El hombre de los caramelos
Un agente de policía y su esposa se sorprenden al descubrir que en la guardería del barrio se han producido abusos sexuales. Quedan desolados cuando descubren que su propio hijo también podr... Leer todoUn agente de policía y su esposa se sorprenden al descubrir que en la guardería del barrio se han producido abusos sexuales. Quedan desolados cuando descubren que su propio hijo también podría ser víctima.Un agente de policía y su esposa se sorprenden al descubrir que en la guardería del barrio se han producido abusos sexuales. Quedan desolados cuando descubren que su propio hijo también podría ser víctima.
- Nominado para 2 premios Primetime Emmy
- 4 nominaciones en total
- Helen Wells
- (as Dee Dee Rescher)
Reseñas destacadas
Sadly this film is just one more example of how the media played a role in the satanic panic. When people abandon reason in favor of emotion and superstition, it can have terrible consequences. This movie creates a narrative that plays into the fears of the time and passes the story off as being based on facts. Besides wrongful convictions, one of the biggest tragedies of the satanic ritual abuse panic is that so many children in these cases may now as adults still believe that they were victims of SRA. How traumatic must that be? Finally, while police and prosecutors were chasing and charging people in imaginary satanic cults with horrific crimes, real cases of child abuse, often perpetrated by family members, went unpunished. I guess it's easier for people to accept that bad things happen in the world because of "the Devil", than to have to face and try to solve complex societal problems like poverty, income inequality, social justice, racism, and sexism.
Whether or not this is based on the McMartin trial is immaterial. The point is that abuse occurs in this world, and the sad reality is that it can be performed by the kindly grandmother who lives next door as well as anyone. To shrug that off by saying it was produced to assure that a famous court case was not judged fairly is to deny the horror that some people go though on a daily basis. Whether that be by systematic or organized abuse in our preschools or the drunken father or mother in the child's home, it happens.
While the adult performances in and the direction of this film are not exactly top-notch, I had to hand it to the kids (Brian Bonsall and Stephen Dorff). They did a fantastic job.
The subject matter is convincing and uncomfortable.
Pam Dawber is great in her role, as is the rest of the cast.
Yet again, the legal system is put under the microscope, and makes you root for the kids in a big way.
But the premise is overplayed and tired.
Other than that, it is well written, well acted and deals with important matter.
But there is an infuriating ending which gives no answers, just leaves the viewer hanging.
I enjoyed the movie, but kept asking myself at the end: "Ummm.... Is this IT????????"
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesA TV movie made for the CBS network.
- Citas
Helen Wells: You know who turned me down flat? Miriam Slossburg.
Kendra Dollison: Josh's mom?
Helen Wells: Sunday night. She gets Alex up out of bed at 2:00 a.m. He meets them at the E.R. You know what it was?
Kendra Dollison: What?
Helen Wells: Gonorrhea. It was Josh.
- ConexionesFeatured in The 42nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1990)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Do You Know the Muffin Man?
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro