Here's what the citizens of the Overlook Theatre had to say:
Math Mage - "Exposed gears, creepy bugs, and buckets of slime; all of Del Toro's favorite things are present but done in a retained and tasteful manner. I kept worrying our heroine was going to fall into the slime or get swarmed by bugs but those problems never materialized. Instead, those aspects were used in service to the film's theme of juxtaposition (beauty vs brutality, reason vs emotion, red vs white). Del Toro's best work." - 4 Stars
Speed Demon - "Guillermo DelToro definitely delivers yet again. Perfect amount of everything. Love, brutality, and creepyness. One of my favorite things about this movie were the sets. Gothic, dark, and eerie. A must see for sure. No matter what genre you prefer I'm sure you will enjoy this one." - 4 Stars
The Berkeley Blazer - "A movie sometimes hits all the right buttons for you, and Crimson Peak was easy to enjoy because it appealed to things I intrinsically like. Gothic romance? Literary allusions? Regency/Romantic period England? Incredibly detailed and colorful Gothic set design as only Del Toro can deliver? Hiddleston, Chastain, and Wasikowska under one roof? Ghosts that actually look terrifying? So much appeals to me and yet, dear reader, the movie itself is really a fascinating romp, and when all the skeletons are unearthed I found I was truly satisfied with the overall result. I would never pretend to be objective about this movie, but I can say with confidence that it is a so-solid-it's-crystal pairing of Torosian talent and Byronic/Brontesque/Shellysian tradition." - 4.5 Stars
Lord Battle - "As a powerfully visual auteur director, Guillermo Del Toro takes a generally romantic genre like Gothic Horror and lets its beauty shine by juxtaposing it with striking horror. After a particularly violent moment in the first act, Crimson Peak seems to have no limit as to how violent or despicable its horrors may be and this sets the film free in a way I could have never imagined. Crimson Peak still has all the wonders of a beautiful fantasy but only now juxtaposed against a very adult horror can we truly appreciate the wonders as they were meant to be. If Pacific Rim hadn't made me feel like a 10 year old again, Crimson Peak would have been the first." - 4.5 Stars
Speed Demon - "Guillermo DelToro definitely delivers yet again. Perfect amount of everything. Love, brutality, and creepyness. One of my favorite things about this movie were the sets. Gothic, dark, and eerie. A must see for sure. No matter what genre you prefer I'm sure you will enjoy this one." - 4 Stars
The Berkeley Blazer - "A movie sometimes hits all the right buttons for you, and Crimson Peak was easy to enjoy because it appealed to things I intrinsically like. Gothic romance? Literary allusions? Regency/Romantic period England? Incredibly detailed and colorful Gothic set design as only Del Toro can deliver? Hiddleston, Chastain, and Wasikowska under one roof? Ghosts that actually look terrifying? So much appeals to me and yet, dear reader, the movie itself is really a fascinating romp, and when all the skeletons are unearthed I found I was truly satisfied with the overall result. I would never pretend to be objective about this movie, but I can say with confidence that it is a so-solid-it's-crystal pairing of Torosian talent and Byronic/Brontesque/Shellysian tradition." - 4.5 Stars
Lord Battle - "As a powerfully visual auteur director, Guillermo Del Toro takes a generally romantic genre like Gothic Horror and lets its beauty shine by juxtaposing it with striking horror. After a particularly violent moment in the first act, Crimson Peak seems to have no limit as to how violent or despicable its horrors may be and this sets the film free in a way I could have never imagined. Crimson Peak still has all the wonders of a beautiful fantasy but only now juxtaposed against a very adult horror can we truly appreciate the wonders as they were meant to be. If Pacific Rim hadn't made me feel like a 10 year old again, Crimson Peak would have been the first." - 4.5 Stars
Huntress - "I'm so glad I was wrong about what this movie was going to be like; I should have known that Guillermo del Toro wouldn't make something as cheap as the previews for Crimson Peak made it seem like it would be. Rather than hiding jump scares at every tension filled turn, Crimson Peak was filled with beautiful sets and haunting histories, all of which are carefully revealed with the most devastating timing. There is a deeper meaning behind so much of this film and I feel like I didn't realize all of it, so I can't wait to rewatch it. Del Toro's passion for film making is very obvious in Crimson Peak; it can be seen in everything from the details of the haunted mansion, to the opposing colors in so many of the shots." - 5 Stars
