It's a long time since
I read much horror fiction, although in my teens I devoured a number of the
short story collections published by Pan, Faber and Fontana. As for horror films, many
of them seem obsessed with gore and violence, so I usually give them a miss.
But fictional horror at its best can be terrific, as Mary Shelley, Robert Louis
Stevenson and others have shown.
My favourite horror
movie is The Wicker Man, and the very recent film Wake Wood does have some
echoes of its brilliant predecessor. The only daughter of a vet and pharmacist
is mauled to death by a dog, and in an attempt to cope with their overwhelming
grief, the couple move to a small and remote village where they can try to
rebuild their life together.
However, it soon
becomes clear that there are dark goings-on in the nearby woods. Somehow, the
villagers have discovered the secret of bringing a person who has died within
the last 12 months back to life – but for three days only. And there are some
rather spooky conditions to be met by anyone who wants to avail themselves of
this chance to say goodbye for the last time.
Needless to say, the
couple cannot resist temptation, and enter into a sort of Faustian pact, which
has foreseeably terrible consequences. It's hokum, of course, but done
surprisingly well, and the final scene is genuinely memorable and chilling.
Much of the power of the film derives from the performances of Aidan Gillen and
Eva Birthistle as the bereaved couple, and of Timothy Spall, who presides over
the village's rituals with a mixture of geniality and menace that avoids the
risk of over-acting the part into absurdity. Although there are some graphic
scenes, I would recommend this film to horror fans. It isn't in the same league
as The Wicker Man, but it's still a pretty good example of its kind.
2 comments:
The remake with Nic Cage was horrible, wasn't it?
I saw this two nights ago after reading your review Martin. Wow! I've not seen something this weird in a long time. Your comparisons to THE WICKER MAN are interesting but not I think very apt. This movie is genuinely supernatural. There is nothing supernatural in THE WICKER MAN. There's of "The Monkey's Paw" in this than anything else. It's like a nightmare fairy tale for adults. I thought it amazingly original.
I really liked WAKE WOOD's strangeness and the sinister mood for most of the movie. That it turned into a Bad Seed/slasher flick at the end lessened its power for me though it didn't utterly ruin the movie. Still wish that the level of originality and oddness was maintained for the entire length of the movie rather than the writers finding an easy way out with tiresome and gratuitous gore.
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