Ghost
Ship Movie Review:
Sailors
of old have often passed long, cold, and lonely nights at
sea with tales of ghost ships that travel beyond this realm
accumulating victims to their spectral crew with each appearance.
There have been several boats that have vanished only to
be found without a crew, and such tales have inspired films
for years. There has been the monster in the dark variety
such as "Deep Rising", to the supernatural with
a twist such as "Event Horizon" which attempted
to give a new twist to the old genre by substituting a space
ship for an ocean going vessel.
This
Halloween season brings us two new entries into the genre
in an attempt to scare up some revenue from a season that
is surprisingly devoid of the traditional slasher films.
Last week saw the gripping and creepy submarine film "Below"
surface in theaters and this weekend will bring audience
and the first sighting of the new film "Ghost Ship".
The film centers on the crew of a salvage ship in the Bering
Sea. The captain of the ship Murphy( Gabriel Byrne) is a
loyal and dedicated captain who watches out for his crew
and is something of a father figure to them especially to
the only female on the crew Epps (Julianna Margulies). While
relaxing after a successful salvage effort, the crew is
propositioned to investigate a mysterious but large ship
by a pilot who claims he has recently seen the ship. For
a percentage of the bounty, the pilot provides the crew
with what he knows and tags along as they set out to locate
the ship.
The
crew eventually arrives at the ships and discovers that
it is an Italian luxury liner that has been missing for
nearly forty years. The crew boards the derelict and finds
it abandoned but a treasure chest of salvage opportunities
and with visions of dollar signs motivating them, set out
to repair the ship in order to tow it back to port. Now
this would not be much of a ghost story if everything went
as planned so naturally all manner of strange and tragic
occurrences start to befall the crew, especially once they
uncover a cache of unmarked gold bars that is worth hundreds
of millions. Of course all hell breaks lose in no time and
the crew is forced to try to escape with their very lives.
While
the storyline of "Ghost Ship" is very simplistic
and has been shown many times, there are some interesting
diversions in the film. I found the opening scene while
predictable to be a very effective and fresh scene that
had many in the screening audience gasping with shock and
morbid delight. The special effects were nothing outstanding
and the characters were not well developed at all. I found
the captain to be the most underdeveloped as we were told
early in the film that he never drinks yet see him struggle
with a bottle later when he has the opportunity to have
a drink in private. The suggestion is that he is a recovering
alcoholic yet this point is sadly not developed at all and
he like most of the cast are left as bland charactures that
generate little to no sympathy for them or their well being
from the audience. I did like the way that the film incorporated
ideas from "The Shining" as manifestations from
the past interacted with the cast making them question reality
and react with the images even if it ultimately lead to
their doom. I was reminded of Nicholson's character descending
into madness as he returned to drinking while conversing
with the ghostly bartender in the snowbound hotel.
Sadly
though "Ghost Ship" lacks the gripping drama and
characters of "The Shining" and Byrne seems to
be walking through his role wasting his talents on a part
that is paper-thin at best. There were a few nice twists
now and then but far to little to keep this sinking ship
afloat. My advice, save this one for a rental.
2.5
stars out of 5
Gareth Von Kallenbach
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