Review: THE WICKER MAN
Review: THE WICKER MAN
Some Sacrifices Must Be
Made
Directed by Neil LaBute.
Certificate 12A; 102 minutes
Plot Outline: A cop who investigates the disappearance of a young girl
from a small island discovers there's a larger mystery to solve among the
island's secretive, neo-pagan community
Sometimes film masterpieces are better left as they are. Neil LaBute’s ‘tribute’
to the 1973 British classic is a perfect demonstration of this maxim. It’s a real pity as the cinematography
in the aerial shots of the beehive area and the crowd scene prior to the film’s
fiery dénouement are superb. Everyone
will be impressed by the natural beauty of Summersisle in widescreen. The shame
is that the film is pretty dreadful.
Nicholas Cage is Edward Malus, a
troubled cop who is traumatised by his inability in a pre-title sequence to
rescue a child trapped in a burning car. In this vulnerable state he is
persuaded in a letter by his old flame Willow Woodward to come to the isolated
little island community where she lives to find her missing daughter, Rowan.
Malus bribes a local seaplane
owner to take him to the island, where he receives a frosty welcome from the
local sisterhood and their strangely silent menfolk. No-one has ever seen or heard of Rowan. His attempts to find out anything about her
are frustrated at every turn.
The agrarian island community is
run by Sister Summersisle (Ellen Burstyn), where they produce organic honey.
Sister Summersisle runs the place like a Queen Bee.
The whole thing seems quite
pointless in comparison to the 1973 original.
Cage’s character goes on about ‘the law’ but has no real point of
difference with the island community – just his frustration that they are
hiding something from them. In the end
his fiery death as ‘a willing sacrifice’ in the wicker man is pointless. He just dies screaming in agony.
In comparison Sergeant Howie (Edward Woodward) in the original Wicker
Man came to the island as a representative of the Crown but also as a
conservative evangelical Christian. He
was repelled by what he regarded as the blasphemous pagan religious practices,
he struggled against erotic temptation in the form of
Howie
goes to his death singing the twenty-third psalm as the pagan revelers sing one
of their harvest songs. LaBute’s film
misses this clash of civilizations entirely.
By all means watch this film in the cinema or hire out the DVD from your local video shop. Save your hard earned cash for the director’s cut double DVD of the original film.
BRITISH
ORIGINAL IS BETTER!
Speaking
of the double-disc DVD version of the original Wicker Man starring Christorpher
Lee, Edward Woodward and Britt Ekland, this is now available at most record
shops and even in some supermarkets at a reasonable price. At least the release
of the remake has kindled some interest in the superior British product, once
voted by Empire magazine as the best British horror film ever. The first disc
carries the original theatrical version, an interview with Christopher Lee and
a 35 minute documentary as well as some trailers for the film. Disc Two
restores some lost footage in a director’s cut together with a full-length
commentary from Lee, Woodward and the director, Robin Hardy.
0 TrackBacks
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Review: THE WICKER MAN.
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.thecarrick.biz/kerrscorner/mt-tb.cgi/48

Leave a comment