Lamb

2016 "Innocence walks a fine line."
6.3| 1h33m| R| en| More Info
Released: 08 January 2016 Released
Producted By: The Shot Clock
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
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Lamb, based on the novel by Bonnie Nadzam, traces the self-discovery of David Lamb in the weeks following the disintegration of his marriage and the death of his father. Hoping to regain some faith in his own goodness, he turns his attention to Tommie, an awkward and unpopular eleven-year-old girl. Lamb is convinced that he can help her avoid a destiny of apathy and emptiness, and takes Tommie for a road trip from Chicago to the Rockies, planning to initiate her into the beauty of the mountain wilderness. The journey shakes them in ways neither expects.

Genre

Drama

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Lamb (2016) is now streaming with subscription on Prime Video

Director

Ross Partridge

Production Companies

The Shot Clock

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Lamb Audience Reviews

Kattiera Nana I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
GrimPrecise I'll tell you why so serious
GazerRise Fantastic!
Sameer Callahan It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
Boristhemoggy My first thought when I began to watch this movie was that the writer must have had some dark fantasy about a child and a middle aged man. There are no circumstances which I can think of in my adult life that would persuade me to strike up a friendship with an 11 year old, and (technically) kidnap her to take her on holiday. I do understand the need for human connection and you can have a connection with a child, but it is limited to just that, a connection and not a relationship. I also understand how the naivety and innocence of a child can help reference you to a fresh point again when you've lost your emotional compass. But again, that doesn't mean you befriend them and take them on holiday. However as I watched and thought about it I began to wonder how much our minds are shaped by the modern hatred of paedophilia and the lack of knowledge of paedophiles and how they work. I also have no knowledge of how 11 year olds may view their friendship with a middle age man. I do of course remember being a child and all my relationships with older people were based on a very simple premise: are they nice to be with. Simple. Oona Lawrence isn't sexualised really in this movie although there is an undercurrent always there but I think that's from expectations developed by other movies and life itself. I do know that 11 year olds can be as insightful and 'knowing' as she is, I was myself and I have no idea where the knowledge came from. Intuition? I know a lot of it has left me now though...cynicism?So as the movie progressed I began to feel more comfortable with their relationship thinking to myself, we've lost our way. We've lost our capacity to keep things in perspective. Much like the hunt for communists in America, "Reds under the Bed" and all that, there was a paranoia that had been struck up that was out of all realistic proportion to the threat. I think the same happened here. There's been so much focus in paedophiles and so many simple behaviours that are not now acceptable that anything that is even remotely hinting at even a friendship between child and adult becomes suspect. As you keep watching you realise that while his actions are still inappropriate and unrealistic, they are innocent and well intended. He's saving her and saving himself at the same time. Their souls bonded because they were alike but with his greater life experience, he knew that with her support -or the support he'd get by helping her and therefore re tuning his own compass- he would also help himself. Suddenly everything is OK and you want them to stay friends, because that level of friendship is in fact only possible with the naive innocence of a child and the child like need of a lost adult. The movie is not only engaging and well directed, fabulously acted and paced intelligently, it's also a comment to say "Hey, not every man is a paedophile. Not every relationship between adult and child is wrong." Sometimes it's the suspicions of the watchers that are suspect, not the actions of the participants. Watch this movie with an open mind and consider you and your society.
Katy_Scary I'm writing this as I'm watching this movie. I'm only 30 minutes into this film and I'm already immensely disturbed. This movie is trying to make the viewer like this 47 year old man who is trying to seduce an 11 year old girl! WTF! I like Tommy. She's a bright kid who doesn't get any attention from her parents and her "friends" are assholes. She is somewhat more mature than most 11 year old but she definitely looks younger than 11 (like 9) and has a naive nature, as she should, about Gary's intentions. Why would someone make this film unless they have the same sick desires as Gary? The acting was superb. I understand why Tommy was intrigued with Gary, she's a little girl starving for attention. This is type of movie that sickos watch and cheer for Gary to succeed with his sick perversion. If you watch this film at the theater make sure you look around and observe the men in the audience, especially the one's sitting alone. I'm sure Woody Allen loved this movie. I don't know if I can stomach the rest of this movie. I will probably cut it off before the ending. OK now she seems like she wants to go home and he is pressing her to stay. She looks scared. Uhg!
japonaliya SPOILERS GALORE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have seen many films about inter-generational romances. Some are wonderful, some creepy...I first would like to say that this film is no "Lolita" (excepting the road trip aspect and living in motels) and it is surely not the Academy Award Best Film of 1962, Sundays and Cybele (Les Dimanches de Ville d'Avray) probably the greatest film about inter generational love ever made and now available on Criterion Bluray.That being said, I am hoping the official DVD/Bluray release may have a director's commentary, as the film is really a Rorschach test given by the director to the viewer. There is no sexual abuse in this film, though where the relationship was heading had not David sever all ties with Tommie is a matter of opinion, but in the end, he did worse..emotional abuse...No one can be sure what David's ultimate intentions were...maybe he himself was not sure.. In a way, he was a kid running a way from home and wanted a companionLikewise, he would do anything to keep the farce of this illusional