“Dark
Shadows” is the eighth collaboration between director Tim Burton and star
Johnny Depp and the combination that once regularly produced cinematic gold
together, has recently started to look tired and uninspired. With the exception of the absolute
masterpiece that is “Sweeney Todd”, the recent pairings of Burton and Depp have
failed to ignite the screen like they once did.
Films such as “Charlie And The Chocolate Factory” and “Alice In
Wonderland” do not hold a candle to classics like “Edward Scissorhands” or “Ed
Wood”, or even “Sleepy Hollow”. Even
“The Corpse Bride”, which is a film I admittedly enjoyed, fails to have the
magic of Burton’s films previous. So
will their latest collaboration, an adaptation of a long running vampire soap
opera of the same name, continue this downward spiral or will it regain some of
the lost magic?
Moving from
England to America, young Barnabas Collins follows his mother and father who
come to the new world to start a fishing business in Maine. By the time Barnabas has grown up, the
business has became so successful that the port town is named after the family,
“Collinsport”, and the family’s wealth has afforded them the opportunity to
build a massive mansion named “Collinswood”.
During this time, Barnabas meets the love of his life, Josette, and the
two plan to marry. However this plan is
soon thwarted by Angelique, a young maid who Barnabas once had a brief affair
with and who also, unbeknownst to him, is a witch. After being spurred by the news of the
upcoming nuptials, Angelique places a curse upon the whole Collins family. She then goes about killing Barnabas’s
parents and makes Josette throw herself off of a cliff to her death. To ensure Barnabas’s suffering is eternal,
the witch then turns the grieving man into a vampire and has him encased in a
coffin that is to stay buried for the next 200 years.
When his
coffin is finally discovered and excavated, the year is 1972, and the world is
a completely different place from the one Barnabas was forcibly removed
from. After feeding on the local
townsfolk, Barnabas sets out to find his fishing business almost bankrupt, and
his fabulous mansion home, Collinswood, more or less in ruins. He enters the mansion and discovers that some
of his kin have still survived. Living
in the house is the matriarch of the family, Elizabeth Collins Stoddard, her
daughter Carolyn, Elizabeth’s brother Roger and his son David, as well as
David’s live-in psychiatrist Dr. Julia Hoffman.
The family has also just hired a governess for David named Victoria, who
has just moved into the mansion and is also the spitting image of Barnabas’s
lost love Josette. Finally, the last
person living on the premises is the always drunk caretaker Willie. Barnabas explains to his family just who he
is and that he plans to bring Collinsport back to the glory days it once knew,
while restoring Collinswood back to its original beauty. This activity soon reaches the awareness of
Angelique, who still lives, and upon learning that Barnabas has risen from the
grave, she decides to rid him and his family of this earth once and for all.
Very early on during the development of this
film, alarm bells started ringing in regards to whether or not the film would
work. In early interviews, Burton
himself explained that the tone of the film was going to be very tricky and he
was not sure whether or not he could make it successful. This sounded like an artist who didn’t have a
complete vision of what he wanted in his head, or if he did, was doubting his
vision which gave me a reason to be concerned.
However Burton has appeared to be prophetic about the tone, as it was
clearly something that the marketing people have struggled with. For the record I believe that “Dark Shadows”
has been very poorly marketed with both the posters and especially the trailer
not representing the true tone of the finished product. In fact it was because of the trailer that I
thought that this film was headed to be a disaster, as it was sold as a “fish
out of water” comedy, and while that is certainly a part of the film, it really
only takes up a minor part of the film’s running time. The film just isn’t as jokey as the trailer
made it out to be, and while I wouldn’t call the film dark by any stretch, the
tone isn’t as light as the trailer suggested.
Instead the film works more like the soap opera it is based, with big
melodramatic moments filled with suspense, action and yes, laughs.
While
the film is loaded with characters, the main thrust of the story has to do with
the dark love affair between Barnabas and Angelique, and as such these
characters dominate the majority of the screen time. Johnny Depp is in top form as Barnabas
Collins and he once again proves just how great a physical actor he is, giving
his vampire character a very distinctive walk, as well as being very expressive
with his claw like hands. I really
enjoyed his performance a lot (it recalls other great vampire characters from
classics such as the 1931 version of “Dracula” and the silent “Nosferatu”), as
he didn’t go as campy with the role as I feared he might, he actually keeps
Barnabas quite grounded. In fact the
only problem I had with the Barnabas character was that sometimes the dark
make-up that defined his gaunt cheekbones were a bit overdone, especially
during scenes of daylight. While all of
the performances within the film are slightly heightened above reality, I
really enjoyed some of Depp’s more grandeur soap-opera like line readings
(“And…fight…I…shall!”). Eva Green is
luminous as always, she is just a stunning woman to look at, and Burton gives
her every opportunity to look gorgeous.