The Impostor - "Del Toro has done it again! I went in not sure what to expect and Crimson Peak blew me away. Visuals were very creative and beautiful, adding to the overall experience, as did the soundtrack. Tension filled and kept me guessing from beginning to end, Crimson Peak is another Del Toro masterpiece that I highly recommend to horror and non horror fans alike. I'm sure this film will remain on your mind for a bit after watching." - 4.5 Stars
The Overlook Theatre Final Rating*
Reader, she married
him! Marrying Sir Thomas Sharpe turns
out to be a big mistake for Edith Cushing
(Mia Wasikowska), but then what Gothic
romance would be complete without a fresh young girl being consumed by the
leftover progeny of a great family that has rotted away? A fine film Guillermo Del Toro has given us,
and one that respects the aesthetic provided by the Gothic literature of the
Romantic/Regency periods of English literature. The foundational Gothic novels
of Horace Walpole (The Castle of Otranto,
1764) and Ann Radcliffe (The Mysteries of Udolpho,1794) are felt immediately both in the look and tone of the
movie, at least when we get to the house at Allerdale Hall, which turns out
to be a rotting, bloody torso of a mansion that hides gory secrets all over its body, from its
crimson bowels to its blackened, shattered skull.
Print from German version of The Castle of Otranto, Wikipedia commons |
Despite all the Gothic love being spread in this
movie, it initially reminded me of the work of Henry James, specifically his
treatment of “the American abroad” theme.
In James’ Portrait of a Lady,
Isabel Archer is a loaded American debutante who jumps at her chance to visit the society of the old world, where she is exposed to the charming cultivation
and history of Europe, as well as its sometimes perverse entanglements and
conniving greed. Both Edith and Isabel are
young women resolute in maintaining their independence, at least until they
come across men who are both exceedingly charming, highly erudite, and as it
turns out, masters of manipulation. The
fresh, independent American girl is taken for her wealth by men who, for all
their worldliness, are merely lustful and greedy. Of course, in both Crimson Peak and Portrait of
a Lady, it’s not quite that
simple, and while Del Toro’s film does not carry the psychological depth of a
Henry James it does manage to do an impressive job of presenting a Jamesian leitmotif in a Gothic romance that is simultaneously repulsive and fascinating. Part of the pleasure of watching both ladies’ journeys is observing Edith come into or perhaps regain a stronger form of their initial independence. At first when Edith thinks
she is in the height of domestic bliss, she is cheerful and accepting of the
decaying manse, and optimistic about the future of her husband Lord Sharpe (Tom
Hiddleston). As the spirits she encounters reveal more and more of the dark history of the house and its inhabitants, Edith becomes less trusting and begins to proactively investigate, donning her reading glasses and stealing keys and documents, engaging in risky subterfuge to figure out what exactly is going on with the
Sharpe siblings, Sir Thomas Sharpe and Lady Lucille Sharpe (Jessica
Chastain), the perfect shady
Europeans. Of course, the pattern of
independent women's disarmament by a tall, dark, and handsome lord who seems to
show much respect for their talents and mind, is reminiscent of the titular
protagonist of Charlotte Bronte’s Jane
Eyre (1847). Jane and Edith both
have a moment of clarity and are able to hold their own after discovering that
their marriage/impending marriage are not all sunshine and hemlock. After Jane discovers Lord Rochester’s
“swarthy” secret in the attic of his crumbling
manse at Thornfield Hall she resists the desperate entreaties of Lord Rochester
despite her wanting nothing more than to fall into his arms. Jane is able to resist because of her
dedication to self respect and Edith manages to rebel as a matter of survival,
but both Jane and Edith are made of that admirable mix of naivete and
independence bore by their respective “tales of woe”, and both are at the outset on guard against men, at least until they are in a
matrimonial situation with the darkly pale Englishmen of their dreams, and both
react with a wounded sort of strength when they discover their lovers
betrayal. This intertextuality becomes especially salient in the Crimson Peak since Wasikowska played
Jane Eyre in Cari Fukunaga's (True
Detective) cinematic adaptation of Jane
Eyre (2011).
