The Carpenter's Son

The Carpenter's Son (2025)

Deliver us from evil.

13/11/2025

#Horror

Overview

A remote village in Roman-era Egypt explodes into spiritual warfare when a carpenter, his wife and their child are targeted by supernatural forces.

Status: Released

Rating: 54%

Original language: EN

Budget: $10,000,000

Revenue: $0

Official website:
https://www.thecarpenterssonmovie.com

Details

Production Companies

Anonymous Content

Anonymous Content

Curious Gremlin

Curious Gremlin

Cinenovo

Cinenovo

Saturn Films

Saturn Films

Spacemaker Productions

Spacemaker Productions

BlueLight

BlueLight

Social Network

IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt32304349

Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q125911900

Facebook: No data

Instagram: No data

X: No data

Cast

Reviews (1)

Review by: Ravi

Written by: Ravi on 2025-11-15T18:58:35.598Z

The Carpenter’s Son is a film that makes a strong first impression, but ultimately stumbles where it matters most: the story. The production excels technically — the visual adaptation is stunning, with symbolic religious imagery and dark, atmospheric cinematography that pulls the viewer into the film’s harsh desert environment. The sound design and musical score are equally impressive, adding tension and depth to every scene. From an audiovisual standpoint, the movie is exceptional.

The problem begins when the narrative takes over. The film attempts to adapt elements from the Infancy Gospel of Thomas, but the result is a storyline that feels confusing, uneven, and at times incoherent. It flirts with deep themes like faith, fear, guilt, and destiny, yet fails to develop any of them in a meaningful way. More often than not, the movie seems more focused on provoking than on delivering a cohesive or compelling plot.

Nicolas Cage delivers an intense performance, as expected, but even his presence isn’t enough to stabilize a script that collapses under its own ambition. The overall feeling is that the premise had tremendous potential, but the execution ends up fragmented, leaving audiences more puzzled than thoughtful.

In short: The Carpenter’s Son is technically excellent, with outstanding visuals and sound, but its story — already described by many as confusing — weakens the final impact. It’s a film that grabs attention, but doesn’t quite earn lasting admiration.

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