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Eli | |
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Directed by | Ciarán Foy |
Screenplay by |
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Story by | David Chirchirillo |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Jeff Cutter |
Edited by | Jason Hellmann |
Music by | Bear McCreary |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Netflix |
Release date |
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Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $11 million[1] |
Eli is a 2019 American horror film directed by Ciarán Foy from a screenplay by David Chirchirillo, Ian Goldberg, and Richard Naing, based on a story by Chirchirillo. It stars Kelly Reilly, Sadie Sink, Lili Taylor, Max Martini, and Charlie Shotwell. The film follows a boy with a rare autoimmune disease who is taken by his parents to a private medical facility to be cured.
Eli was produced by Paramount Pictures, Paramount Players, MTV Films, Intrepid Pictures and Bellevue Productions and was released on October 18, 2019, by Netflix. The film received mixed reviews from critics, with praise for its performances, plot twist and atmosphere, and criticism for its screenplay, pacing, tone and reliance on jump scares.
Young Eli Miller suffers from severe allergic reactions to the outdoors and is forced to live in protective gear. His parents, Rose and Paul, take him to Dr. Isabella Horn's secluded medical facility built in a renovated old house.
Eli is initially overjoyed to remove his "bubble suit" and enjoy comforts previously denied to him. However, he begins to experience supernatural phenomena in the house. He also begins his excruciatingly painful treatments. The specters repeatedly leave the message lie, and Eli wonders if they refer to Horn's treatments.
Eli befriends Haley, the only person who believes the house is haunted. She tells him none of the other patients Horn treated left the facility. Eli discovers the word "LIE" is the inverted number 317, the passcode to Horn's office. In the office, Eli finds Horn's records of past patients, all of whom were killed by the third and final treatment.
Eli unsuccessfully tries to persuade his parents to get him out of the facility, but Paul sedates him. Hurt and confused, Eli barricades himself in Horn's office. He discovers and enters a hidden passageway to an underground chamber with religious paraphernalia. Horn locks Eli inside the chamber, causing Eli to pass out from the allergic reaction. When Eli awakes, he finds he can breathe fine, and he actually has no disease. Rose, feeling guilty for deceiving Eli, goes to him. When she opens the gate, Eli knocks her unconscious with a crucifix and flees but is recaptured by Horn and his father.
Rose regains consciousness and finds a dagger in the crucifix. She also discovers that the chamber contains the bodies of Horn's previous patients, bound and adorned with religious symbols. She forces her way into the treatment room but Paul restrains her. It is then revealed that Eli is a child of Satan himself, and his "allergic reactions" were him developing demonic abilities. Horn prepares to stab the restrained Eli with the ceremonial dagger, but Eli telekinetically stops the dagger and makes her stab herself. He then levitates the assistants in the air, spin them upside-down (resembling the Cross of St. Peter), then set them on fire. Eli demands answers from Rose, who reveals she was desperate for a child, and asked Satan for one. Paul tries to stab Eli, who telekinetically crushes his face.
Eli and his mother leave the burning house. Haley, who turns out to be another child of Satan, greets them, saying Eli is stronger than his paternal half-brothers and half-sisters. She offers to take Eli to his biological father. Rose drives the two children away from the burning facility.
David Chirchirillo's screenplay was mentioned in the 2015 Black List, compiling the best scripts of the year. In March 2017, it was announced that Ciarán Foy would direct the film, with Ian Goldberg and Richard Naing contributing to Chirchirillo's screenplay.
Trevor Macy and John Zaozirny produced the film, while Melinda Nishioka served as a co-producer. Daniel Hammond and Gabriel Hammond executive produced the film under their Broad Green Pictures, Intrepid Pictures and Bellevue Productions banners, respectively.[2]
In October 2017, Charlie Shotwell was cast to star in the film.[3] In December 2017, Sadie Sink and Kelly Reilly also joined the cast.[4] In January 2018, Lili Taylor and Max Martini were also added.[5][6]
Principal photography began in January 2018 in New Orleans, Louisiana.[7]
In October 2017, Paramount Players acquired distribution rights to the project, and set it for a January 4, 2019, release.[8] However, Netflix bought distribution rights to the film from Paramount after Paramount reportedly could not figure out how to market the film.[1] Netflix released it on their service on October 18, 2019.[9]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 52% based on 25 reviews, with an average of 5.2/10. The site's critical consensus states, "Intermittently effective if not wholly successful, Eli offers horror fans a handful of jump scares in search of a truly terrifying story."[10]