When Charlotte Bronte
wrote Jane Eyre she was not really writing a Gothic novel, but using the Gothic novel as a vehicle to
explore her ideas about being a woman, skillfully building a house centered
around a dangerous and seductively charming lord. Bronte was being a little cheeky and playful,
using the genre to advance her own kind of Victorian brand of progressivism,
much in the way Jane Austen used the wild imagination of Gothic novel readers
in her Northanger Abbey (1817). Tom Hiddleston's version of Mr. Rochester may
be less honorable than the source but the characters are cut from the same cloth,
and both hide their former marriages from their upstanding love object. Both Jane Eyre and Edith are always striving,
whether through writing or...governessing?..to be liberated financially,
domestically, and sexually. The problem
of women not being taken seriously is not an unusual theme for these kinds of stories,
whether or not they are contemporary. Mary Shelley’s (Frankenstein,
1818) mother, Mary Wollstonecraft wrote
what is considered by many a foundational text of modern feminism, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792). Despite the fact that many of the most
popular books in Britain at the time were written by women, many like Jane
Austen and George Eliot had to initially publish their work under male pseudonyms to be taken seriously, and in some
cases to avoid the danger of embarrassing their families (proper ladies aren’t
supposed to write, y’all). Crimson Peak has Edith dealing with such
obstacles to her dream of writing a Gothic novel that will be published, going
so far as to use a typewriter to hide her “overly feminine script”. Edith is a solid representation of her
literary forbears, as is Jessica Chastain’s Lucille Sharpe, a red-haired vision
straight out of a pre-Raphaelite painting, especially during the climax when
she ferociously emerges from her austere restraint and unleashes her fury on
the rest of the dramatis personae with her cleaver.
Veronica Veronese, Dante Gabriel Rosetti, 1872 |
In this
tradition, Lucille Sharpe is supposed to represent what passion looks like when
unrestrained, and even the most progressive female authors like Charlotte
Bronte and Jane Austen stressed the virtues of restraint and the controlling of
the passions. Lady Sharpe’s passion for
her brother and her murderous disposition are only restrained when she wants to
fool society or her adversaries, and thus she has become, according to the
dictates of the story, a perverse soul. Even Charlotte's sister Emily, who seems in her seminal Wuthering Heights (1847) to have a
deeper sympathy for the unrestrained soul, has her feral protagonist Cathy
driven to tragedy by her passion. So we
see that in all these vicissitudes of the Gothic form, the drive to liberation
is tempered by the general moores of the time, which prized restraint for women and men. Del Toro
avoids the temptation to modernize too much in this film, whereas another
director might of had more sympathy for Lady Sharpe, who casts off the demands
of the society around her for her forbidden love. In many ways she is the ultimate Romantic
heroine, a Byronic female figure who lives and dies by her passions and casts
the world aside. In other words, though
we are repulsed by the particular nature of her love, it is exactly this
willingness to do anything for this love that makes her fascinating. Incest was also a prevalent theme in Gothic
literature for reasons that are too myriad to go into here, but it is worth
noting that this aspect of that film is a solidly gothic plot device.
-The Berkeley Blazer
*Based on the star ratings turned in by character reviewers, others viewed and got to "Dislike" or "Like" but that does not effect the rating.
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