Re: Halloween Horror Marathon 2020
Posted: Tue Sep 29, 2020 10:24 am
Hey I'm contributing to this thread this year, in September no less!
HIGH SPIRITS
5/10
It's always unfortunate when there are things you can love about a movie -- its look, score, cinematography, cast -- and the movie itself just gets in the way.
That's the problem with Neil Jordan's ghost comedy, released by Tri-Star to middling box-office before Thanksgiving '88, which offers gorgeous production design by future "Batman" Oscar winner Anton Furst, Alex Thomson's crisp lensing, Derek Meddings' old-school special effects, and a rousing, glorious George Fenton score. It also benefits from a lively Peter O'Toole performance as the proprietor of a dilapidated Irish castle, who hopes to score with American tourists (Steve Guttenberg, Beverly D'Angelo, Jennifer Tilly, Peter Gallagher) by pretending the place is haunted. Turns out, it actually IS haunted, with two spirits in particular (Daryl Hannah and Liam Neeson) eventually causing trouble -- the romantic kind in particular.
This is a great concept for a supernatural comedy, but "High Spirits" starts off on the wrong note and never recovers. There's no way the film's script could've been written in the fragmented manner the picture plays out in -- indeed, Jordan lamented he had scant involvement in the film's editing and his actual cut is still sitting in a vault somewhere. That's completely plausible, since simple things like a basic plot line are missing from the film (why are the guests still hanging around the castle in the film's second half?), characters come and go with no or little point, and the movie underscores every laugh with a sledgehammer (Fenton's score is outstanding, though tends to undercut the humor, especially in the movie's opening half hour, which seems especially fractured in terms of pacing).
With more character development and editorial work that made sense, "High Spirits" could've been something -- yet the final product is one of those head-scratching efforts where you can only guess what the point was supposed to be. Still, it looks so good (especially in Koch's German Blu-Ray which offers a spectacular transfer) and works in fits and starts, that I revisit it every now and then.
Perhaps unsurprisingly the end credits give "Special Thanks" to a myriad of people who must've been involved to some degree in the picture, including screenwriters Steven Kampmann and Will Aldis, "Beetlejuice" writer Michael McDowell, and actor Kenneth Mars, who one imagines ended up on the cutting room floor -- along with the material that might've made "High Spirits" a truly worthwhile effort.
HIGH SPIRITS
5/10
It's always unfortunate when there are things you can love about a movie -- its look, score, cinematography, cast -- and the movie itself just gets in the way.
That's the problem with Neil Jordan's ghost comedy, released by Tri-Star to middling box-office before Thanksgiving '88, which offers gorgeous production design by future "Batman" Oscar winner Anton Furst, Alex Thomson's crisp lensing, Derek Meddings' old-school special effects, and a rousing, glorious George Fenton score. It also benefits from a lively Peter O'Toole performance as the proprietor of a dilapidated Irish castle, who hopes to score with American tourists (Steve Guttenberg, Beverly D'Angelo, Jennifer Tilly, Peter Gallagher) by pretending the place is haunted. Turns out, it actually IS haunted, with two spirits in particular (Daryl Hannah and Liam Neeson) eventually causing trouble -- the romantic kind in particular.
This is a great concept for a supernatural comedy, but "High Spirits" starts off on the wrong note and never recovers. There's no way the film's script could've been written in the fragmented manner the picture plays out in -- indeed, Jordan lamented he had scant involvement in the film's editing and his actual cut is still sitting in a vault somewhere. That's completely plausible, since simple things like a basic plot line are missing from the film (why are the guests still hanging around the castle in the film's second half?), characters come and go with no or little point, and the movie underscores every laugh with a sledgehammer (Fenton's score is outstanding, though tends to undercut the humor, especially in the movie's opening half hour, which seems especially fractured in terms of pacing).
With more character development and editorial work that made sense, "High Spirits" could've been something -- yet the final product is one of those head-scratching efforts where you can only guess what the point was supposed to be. Still, it looks so good (especially in Koch's German Blu-Ray which offers a spectacular transfer) and works in fits and starts, that I revisit it every now and then.
Perhaps unsurprisingly the end credits give "Special Thanks" to a myriad of people who must've been involved to some degree in the picture, including screenwriters Steven Kampmann and Will Aldis, "Beetlejuice" writer Michael McDowell, and actor Kenneth Mars, who one imagines ended up on the cutting room floor -- along with the material that might've made "High Spirits" a truly worthwhile effort.