2. Characters
• Protagonist- Sabrina Alex suffers from schizophrenia.
She escaped from a mental institution. She was in
there because she killed her sister who tried to
confront her that her child has died and she needs
to stop playing around with an imaginary child
because it scares the sister(Lucy).
• Lucy Alex- no disability.
• Austin Richards- suffers from depression.
3. Plot
• My movie will be mystery/action genre.
• Sabrina hears voices that tell her when she sees another baby
that, that is her child because the real parents ‘stole the baby
from her’. The voices also make her want to steal the babies
because she had a miscarriage and that’s why she thinks that
those children are hers. She never really harms the babies but
she doesn’t take care of them well. The police are after her
because she ‘looses’ the kids that she stole, she does this
because she isn't organised. She lives in an abandoned
building where looks after the children until they go missing
and she takes another one ‘home’. The police find out that
she does these to the children when they get a call from a
member of the public that they found a young child on the
side of the road. Austin looks like a ‘normal’ guy. When he sees
Sabrina looking confused and arguing With the voice in her
head he decides to try and help her. They escape and hide
from the police through out the movie. In the end they find
out the truth(plot twist).
4. Plot Twist
• Turns out that the voices in Sabrina’s head were
right on some points because she didn’t actually
have a miscarriage, her baby was taken away at
birth to carry out lab experiments on her. The voices
in the end lead her to find her real child.
5. Certificate
• I would make this movie a 12, because this movie
doesn’t have any gory or too violent scenes. The target
audience would be men around the ages of 20-25
because the protagonist looks appealing to men. Also
the story line maybe a bit too upsetting for a female
viewer.
• Films classified 12A and video works classified 12 contain
material that is not generally suitable for children aged
under 12. No one younger than 12 may see a 12A film in
a cinema unless accompanied by an adult. Adults
planning to take a child under 12 to view a 12A film
should consider whether the film is suitable for that child.
To help them decide, we recommend that they check
the BBFCinsight for that film in advance.