Here's one for you. What do you get when you cross Misery with Scooby Doo on Zombie Island?
Apart from the easiest way to ruin a child for ever. |
The correct answer is The Skeleton Key. One of those spooky thrillers that was all the rage around the late nineties and early noughties. Inspired by a certain movie's unusual success and based on the same model of the predictably unpredictable ending, these films are enjoyable for the simple fact that you know exactly what you're getting before you even start the torrent downloading, because who the hell would pay for a movie that looks exactly like the last five?
"I see dead advertising executives." |
"From what I can see, he's either at Jackie's having milk and cookies or at Dave's being sodomised." |
Shall we get this over and done with then? Let's rattle through the list of ever so original aspects found in this wonderful example of modern Hollywood cinema: A big, old, creaky white house with a dark past (from my knowledge these places make up 80% of American real estate, the other 20% being the White House and/or government testing facilities), a surprisingly attractive blonde protagonist, ghosts in one form or another, a possible magical influence, the plot device cum weak character who will undoubtedly turn out to be the bad guy by the end and some kind of secret room or book or conch or casserole dish that the character is told in no uncertain terms not to go near.
I watched this for one reason and one reason alone, John Hurt. That guy is my old man crush. He is beautiful, I would happily take a Face-Hugger for him, and he only ever seems to appear in good movies.
He tries his best to hide in any bad ones. |
The whole experience gets a lot more meta when you imagine the parallel was intentional. |
Bless them, they try. We've got the great set-up to a rich plot: a deep-south setting with elements of racial and religious prejudice spanning generations, the presence of authentically portrayed black magic (we'll get to that), the possibility of some good, old fashioned horror movie boobage, and an item presented at the very beginning of the film with the enticing power to open any door in the house, which is incidentally where the title of the film originates.
Incidental is the key word here. Everything you hope the movie is going to do is swiftly discarded by the director with the blasé confidence of a man with a much bigger plan. Spoiler alert: There is no such plan.
Pictured: The sum total of all the boob in the movie, and this is in a flattering aspect ratio. |
I would have considered it a spoiler if these two didn't already look so much like untrustworthy bastards. |
It's the thought that counts, and the makers of this film can be proud of that. The magic which serves as the primary source of creepy shit (technical term) in the story has been nicely researched for authenticity. Hoodoo differs slightly from the more commonly known southern religion of Voodoo in that it focuses much more heavily on the use of folk magic to improve a believer's "luck". Much of what we usually see in film and TV is often Hoodoo practices incorrectly placed under the Voodoo banner. It's a little thing, but it makes you feel like the writers really tried to come up with something authentic. Although they did choose to omit the fact that said magic often involves the use of semen and menstrual blood in their spells.
It's amazing how one letter can make such a difference. |
So yeah, The Skeleton Key is essentially another fine example of a nice concept marred by lack of imagination, shallow characters and far too many genre clichés. Also minus points for scaring John Hurt, you terrible people.
And that's all I have to say about that.
Overall Ben Equivalence Rating
Spending the Whole Day Watching Re-runs of Scrubs -
You know exactly what to expect, its enjoyable but gets shittier the longer you're watching it, and afterwards you feel very dirty...
You know exactly what to expect, its enjoyable but gets shittier the longer you're watching it, and afterwards you feel very dirty...
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