Booga-booga, it’s Burl, here to review the latest work from
that portly master of the McBare, Guillermo Del Toro! We last heard from him
with the battling robots and beasts of Pacific Rim, and now here he is down in the spookhouse, showing us some ghosts,
but, ha ha, not too many ghosts!
Because, you see, this is not really a ghost picture, we are
told, but a Gothic romance in the vein of Jane
Eyre or Rebecca! Fair bananas
says I, but I can tell you what it really is, ha ha: an updated, much
overextended version of one of Roger Corman’s old Poe pictures! Shortened by
half an hour, and with the insertion of Vincent Price, or even Ray “Premature Burial” Milland, into the part
of the plummy Cumbrian baronet here played by Tom “Only Lovers Left Alive” Hiddleston, this would be virtually
indistinguishable from one of those crushed-velvet-and-ground-fog epics! Ha ha!
Mia Wasikowska, well-known from Stoker, plays a young lady novelist from Buffalo who meets and
subsequently marries the aforementioned baronet, who, with his grumpy sister,
is abroad searching for investors in his clay-digging machine! The sister is
played by Jessica Chastain from The Tree of Life, and her performance is the best in the picture, or at least the most
in tune with its demands! Ha ha, it’s funny that del Toro hired an Englishwoman
to play an Americaness, and an Americaness to play an Englishwoman! And it was
all shot in Canada, which I suppose makes sense too!
Anyway, the young American, named Miss Cushing of course,
has met ghosts before, so when some turn up at her ludicrously dilapidated new
abode, she exhibits about as much alarm as others would on espying a doodle bug
scurrying across the floor! Ha ha, I’d sure be a little more alarmed than she
is! Eventually just about everything you suspect is happening proves to indeed
be happening, while no further plot wrinkles are explored! The only thing that
really is explored is the old mansion itself, which has an open roof through
which snow gently falls, and floorboards which ooze the red muck for which the
crumbling old pile, and the picture itself, is named!
While the ghostly elements are a bit lacking and the scares
few and far between, the romantic material is pushed as far as it can go!
That’s not terribly far, but still, del Toro does weave an atmosphere of
genuine tragedy, present and past! It’s just too bad it plays out in such a
narritavely dull, if pictorially attractive, manner! A little bit of gore
spices up the brew, ha ha, though this could easily have been elided for that
important PG-13 rating, I suppose! I’m impressed with del Toro for sticking to
his guns on that one, as I’m sure there was considerable pressure on him to stay in the tween-safe zone - the demographic for which the picture is ostensibly intended, remember! - and the disappointing box office is probably being held
against him now!
I’m always rooting for the success of original horror
projects, even ones so imperfect as this, so I was hoping it would be a hit! Ha
ha, I want more R-rated big-screen scare pictures! It’s a pretty perennial
genre though, so I’m not too worried! In the meantime, I guess I’ll give Crimson Peak two big vats of tomato
paste and urge young Mr. del Toro to go full-throttle horror next time! Ha ha!
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