13
Ghosts Movie Review:
The link
between the natural and supernatural has always had a fascination
from some scholars. In the Middle Ages and Renaissance,
the links between Heaven and Hell were studied and pondered
in art, religion, debate, and writing. In the classic Dante's
Inferno, a decent into Hell is documented and the imagery
transcends from the printed page to the mind in a gripping
and graphic fashion where readers can almost hear the screams
of the tortured souls and smell the brimstone.
In the
modern age, films have become a large medium for the supernatural
as many of the great books of our time and past ages have
been adapted to the silver screen. Films such as the "Hellraiser"
and "Evil Dead" series as well as "Event
Horizon" have dealt with the passage of spirits and
demons into our realm and the chaos that they bring with
them.
The
fall season is upon us, and with it comes new horror films
to our local video stores and new films to our cinemas in
an effort to generate big bucks by putting a scare into
the audience. The new film "13 Ghosts" is the
latest film to arrive in time for Halloween, and relies
on the old formula of the haunted house to drive the story
and generate scares.
The
plot of the film revolves around Arthur (Tony Shalhoub),
a widower who is struggling to raise his family in the aftermath
of losing his wife to a house fire, and battling his inner
turmoil that he could not save his wife. Grief is not the
only problem facing Arthur, he is having financial problems
and is growing frustrated with the hand life has dealt him.
His children Kathy (Shannon Elizabeth) and Bobby (Alec Roberts),
do their best to help their father through his difficult
time, but Kathy longs for a larger home for them and Bobby
has become fascinated with reading crime scene reports and
recording the grisly details into his tape recorder much
to the dismay of their housekeeper Maggie (Rah Digga), who
dispenses wisdom with an attitude.
The family fortunes take an unexpected turn for the better
when it is revealed that Arthur is to be the sole heir to
his late uncle Cyrus's estate. It seems that Cyrus (F. Murray
Abraham), was a brilliant investor and he has left a very
lavish home to Arthur and his family.
Before
long, Arthur and his family arrive at the house and marvel
at the windfall that has fallen into their laps. The house
is a modern marvel of glass and moving parts and comes complete
with a centerpiece room that has moveable tiles spin and
combine archaic symbols at random intervals.
While Arthur is preparing to sign the paperwork for the
home, he is met by a frantic young man named Rafkin (Matthew
Lillard). Rafkin explains that Arthur and his family are
in grave danger and must leave the house. Before Arthur
can act on this advice, the group becomes trapped in the
house with no way out. It seems that the basement holds
twelve spirits and the house was designed based on an ancient
text to harness the spirits to provide a portal between
the realms, thus insuring absolute power to those who control
the portal.
All
of this is of little interest to Arthur, as his only goal
is to get his family safely from the home, but his children
have gone missing, and Arthur is forced to venture amongst
the unleashed spirits to save his family.
It is at this point that the film starts to unravel as an
interesting premise quickly dissolves into the cast running
around the house at random trying to avoid one ghost after
another. There is little plot, and the tension that should
be evident is nonexistent.
One
would think that a person in a similar situation would have
enough insight to avoid the old horror film trap of splitting
up a group when in a hostile location. This was done on
several instances in the film to the loud groaning of the
audience. Worse yet, cast members vanish only to appear
later with little to no explanation of where they were,
and there is very little in the way of sympathy generated
for the characters, as we do not really care what happens
to them.
What
could have been an interesting premise became nothing more
then the a group of people in a house trying to avoid ghosts
that pop up now and then in an attempt to provide menace
to the characters. The makeup for the ghosts is not bad,
but there is a heavy sense of been there, seen that amongst
the film. It seemed to borrow heavily from "Hellraiser"
and "The House on Haunted Hill" as the houses,
or the mysterious puzzle cube are supposed to be a conduit
of evil. Instead, what we get is nothing more than a
series of uninspired sequences from a cast that looks embarrassed
to be a part of this film and are far less lively and inspired
then the ghosts they are fleeing. One can only hope that
this film will take a clue from its spectral subject matter
and vanish.
1 star
out of 5
Gareth
Von Kallenbach
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