‘Key’ chills to the bone
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{LDQUO}The Skeleton Key” is a classy horror film that relies as much
on a clever screenplay and skillful acting performances as it does on
the standard, tried-and-true shock effects that one generally
associates with films of this type. Much of the gritty horror is in
the setting, a down-at-the-heels antebellum mansion in the dark,
swampy backwoods of Louisiana with slouching magnolias lining a
country road that leads to heaven knows where.
Kate Hudson is a young hospice worker sent to this creepy place to
help the elderly Mr. Devereaux (John Hurt) through his final days.
She catches on right away that things don’t quite seem as they appear
especially after her introduction to Gena Rowland who plays the
unpleasant Mrs.
Devereaux in a wonderfully wicked albeit kooky performance. And,
as a matter of opinion, while they are on screen together, Rowland’s
aging matron usually steals the show from Hudson’s youthful,
intelligent beauty.
The story alludes several times to a servant couple who occupied
the mansion back in the 1920s and who were involved in a strange
belief called hoodoo, presented as a modern day evil version of
voodoo.
In flashback sequences, they are filmed in a sepia toned
herky-jerky slow motion that plays along with a sinister sound track
of decidedly evil chanting that is guaranteed to raise the gooseflesh
on the back of your neck.
The plot twists and turns with lots of unexpected goings on and it
is a credit to the skills of director Iain Softley of “K-PAX” (2001)
fame as well as those of screenwriter Ehren Kruger, who wrote the
recent hit “The Ring.” Also, much of the appeal of this film lies in
the cinematography. Some of the scenes are so visually rich;
especially the zoom shots of the decaying mansion and the ever
present gauzy mist, that one can almost smell the cloying odor.
Fortunately, Kruger’s writing skills have kept this film from
descending into the hackneyed world of slasher flicks. A few of the
scenes, especially those of Hudson rooting around in the darkened
rooms of the mansion are so suspenseful that the audience groaned
aloud in sympathy of the pretty, young nurse.
The last scene of this film is completely unexpected and is
reminiscent of the skills of the late British director Alfred
Hitchcock, the master of the twist ending. If you are the type who
enjoys a well-made ghoulish film along with a few surprises you will
love “The Skeleton Key.”
JEFF KLEMZAK of La Crescenta is a self-proclaimed horror
aficionado and maintains that the vintage horror films of the 1930s
were the best, particularly “The Black Cat” with Boris Karloff and
Bela Lugosi.
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