obsession boyfriend i'm psyched     i'm dreading enemy

(need an explanation?)

advertisements


 
 
reviews Thu Aug 11 05, 12:50PM

The Skeleton Key (review)

A Kind of Magic

It doesn't work if you don't believe. It's the mindset that fuels the power of superstition, of placebos, of magic, of religion. It also fuels the power of movies, and in particular of horror movies: Can you let go your skepticism to a degree wherein you can fool yourself into buying -- for an hour and a half or so, at least -- the most outrageous conceits? You're only looking for some temporary diversion, after all, not a cure for cancer or the eternal salvation of your soul. And yet it can be surprisingly hard, in the face of movie characters behaving stupidly even when confronted with clear indications to get the hell out of demonic harm's way.


more below the ad... scroll down...


The Skeleton Key deals with such conundrums head on, in a way that films about paranormal hoo-hah rarely do, acknowledging the disconnect between supposedly rational characters and their apparent desire to get themselves killed in some nasty supernatural way... and between supposedly rational audiences and their desire to have the bejesus scared out of them by stuff they don't really believe exists in the first place. Key launches itself -- thunder a-boomin', doors a-slammin', spooks a-spookin' -- directly into an iconic, even clichéd horror-flick realm, and then pulls itself back into a place more considered, more deeply horrifying: a place where what we believe, what we really believe, is the only force with any power over us. After its own sneaky introduction of itself as a paint-by-numbers haunted-house theme-park ride, it stops itself short and says, No, wait: we're gonna show you why you're gonna be so unsettled in the end. Not to spoil your late-summer moviegoing fun, but there's some remarkable psychological insight in this scary little movie.

Which isn't to say that it isn't all utter nonsense, either... at least, that's how it'll feel, reassuringly, the next day. Oh, all the silly hoodoo about old mansions in the L'siana swamps, about noises in the attic and locked doors and a skeleton key that opens every mysterious portal in the house: it is to laugh, no? Stalwart, no-nonsense Caroline Ellis (Kate Hudson: Le Divorce, Alex and Emma) thinks so, too, when she is hired by lawyer Luke (Peter Sarsgaard: Kinsey, Garden State) to tend to the stroke-addled husband of his client, creepy old Southern dame Violet Devereaux (Gena Rowlands: Taking Lives, Paulie). Poor old Ben Devereaux (John Hurt: Hellboy, Dogville) can't speak, can barely move -- he's on death's doorstep, and Caroline comes to believe that perhaps Violet has somehow ushered him to this sorry place. Clearly, something is not right in this decrepit old rundown manse: the mirrors have all been removed from the 30-odd rooms of the house, for one, and odd is certainly a good term for them, particularly the one off the attic, which is full of--

Well, as with most films looking to give you a good fright, revealing too much about The Skeleton Key would spoil the fun for you. Suffice to say that a genuine horror -- and a not so ancient one at that -- rises up out the history of the South to fire all the weird mumbo-jumbo, and that would be reason enough, perhaps, to hail Key as the fulfillment of the promise we've been hearing screenwriter Ehren Kruger (The Ring Two, Reindeer Games) has embodied for lo these many years, since his Arlington Road made a biggest splash than it deserved to. But what makes me finally deem Kruger No Longer Overrated is that Key ends up being, in a deliciously insidious way, a true seduction into the supernatural as only the best thrillers can manage. We, as the audience, derive half our fun from the movie by imagining that we're way ahead of it, that we've got it all figured out. We know in our geeky little movie-fanatic hearts, for instance, that Luke must be more than what he seems, and not only because the slippery-intense Sarsgaard would not have been cast in the role if this were not the case. But those kinds of red-herrings-or-are-they? are but a sideshow in this sharp, artful script -- a necessary and entertaining sideshow, but a sideshow nonetheless.

The brilliant -- and truly beguiling -- thing about Key is how it lures us into following Caroline along the psychological path she takes, tricks us into walking right in her footsteps, so that we, like her, don't even realize until it's too late how we've been bewitched. Her dismissal of anything outside of the plainly rational was so vital to letting us accept her as a character in the beginning of the film -- of course she walks into spooky places unannounced, because there's nothing to be afraid of: ghost and goblins and voodoo don't really exist, even if some people act like they do. Hudson's undeniable screen charm springs partly from her resilience, her determination, her groundedness. But as Caroline's skepticism slowly erodes to the point where she begins to believe -- and hence begins to be affected by those beliefs -- ours has been too. If Carolina is stunned by how everything resolves itself, well, we are, too, mostly because we just didn't expect our own surprise.

viewed at a semipublic screening with an audience of critics and ordinary moviegoers
rated PG-13 for violence, disturbing images, some partial nudity and thematic material
official site | IMDB


who I am


I'm MaryAnn Johanson: writer and ponderer in New York City who drinks too much wine and thinks way too much about such inconsequences as movies, TV, books, and the meaning of life.
[email me]

• contributor, Film.com
• member, Online Film Critics Society
• member, Alliance of Women Film Journalists
• member, International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences
• visit my scratchpad blog, MaryAnnJohanson.com
• read my Doctor Who fan fiction

photo by David Speranza

(postings feed)

Add to Technorati Favorites

monthly archives

recent screenings and hot movies

just opened
red for no Babylon A.D.
green for go Traitor
green for go Hamlet 2
red for no Sukiyaki Western Django
box office top 5
green for go Tropic Thunder
red for no Babylon A.D.
green for go The Dark Knight
red for no The House Bunny
green for go Traitor
top limited releases
yellow for maybe Vicky Cristina Barcelona
red for no Fly Me to the Moon
Elegy
green for go Bottle Shock
Tell No One
coming soon
green for go Happy-Go-Lucky
red for no The Women
green for go Battle for Seattle
green for go Mister Foe
green for go Flow
yellow for maybe Hounddog
green for go The Perfect Game
yellow for maybe A Thousand Years of Good Prayers
now playing
green for go Hamlet 2
red for no Death Race
green for go Star Wars: The Clone Wars
green for go Frozen River
red for no The Last Mistress
green for go The Rocker
green for go I.O.U.S.A.
green for go Trouble the Water
red for no Henry Poole Is Here
red for no Brideshead Revisited
red for no Pineapple Express
red for no Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer
red for no The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor
red for no The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2
green for go Step Brothers
green for go American Teen
green for go Wall-E

2008 screening log

new on dvd

09.02
yellow for maybe Married Life [buy]
red for no The Sensation of Sight [buy]
green for go Ballet Shoes [buy]
green for go Monster Camp [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The Invasion of Time [buy]
green for go Doctor Who: The Invisible Enemy [buy]
08.26
green for go Chicago 10 [buy]
green for go Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden? [buy]
green for go Gypsy Caravan, When the Road Bends [buy]
yellow for maybe August [buy]
red for no Redbelt [buy]
red for no Postal [buy]
green for go Alfresco [buy]
green for go Heroes: Season Two [buy]
green for go The Nightmare Before Christmas: 2-Disc Collector's Edition [buy]
green for go Brotherhood of the Wolf: Director's Cut Two-Disc Special Edition [buy]
08.19
green for go Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day [buy]
green for go Street Kings [buy]
green for go Recount [buy]
green for go The Proposition [buy]
green for go Television Under the Swastika [buy]
green for go Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles: Season 1 [buy]
green for go House: Season Four [buy]
green for go House: Seasons 1-4 Collection [buy]

advertisements

search

Google
flickfilosopher.com
web