Incest Story 2021

Incest Story 2021




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Josie & Jack review – shockingly lifeless incest drama
The female characters are badly underserved in this story of an off-the-rails brother and sister that gravitates around the monstrous men
Last modified on Tue 16 Mar 2021 11.01 GMT
“Your dad kept you locked up in an old house,” a character drunkenly blurts out in this adaptation of Kelly Braffet’s gothic novel about childhood misery and brother-and-sister incest. “It’s soooo Flowers in the Attic.” If only! The most shocking thing about this movie is how stale and lifeless it is, as if entire scenes had been placed into a vacuum storage bag, zipped up, and sucked of all energy and human feeling.
Set in the 1990s, it begins in rural Pennsylvania where 16-year-old Josie (Olivia DeJonge) and her older brother Jack (Alex Neustaedter) have been raised in a spooky old house by their physics professor father (William Fichtner). He’s a violent pompous drunk who homeschools the kids rather than sending them to “the idiot factory” local high school. In a few flatly acted scenes, he rants grandiosely about his university colleagues and hurls crockery at his children.
Jack is a good-looking bad boy who instructs Josie to seduce the kid behind the counter of the local pharmacy so he can get his hands on prescription drugs. And Jack creepily paws at his sister, stroking her hair and walking into the bathroom when she’s in the shower. Director Sarah Lancaster’s script, co-written with Braffet, keeps the audience guessing right up to the end how far things have gone between them – but there is so little visible chemistry between the actors you may not care either way.
Eventually, after a massive barney at home, the siblings escape, arriving penniless in New York where Jack attaches himself to an Upper West Side socialite, Lily – a brittle performance by Annabelle Dexter-Jones so good it deserves a better role. As for Josie, she is a disappointing non-character – often spotted with her nose in battered Kafka paperback to show she’s got a brain, but 90 minutes pass before she gets a chance to use it. Unintentionally, perhaps, the film is the story of monstrous men (a daddy dictator and controlling brother); the women are weirdly blank.
Josie & Jack is released on 22 March on digital platforms.
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Jordan KingFriday 25 Jun 2021 3:12 pm
The number of incest and child sexual abuse cases has risen in Cornwall and Devon during the pandemic. 
Its police force investigated 30 cases of incest or familial sexual offences last year, up from just one in 2019 and eight in 2018 and 2017. 
There were 12 investigations in Cornwall and 18 in Devon. 
It is feared lockdown may have left some vulnerable children in the hands of predatory family members.
This could have been made worse by schools being shut because teachers would have been unable to spot signs of abuse and intervene.
Michael Sheath, from child sexual abuse charity the Lucy Faithfull Foundation, said: ‘Most child sexual abuse takes places within the family and many victims of child sexual abuse are abused by someone they live with – a brother, a father or a step-parent.
‘So it’s no surprise that for some children lockdown has made these situations much worse as they are stuck at home with the person who harms them.
‘Protective adults need to know where the risks to children are – not from stranger danger, but from people the child knows.’ 
So far only three of these 30 possible offences have resulted in suspects being charged or receiving a court summons. 
Police have sent one to another agency for further investigation, and decided two should not be prosecuted because it would not be in the public interest. 
Another 15 will also go unprosecuted but this is because of issues over evidence and victims not wanting to take the case further. 
There are nine offences still waiting on an outcome. 
This rise in cases is not replicated nationally – where last year’s incest or familial sexual offences were down 5%, from 917 complaints in 2019 to 873 in 2020.
Delta variant 'spreads just as easily in double-vaccinated as those without jab'
But this is not necessarily because there was a genuine decrease in these types of crimes. It is possible fewer cases were picked up on and reported, so more abuse went on behind closed doors. 
‘Some perpetrators may also have thought their victim had nowhere to go and that they would be able to get away with their crime,’ added Mr Sheath.
‘[Protective adults] also need to know how to spot the warning signs of abuse and where to go to get help if they have a concern.
‘It’s so much better to ask for support about a worry rather than ignore it and hope it goes away – we must not leave it to children to protect themselves.’
When a child or young person is sexually abused, they’re forced or tricked into sexual activities. They might not understand that what’s happening is abuse or that it’s wrong. And they might be afraid to tell someone. Sexual abuse can happen anywhere – and it can happen in person or online.
It’s never a child’s fault they were sexually abused – it’s important to make sure children know this.
Emotional and behavioural signs to look out for:
If you’re worried about a child, even if you’re unsure, contact the NSPCC’s helpline to speak to one of its counsellors. Call them on 0808 800 5000, email help@nspcc.org.uk or fill in their online form.
Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.
For more stories like this, check our news page.
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Many children were trapped in their homes with predatory family members during lockdown (Picture: Getty Images)
Police investigated 12 cases of incest and child sex abuse in Cornwall and 18 in Devon (Picture: Getty Images)
More abuse likely went unnoticed because schools were closed and children had less contact with other adults. Stock image (Picture: Getty Images)

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