Alice Woodard (Emily Beecham) is a single mother and a top plant breeder at a corporate bio-engineering lab. She is focused on her work to the neglect of her adoring teenage son Joe (Kit Connor), so she breaks protocol and takes home one of her new creations: a beautiful but alien looking crimson flower that is genetically engineered to lift the mood of the owner. "Little Joe," as she names the new plant, is sterile, but the plant's survival instinct is more powerful than science and it showers her son and her assistant (Ben Wishaw) with pollen that changes more than their emotions. This indie horror film could be a 21st-century take on "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" by way of "Little Shop of Horror." The film explores themes of maternal connection and emotional bonds—Alice is torn between her son and her new creations at work, and she struggles with the changes in her pubescent son—and touches on fears of genetic tampering and the dangers of pharmaceutical solutions to emotional issues. Throughout it all, filmmaker Jessica Hausner creates a sense of unease and paranoia. The performances become emotionally distant and eerily controlled, the austere production design extends the theme of sterility to the lab itself, and the soundtrack adds an additional layer of alienation with its spare score and sound effects. It's a slow film that suggests more than it says and leaves questions hanging, letting the audience come to their own conclusions, but the superbly orchestrated direction creates an eeriness that infects the entire film. Features some adult language but no violence or sexuality. The DVD also includes a Q&A with filmmaker Jessica Hausner and star Emily Beecham. Recommended. (S. Axmaker)
Little Joe
Star Ratings
As of March 2022, Video Librarian has changed from a four-star rating system to a five-star one. This change allows our reviewers to have a wider range of critical viewpoints, as well as to synchronize with Google’s rating structure. This change affects all reviews from March 2022 onwards. All reviews from before this period will still retain their original rating. Future film submissions will be considered our new 1-5 star criteria.
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