relationship going at all costs, so keeping Tommie hidden was justification for that desire, and Tommie too was complicit until she actually got jealous when she realizes that he still (in her mind) thought of her as a kid.While I am sure Tommie, as an innocent 11 year old did not actually want a sexual relationship with David, unconsciously and in her budding sexuality, she wanted him to want her as a woman.I think however, the man had a plan, or had a plan which there were to be a couple of outcomes.First, I want to establish a few things.. I don't think that initially he thought of Tommie as a sexual object, but definitely one he could mold, or "save" even though he couldn't "save" himself, or maybe he could, by giving Tommie the gifts of being needed, and to expand her horizons from the bleak existence she had.Some very important scenes provide insight about both David and Tommie's persona.When Tommie is shaving her legs (surely not actually as she was clearly not in that stage of puberty) but to mimic being a woman the way a young boy picks up his father's razor.This is also why she screams at him when he wants to bath her. Not because she is embarrassed by nudity, as much as being treated like a small child.This is further exemplified by her reaction of catching him making love to his girlfriend. NOT in disgust or fear that an innocent child might view it, but as a person who is told she is "equal partners" yet sees that in his eyes, she is not.Whether she as a girl-child actually wanted to have sex with him was probably unconscious if at all, but the need to be "desired" was, and her need to act, and feel grownup is apparent throughout the film.I think the ending is somewhat ambiguous on purpose, but there are clues.While Tommie's life is going nowhere, and David attempts to show her the beautiful world beyond, his intent backfires when she is, by circumstances bound to him, and in a way, is "in love" with him.So does the age old adage, "Tis better to have loved and lost, than never to have loved at all, apply here?"The very last shot is of her bag, still laying on the sidewalk where she left it running after David's car. This might imply that it is left behind,as she does catch up to David and he relents and takes her away.You know that he sees her running after him by the shot of her running in his side mirror.This would be the "fairy tale ending.Another possibility is that good directors never put in scenes or props that have no significance. That being said...there was a rifle....and also some very "poetic" parting words.One earlier scene which might establish David becoming further unhinged in this temporary Utopian fantasy is that after considering the nosy neighbor to be a threat to his concocted world, he sneaks into the neighbor's backyard with his rifle. Was he planing to shoot the guy? Why was he there at all, spying on him, and with a gun? Only when he sees the dying wife and is reminded of his father does he back off.When Davis realizes that his fantasy is over, and that he has harmed, rather than helped Tommie, he knows what he has to do.The clues are the gun, the "willing" his cabin to Tommie, and he would never see her again, but he will be with her always..in the wind, nature, etc. Sounds like a man who knows what he is going to do and there is no turning back....David is going back to the cabin to kill himself.THAT is what I believe the ending is... out of the 3 choices, David and Tommie go on with life apart, or she does catch up with him and they ride off into the sunset, or Tommie is totally broken, at least at first, and David ends it all, not being able to live with himself for what he did, and not being able to fix it.Tommie also has a few choices, to remain broken, and feeling used by David, or that she can sense that he did try to give her something she would never have in her world before they met, and would use that experience, bittersweet as it was to become empowered.
christiank7 Lets get a couple of things out of the way first. The direction and acting is excellent and definitely a well paced and engaging tempo. The technical aspect of photography and lack of intrusiveness of it was superb. The story line was well developed but slightly confusing as you watched it, mnade sense after the fact though. The casting was clever and the young girl's home situation was extremely well depicted in a very short scene. Clever scripting and clever idea. Now lets get to the crux of what is so bothering to people. Did it bother me personally? NO! I actually come from a world where adults and kids are not so separated by political correctness. Is this film showing behaviour that is wrong? Well that depends on where you see it from. The little girl was inncoent and her innocence was maintained and she received much of what was lacking in her own family like so many millions of little girls out in suburbia. The truth was explosive. The guy on the other hand presented a serious set of complex problems. He was a deviant and a liar but he was not an evil person and he was not a child molester either. He was a sad miserable grieving middle aged guy who had lost his way a long time ago. He was in every sense one of millions of men in his age bracket and if a child showed them the sunschine that this little girl showed I would bet that many would be entrapped by this situation but too gutless to appreciate it and run with it. This brings us to the most pressing question. Did he cross a line when he took her on this trip? Some will say definitely and yet it was most likely the nicest time this girl has ever had. Others will say that the actions were criminal and in the US they most liekly were because of the laws there. Due to the fact that the US has such a terrible child abuse history it is not astonishing to see the response by so many people. Did he cross the line morally, I do not think so. If it was my child I would have been very ticked off but then my child would never be in such a position because my child is looked after with care and good grace. This child was NOT! Does that make it right or at least OK for him to take her on a trip? You answer that for your self. I see this film as a major contribution as to how we as a society see the roles handed to us and how we have become so besmirched by ugliness that we are no longer able to love or for that matter feel it. If a man in his age has a good and genuine feeling for this little girl then why is it so wrong? Again - the ball is now in your court. Great film, deserves lots of people to see it. Definitely a film that is beyond the Hollywodd krap we see most every day.