The Good Son



The Good Son is a 1993 film starring Macaulay Culkin and Elijah Wood. The film was directed by Joseph Ruben, previously known for such films as "The Stepfather" (1987) and "Sleeping With the Enemy" (1991)

It is about Henry Evans, played by Macaulay, a psychopathic kid terrorizing his cousin, Mark (Elijah Wood). Mark tries incredibly hard to convince his family that Henry is psychotic and evil, a fact that should be noticed even if you're three miles away, Mark tries to stop Henry from getting worse, but fails to do so...

The movie was critically hated, being called a thoroughly creepy, unpleasant experience. The movie was a modest box office hit. It had a relatively small production budget and earned about 60,5 million dollars in the worldwide market. About 45 million of these dollars came from the United States market, where it was the 31st most successful film of its year. Elijah Wood won a Saturn Award for his performance in this film.

Tropes included:

 * Adults Are Useless: Really, all the signs are there but not one adult sees how off Henry is. When Mark points this out, he is labeled the crazy one.
 * Ax Crazy: Henry.
 * Big Damn Heroes:.
 * Bittersweet Ending: Yes, yes, we all know that, but what makes it feel bittersweet is , gives you this feeling of hard years to come.
 * Blond Guys Are Evil: Even if they're children.
 * Book Ends: The movie starts and ends with Mark standing on a large rocky hill.
 * Card Carrying Villain: Henry.
 * Cassandra Truth: No one believes Mark when he tries to tell how twisted his cousin is.
 * Chekhov's Gun: Well, more like Chekhov's Cliff.
 * Creepy Child: Henry.
 * Critical Psychoanalysis Failure: Henry actually manipulates Mark's psychologist, who should obviously be capable of telling how a psychologically disturbed child with no empathy acts.
 * Disproportionate Retribution: The reason Henry drowned his brother in the bath was because he had Henry's rubber duck.
 * Enfant Terrible: Again Henry.
 * Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas: Brutally averted. Even this trope was averted with Henry Evans. Maybe this is a possible reason, why the movie was so hated...
 * From Nobody to Nightmare: Henry.
 * Gilligan Cut: A pretty depressing example occurs at the beginning, when Mark is sitting by the bed of his terminally ill mother, repeating desperately that she won't die because he won't let her. Then it cuts to her funeral.
 * Good Colors Evil Colors: Mark wears a blue jacket and Henry wears a red jacket.
 * Good Smoking Evil Smoking: The first sign of Henry's true nature is that he smokes and gets Mark to smoke as well.
 * Hollywood Density: Henry tries to kill his sister by hurling her onto thin ice, where she immediately falls through. However, several adults trying to save her easily walk on the ice and need massive axes to chip it open mere seconds later.
 * Kick the Dog:
 * Kids Are Cruel: Henry for the sixth time.
 * Lack of Empathy: Henry for the seventh time, which makes him extremely Trope Overdosed. In particular when he asks Mark about how his mother looked when she died and described how his brother looked and felt after he was a corpse.
 * Literal Cliff Hanger:
 * Manipulative Bastard: Henry.
 * Nightmare Fuel Stationattendant: Make one guess.
 * Obviously Evil: Henry
 * Offing the Offspring:
 * Playing Against Type: Macaulay Culkin. Big time.
 * The film was probably made for that entire purpose. (Some people wanted to see evil Macaulay Culkin).
 * Played with in the Latin American name for the film. "El ángel malvado" (The evil angel), what's the name for the Home Alone series? "Mi pobre angelito" (My poor little angel)
 * Precision F Strike: Yes, The Home Alone kid really did say "Don't fuck with me."
 * Self Made Orphan:.
 * Shout Out: When they meet the first time Henry gives Mark a white mask made of paper and glue.
 * What Do You Mean Its Not for Kids: Many critics decried the casting of Macaulay Culkin in the role thanks to his kid-friendly Home Alone series, many children hero-worshiped him and marketing research indicated extreme interest by children in the film entirely because of Culkin's presence. If the number of anecdotes by people mentioning this film gave them nightmares indicates, they probably saw it anyway in spite of the R-rating.
 * People don't like it when you weaponize the break from Contractual Purity.