Director Guillermo del Toro has dabbled in many genres of
film in his career; horror, sci-fi, fantasy, and comic books…sometimes one at a
time and sometimes all at once. His newest original tale, CRIMSON PEAK, is a
return to his roots as a horror director, while throwing in something new…
After the mysterious death of her father, Edith (Mia
Wasikowska), a struggling writer who once saw a ghost as a child, falls in love
with and marries struggling inventor Sir Thomas Sharpe (Tom Hiddleston), who
takes her to England to live with him and his sister Lucille (Jessica Chastain)
at their ancient family mansion. Once there, Edith is visited by spooks and specters,
while her father’s former doctor (Charlie Hunnam) becomes suspicious and
investigates…
Early in the film, Edith’s character describes the story she’s
writing as a love story which just happens to have ghosts in it. It is an
on-the-nose description which Guillermo del Toro uses to tell the audience exactly
what kind of film we’re in for. While there are plenty of scares inside of a
creepy atmosphere peppered with some startling imagery, CRIMSON PEAK plays out
like a feature-length soap opera more than a ghost story. The plot is thick
with twists and turns involving family estates, histories, troubled childhoods,
and a thousand secrets buried in the walls of the creepy and bleeding mansion.
It is a melodrama to be sure, which just happens to have a few drop-ins by ghosts.
Despite not fully committing to being a ghost story, CRIMSON
PEAK, even after all of its effective story-building and slow unraveling of
mysteries, winds up falling back to the mistake that many horror films tend to
take; all the intrigue gets let out of the room when the final act just turns
into a knife-wielding psycho chasing the helpless around the room. Worse, the
final mystery is a bit of a ho-hum, been-there, seen-that type of reveal. The
final solution to it all is telegraphed very early, and when Edith discovers
all of the grisly secrets, it isn’t very much of a gut-punch because the
audience will have likely already figured it out long before.
There is still a ton to enjoy in CRIMSON PEAK. The real star
of the show is the mansion itself, which is a marvel to look at and is a
throwback to the old days of filmmaking. Spooky and gothic and wonderfully
explored by del Toro’s camera, it is a true wonder to be seen. Del Toro makes
great use of color, offering some eye-popping visuals with great contrast. The
ghosts, which are all CGI, are effective only for as long as they’re concealed
in shadow, and lose much of their creep-factor once they enter the light.
Acting is excellent all around. Mia Wasikowska does the most
work as a troubled young woman trying to find her way, and it is the most
emotionally-charged performance of her early career. Tom Hiddleston is a
charmer as always, and Jessica Chastain nearly steals the show as the slightly
un-hinged older sister with a lot of demons to hide. Charlie Hunnam is OK but doesn’t
do anything remarkable.
By the time the predicable finale rolls around, the
realization sets in that the goddamn ghosts in the movie really don’t play much
of a part in the overall story other than to provide a few scares. If they were
eliminated from the screenplay it wouldn’t have made much of a difference for
better or for worse. In the end, CRIMSON PEAK is a very confused film, with one
foot in horror and the other in soap-opera land…all while displaying one the
most beautiful looking movies ever made. There is no real rush to climb this
peak.
BOTTOM LINE: Rent it
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