Orphan: First Kill

There's always been something wrong with Esther.

6.6
20221h 39m

After escaping from an Estonian psychiatric facility, Leena Klammer travels to America by impersonating Esther, the missing daughter of a wealthy family. But when her mask starts to slip, she is put against a mother who will protect her family from the murderous “child” at any cost.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Esther's First Kill

Esther's First Kill

Thumbnail for video: Now Streaming

Now Streaming

Thumbnail for video: Behind The Scenes

Behind The Scenes

Thumbnail for video: Clip: Railway Station

Clip: Railway Station

Thumbnail for video: Clip: Pencil

Clip: Pencil

Thumbnail for video: Clip: Rat Drink

Clip: Rat Drink

Cast

Photo of Isabelle Fuhrman

Isabelle Fuhrman

Leena Klammer / Esther Albright

Photo of Julia Stiles

Julia Stiles

Tricia Albright

Photo of Rossif Sutherland

Rossif Sutherland

Allen Albright

Photo of Hiro Kanagawa

Hiro Kanagawa

Detective Donnan

Photo of Matthew Finlan

Matthew Finlan

Gunnar Albright

Photo of Lauren Cochrane

Lauren Cochrane

Officer Leahy

Photo of Jeff Strome

Jeff Strome

Lobby Guard

Photo of Jade Michael

Jade Michael

Girl 1 / Madison

Photo of Sarah Luby

Sarah Luby

Receptionist / Claire

Photo of Bradley Sawatzky

Bradley Sawatzky

Officer Kusnetsov

Photo of Stephanie Sy

Stephanie Sy

Flight Attendant

Photo of Marina Stephenson Kerr

Marina Stephenson Kerr

Society 1 / Olive

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

"Esther" (Isabelle Fuhrman) is the resident of an high security facility in Estonia where she is a distinct danger to anyone who crosses her path! Rather gorily, she engineers a daring escape and somehow manages to get to the United States where she convinces "Allen" (Rossif Sutherland) that she is his long lost daughter. Well whilst dad might be fooled, the wife "Tricia" (Julia Stiles) and her son "Gunnar" (Matthew Finlan) soon catch on - but it seems that they have secrets of their own to keep. Can an uneasy truce prevail between them? Well, no - of course not but frankly I really couldn't have cared less. She is all too readily accepted into the wealthy American family (no DNA tests with her father to verify?) and as the story plods along, it loses any grasp on plausibility. We are required to believe that "Esther" is this epitome of evil, but the plot has more holes than a Swiss cheese so I kept asking myself just how any of this could ever actually happen - even in cinema land. It does have the benefit of being quite short, and to be fair to director William Brent Bell, he doesn't hang around once what passes for the story gets going. I just found the whole thing too nonsensical and the lead character had more of a petulance to her than any believable sense of menace.

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