DREAMCATCHER
Article courtesy of Andrea
Chase of KillerMovieReviews.com
DREAMCATCHER , USA , 2003,
MPAA Rating: R for violence, gore and language
The
good news for all of us who have been seeing the trailer for
DREAMCATCHER since the early Pleistocene Era is that it >doesn't<
give everything away. There are plenty of twists, turns and
surprises in this elegant and sometimes witty horror flick that
is full of invention and characters that rise nicely above the
usual gore fodder that inhabit flicks like this.
The story begins with four
lifelong friends. They're nice guys, full of entertaining guy-type
chat and the sort of decent moral values that set an example
without devolving into an annoying preachiness. And while they've
all taken different paths in life, from used car salesman to
psychiatrist, they've remained tight. Perhaps this is because
of a special talent they all share, a sort of clairvoyance with
a dash of telepathy, so that they can do things like really
deep analysis and finding lost keys. Sometimes this is a good
thing, and sometimes the people that they're trying to help
run screaming from the room. Life's like that.
They're spending yet another
annual holiday deep in the snowy Maine woods, looking forward
to bonding and to unwinding from the workaday world. Since this
is based on a Stephen King story, and we've seen the trailer,
some of us many, many times, we know that this idyllic interlude
is just a way station on the way to something very scary and
not for the faint of heart.
The surprise is how deftly,
one might even use the word subtly, that events unfold. It all
starts with a strange and ominously beautiful migration of every
animal in the woods past the guys' cabin, followed by a disoriented
hunter who takes shelter with them. With a series of burps and
farts of ever growing and finally epic proportions, the hunter
unleashes a beastie that resembles nothing so much as a vagina
dentate. To complete the Freudian implications, this beastie's
favorite target is the organs of generation. In a nice touch,
the two pals who are there at the time of the creature's appearance,
react pretty much the way you and I would, which is to say,
they don't want to go into the bathroom (don't ask) to find
out exactly what's going on in there.
Of course it doesn't stop
there. As a matter of fact, that brings us only through the
first half-hour or so. The real big bad nasty is yet to be revealed
and it's a toss-up whether is the monster, who actually identity
should best be left as a surprise, or the elite military unit
sent to destroy it. Headed up by Morgan Freeman, this gung-ho
gang ruthlessly hunts and terminates not so much because it
needs doing as because they enjoy it, particularly Morgan's
character, who may or may not have gone nuts after years of
doing this sort of work.
For all the wholesale creepiness,
things that include watching an unwholesome looking spongy red
mold slowly consume everything in sight, it's the characters
that drive the story. The pals are fully realized and eminently
likable as played by Thomas Jane, Jason Lee, Timothy Olyphant,
and particularly Damien Lewis, who wowed us in BAND OF BROTHERS
and THE FORSYTHE SAGA and who here runs a gamut of emotions
and characters that are not only on target, but a delight to
watch. The fact that we come to care about them, both individually
and as a group, makes Lawrence Kasdan's direction all the more
effective. With him, when the things that go bump not just in
the night but pretty much anytime they want, inevitably do the
jump-and-scare routine, it's played out with nice timing aimed
for maximum jump-and-scream in the audience. He also eschews
any more visuals of the creatures and what they do than absolutely
necessary, allowing us to use our imagination to fill out the
rest, knowing that nothing he can show on screen can match what
we can conjure up for ourselves, particularly with the evocative
sound effects that are layered in.
Things do fall apart in
the final 20 minutes with the story becoming a straightforward
race against the end of the world. The final payoff isn't as
satisfying as it could have been, having been telegraphed to
us throughout the final hour. There's little surprise and visually,
it's bland, despite the prevailing sense of mayhem. There are
also more than a few whiffs of King's earlier work, STAND BY
ME, with flashbacks showing the guys as kids ready to defy all
odds to save a mentally handicapped kid from some bullies. But
balance it out with strong characters and touches such as a
deliciously wry take on a memory palace that allows us to glimpse
the inner workings of one character's mind while his body is
possessed by the monster, and you've got a dandy and deeply
scary night out at the movies.
ANDREA
CHASE
My
Rating:





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