Jeremy Clarke reviews
The Frighteners
Distributed by
Pioneer LDCE
Cat.no: PLFEB 36301
Cert: 15
Running time: 105 minutes
Sides: 2 (CLV)
Year: 1996
Pressing: 1998
Chapters: 39 (18/20+1)
Sound: Dolby Surround
Widescreen: 2.35:1
Price: £24.99
Extras : Trailer for "Daylight"
Director:
Cast:
Michael J. Fox
Trini Alvarado
Peter Dobson
John Astin
Dee Wallace Stone
Jeffrey Combs
Jake Busey
Chi McBride
Having
written and directed the extraordinary Heavenly Creatures ,
based on an infamous fifties murder case that rocked the NZ town of Wellington
and considered by many the best film ever made in New Zealand, Peter
Jackson has a near insurmountable task in coming up with something
equally impressive. His approach (with longstanding screenwriting
partner Fran Walsh) was to write a screenplay for sale to Hollywood.
Enter Bob Zemeckis , director of Back To The Future, Forrest Gump and
much else, co-screenwriter of the spec script 1941 (made by Spielberg!) who
insisted that Jackson himself direct the piece. So here's the result -
an American genre piece written and directed by a New Zealander and shot
in New Zealand, which doubles uneasily for small town America.
The plot has shades of Heavenly Creatures , since it rests on a small
town named Fairwater in the grip of a terrible past - in which a local
Starkweather-obsessed serial killer Johnny Bartlett (Busey ) notched up
twelve victims in a hospital rampage before being captured and executed.
His accessory girlfriend Patricia Bradley (Stone ) now lives incarcerated
in an old, dark house with her mother.
In a seemingly unrelated parallel tale, self-styled psychic investigator Frank
Bannister (Fox ) is gifted with the ability to see and talk to undead
spirits, who cause havoc in the houses of Fairwater residents on his behalf
just so Bannister can visit, exorcise and collect his fee. But Bannister
starts noticing numbers appearing on people's foreheads - and before you know it,
they die by intense pressure upon their hearts.
What follows is a rollercoaster ride in the best Hollywood tradition, a
feature that's both a strength and a weakness since the film lacks (not
that it ever attempts) the emotional resonance of Heavenly Creatures .
But it does boast some extraordinary performance - Fox is impressive and
there are strong bit parts from Full Metal Jacket 's R. Lee Ermey (an
undead military officer lording it over the local cemetery), the
likeable Troy Evans as the local sheriff and - particularly - Jeffrey
Combs ("my body is a road map of pain ") as the distinctly odd FBI
agent in pursuit of supernatural quarry.
Then, there are the effects - a grim reaper who pursues speeding cars,
monstrous animate beings that form in interior wall surfaces, a face that
slides down the side of a coffin, and more. All this composed with Jackson's
extraordinary visual sense, exploiting the widescreen frame to the full (why
would anyone want to watch a pan and scan version of this movie??) with a
camera that, in the more frantic moments, swings around all over the place.
Pioneer's disc has plenty of chapters (38 plus one for a trailer) and
generally in all the appropriate places. The side break works fine,
although personally I would have placed it a few minutes later after the
entire flashback sequence involving Mrs Bannister's death, not merely
after her fatal car crash which seems an odd point to break the
narrative.
Speaking of odd points, in Chapter 34 (Dammers Loses His Head ), the
American NTSC LD release shows Combs' head explode, followed by Fox
falling through several floors. But in this PAL LD you see Combs' head
almost-explode, Fox falling through a floor, Combs head finish
exploding, Fox falling through more floors. What's removed is a cartoony
visual splat - the film flows fine without it, but it's irritating to
know it's gone.
Strangely, there are some far more unsettling scenes left intact by the censor
(check out two chapters on - The Express Bus to Hell ). It's a shame,
because aside from this peculiar cut, Peter Jackson's extraordinary
effects-laden visuals are perfect for presentation on LD, Pioneer's transfer
does them proud and the result is an otherwise truly gorgeous disc.
Film: 4/5
Picture: 5/5
Sound: 5/5
Review copyright © Jeremy Clarke, 1998.
E-mail Jeremy Clarke
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DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TXW32R4 32" widescreen TV
connected to either a Creative Dxr2 DVD-ROM player or Microsoft Xbox and
played through a Sony STR-DB930 amplifier.
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