth_-level craziness with this film and I couldn't be happier. _The Lobster_ was a favourite of mine in 2016, but something about this one's hopelessness drew me in more - odd, I know. Lanthimos' films have ... characters stuck in dead end situations where they are able to make a choice, but the results of the options are bad and worse. It's a dour story and the film is relentlessly unsettling, but this is what I've come to expect and want out of this Greek maestro. Sacred Deer is a suburban Greek tragedy that draws inspiration from Euripides’ _Iphigenia in Aulis_ - a character even mentions this title in a key scene - and it plays out both as you'd imagine and with great shock and originality. Lanthimos and his writing partner Efthymis Filippou may just be my favourite writing team working today - they haven't let me down yet. The cast is spectacular here with Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell in top form bringing the odd words of Lanthimos and Filippou to life - albeit a very, very strange life. Farrell, having worked with Lanthimos on The Lobster, had nothing but high praise for the director during tonight's Q&A after the screening of the film. He even said they were planning another project to work on together. He's slowly becoming a muse and their relationship is turning into a DiCaprio-Scorsese type partnership (except I look forward to these way, way more). The audience I was in had a hard time with this film - there was audible shock and disgust during the film and the applause as it ended was slight. I think people were genuinely scandalized by this one and that makes me like it even more. Keep shocking audiences, Lanthimos, you Greek bastard. I'll be in line every single time!
I am a big fan of some of Yorgos Lanthimos' earlier work, so _The Killing of a Sacred Deer_, which I had been told in no uncertain terms would be a straight up horror movie, was well and truly on the agenda for 2017. Unfortunately, I found that not only was _Sacred Deer_ not at all a horror, but mor ... e importantly that it lacked the dark whimsy of something truly odd, like the director's previous film, _Lobster_. Instead it opts for an outright uncomfortable tone. The world is real, boringly so, and it is only the characters who seem unbelievable. Which is a 180 on the sort of absurdism I usually gravitate towards. That said, _Sacred Deer_ still contains some beautiful cinematography, and a couple of the most genuine laugh-out-loud moments I've seen in a movie all year. _Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._
Finally got the chance to see this via Amazon. Dogtooth and The Lobster (from the same Greek director, who I must admit has a keen sense of storytelling) did not impress me at all. Very interesting ideas; atrocious presentations. Dogtooth was indecipherable and The Lobster is cruel, ugly, and not h ... umorous in any fashion (I've no idea why it's billed as a black comedy.) However, this latest film is entertaining to me despite it's grim and inky-black nature (based on the ancient Greek play, which is where the title is loosely derived from.) Perhaps it's a bit more straight-forward despite its cryptic nature, a bit more involved in some form of reality we can recognize and less inference as to what the hey is really happening. But I sure watched it w/ more interest than The Lobster (I've no interest in the director's film prior to that one.) A successful heart surgeon (w/ a past history of alcoholism, sober for some time at present) is shown to have an uneasy alliance w/ the teenaged son of a patient who died on the operating table. It's clear the boy has some hold over this surgeon, who seems eager to please him but his heart's not into it (no pun intended.) The boy's true intentions are revealed as events move forward; the surgeon's wife and two children (a few years apart, both intelligent in their own ways) are placed in grave danger as well as dear old Dad, and to reveal just how would spoil it for first-time viewers. The camera-work here is impeccable, as are the jarring soundscapes, found-sounds, and industrial noise which makes for harrowing listening. The actor playing Martin, the teenaged oddball w/ a shared secret, is riveting to watch in a well-suited role. Sacred Deer isn't so much a horror-film as a drama w/ strong elements of dream-like reality, awkward young romance, and assorted chills and cold calculated sex-scenes involving "playing dead" and "the other." My biggest complaints would be as before w/ this director's work: everyone speaks their lines as if hearing them through an ear-piece to parrot back, which makes the cast seem rather stilted and robotic. This director favors a weird tangent of "Mamet-speak." The ending is about what you'd expect, following the matter-of-fact discussions which precede it. Up until that point Sacred Deer does a pretty good job keeping us wondering what will happen next, where will things lead, what is that kid's gift and whereupon was it bestowed; unfortunately the outcome isn't as entrancing or unexpected as I'd hoped. But overall worth my time to watch. Considering how disappointed I was by the previous films by the director I'd watched (great reviews, all of which confounded and puzzled me) this film was much less of a bore and a chore to watch. A pleasant, unpleasant surprise indeed.
**What a shame this could have been excellent** This film depicts the life of upper class people as we like to imagine it, and brilliantly so. The medical doctors couple have it all figured out, speak in complete sentences and are firm and polite. The house is gorgeous, the children are smart and ... well behaved. The setting of the story as a whole is very well done, believable and with great actors to boot. The score is not so great. At times we have experimental "music" that just annoys and does nothing for the mood, but the visuals are exciting to watch, we have interesting camera angles, no shaking and clever zooms and motion. The pace is slow, yet "The Killing of a Sacred Deer" is never boring. There is always a plot twist which is explored after, things take their time but rightfully so. Why the relatively detailed review for a 1.5 star rating? The problem is that the climax is just a huge letdown. The audience can't help themselves but wonder what is going on, guessing on the crime the apparently genius 16 year old villain commits. It is never explained. The makers thought it would be enough to have the bad guy win. It is not enough. In the end everything good about the movie was negated by breaking the suspension of disbelief in a petty way, just ending the movie. Even "The Leftovers" explained its phenomenon, and that show did not need to. There the mystery was the premise for character development, here the mystery is a tool to keep the viewer's attention. I'd like to give less than 1.5 stars, because of how cheated I feel and because of the waste of talent and production value. But I'm sure there are people who love this and people who will learn from this. 18 December 2017 I am migrating my reviews from a different site which has become simply garbage. TMDB looks awesome and I look forward to be a part of it.
I found this to be one of the better Yorgos Lanthimos films, but I just cannot get behind his writing style. The stories he delivers are incredibly unique and I want to like them so much more than I actually do. Despite those drawbacks, _The Killing of a Sacred Deer_ was a mind-bending movie that th ... rew me for a loop. The performances were great all around, as they should be with a star-studded cast featuring Colin Farrell, Nicole Kidman, and Barry Keoghan. The plot was incredibly twisted and dark. I enjoyed this film, but much like Lobster, and really wish there was a more modern spin on the writing instead of the short choppy and somewhat awkward framing that Lanthimos is known for. **Score:** _65%_ | **Verdict:** _Decent_
This film managed to keep me fully engaged. I watched it at 1.0 speed, which has been challenging for me lately. The plot was so thrilling, but after it ended, I had this feeling of uncertainty. Perhaps I did not realize something, or maybe there was a hidden reason behind everything that was happen ... ing. I was left with unanswered questions. However, as I read other reviews, I started to realize that this was my first time watching a film by Yorgos Lanthimos, and I did not fully catch up to his style. By the way, I discovered this film through Barry Keoghan, and he did not disappoint. My next stop is "The Lobster" as you all love it so much.