Unfortunately she does not command the screen as well as Depp and as
such the chemistry between the two feels far too forced. Of all the characters, Angelique is played a
little too big, and feels a bit over the top at times. What I did love about the Angelique character
was her “broken doll” appearance towards the end of the film. It is so well done and for me was the visual
highlight of the film.
The rest
of the cast all handled their roles admirably although some suffer due to the
limited screen time of their characters.
Chloe Moretz as Carolyn probably suffers the most and she is almost
wasted here in a thankless role. She has
proven herself as a very capable actress in the past (with roles in “Hugo” and
especially “Let Me In”), but I believe this may be the worst performance that I
have seen her give. However, the script
doesn’t give her much to do. It was
fantastic to finally see Michelle Pfeiffer in another Tim Burton film, because
the last time she gave us her fantastic rendition of Catwoman in “Batman
Returns”. While her turn in “Dark
Shadows” may not infect the world of pop culture like her Catwoman did, she
still gives a great and strong performance as Elizabeth. She is still as gorgeous as ever and seeing
her brandishing a shotgun in the finale was super cool. Although he had limited work to do in the
film, I really liked Jonny Lee Miller’s turn as the slimy and shady Roger, he
always impressed when he was on screen.
As usual Helena Bonham Carter gives an odd but rewarding performance as
the doctor who may have ulterior motives, but again doesn’t have a load of
screen time. Australian actress Bella
Heathcote is great in the dual roles of Josette and Victoria but her character
seems to do a disappearing act more than any of the others in the film. While she has a fair amount of screen time,
there are large chunks of the film where her character is just missing, and she
only seems to re-emerge when her character can service the plot. However when she is on screen she displays a
charming presence and she has good chemistry with Johnny Depp too.
The
actors actually do a great job with what they have been given which sadly is
not much. Seth Grahame-Smith’s
screenplay is definitely the weak point of the film. While the dialogue gets a pass mark, it is
the structure of the film that needed work.
Things seem to happen just out of the blue in this film with no
foreshadowing, especially in the mad finale.
Also as I mentioned earlier, characters have a habit of coming and
going, showing up when they can move the plot forward only to disappear
again. The other strange thing in “Dark
Shadows” is the weird sexual perversion to it.
Now I have not seen the soap opera that the film is based on, so am not
sure whether it existed their previous, but it is certainly unique to any Tim
Burton film that I have seen (and I have seen them all), so I am attributing it
Grahame-Smith’s script. From this comes
one of the most unbelievable and out-of-place fellatio scenes I have ever
seen. Granted the scene is played for
laughs, but “Dark Shadows” was not the film for the scene, it is terrible and
needed to be trimmed from the final film.
Typical
for a Tim Burton film, “Dark Shadows” looks wonderful. The gothic setting just suits his visual
style to a “T” and in this regard he does not disappoint. After the visual green screen mess of “Alice
In Wonderland” it was great seeing the Burton style in full effect once
again. The opening pre-credits scene is
classic Burton and is when the film is at its darkest, and it is a shame that
once the film switches to 1972 that darkness is then lost. The cinematography from Bruno Delbonnel is
outstanding (he followed this project by shooting the new Coen Brothers film
“Inside Llewyn Davis”) and a special mention must go to the costume designer
Colleen Atwood. Truthfully this is a not
an aspect I notice a hell of a lot (except if it is bad) when I watch films,
but her work here is so grand it is impossible to ignore.
After
re-reading this review I have realized that it is not easy to work out what I
actually thought of “Dark Shadows”, and well, I ended up having a really great time
with it. I thought the film was a lot of
fun, I know that it has its flaws, but the film is certainly not a bad film let
alone the disaster I was expecting it to be.
I absolutely loved the crazy finale (which I know a lot of critics
despise) and never once felt the running time passing, which is always a good
sign. While it is not as good as the
early Burton / Depp collaborations (it doesn’t come close to “Sweeney Todd”
either), it is much better than “Charlie And The Chocolate Factory” and the
train wreck that is “Alice in Wonderland”.
While I thoroughly enjoyed “Dark Shadows” (and look forward to watching
it again soon), I do hope that Tim Burton and Johnny Depp separate for a while
and recharge their creative batteries.
Burton’s next film is the stop-motion “Frankenweenie” which Depp is not
involved in, with the live action follow up rumored to be the sequel to his
1988 classic “Bettlejuice” (although sadly Grahame-Smith is scheduled to be
scripting that too), so it may indeed by awhile until we see another
collaboration between the two. In any
case, I love the latest work from this talented pairing, flaws and all.
3.5
Stars.
No comments:
Post a Comment