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"The Skeleton Key"
104 minutes | Rated: PG-13
WIDE: Friday, August 12, 2005
Directed by Iain Softley
Starring Kate Hudson, Gena Rowlands, Peter Sarsgaard, John Hurt, Joy Bryant, Forrest Landis
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OTHER REVIEWS/COMING SOON
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There's a solid, creepy voodoo movie locked away somewhere inside lackluster 'Skeleton Key'
A first-rate concept for a spine-tingling tale of voodoo, hoodoo and possible hauntings in the swampy Louisiana bayou, "The Skeleton Key" is rendered impotent by bland, generic execution.
The wannabe chiller stars Kate Hudson as a New Orleans home-care nurse named Caroline who takes a job at a remote, run-down plantation manor, looking after a mute and paralyzed elderly stroke victim (played with eerie, deceptive vacancy by John Hurt) in what will probably be his last weeks of life.
Caroline is selfish, snooping and disrespectful (having an unsympathetic heroine is another of the movie's problems), so soon she begins sticking her nose where it doesn't belong -- opening attic doors that have been locked for decades and digging into the house's history. Doing so raises the ire of her patient's bitterly old-fashioned and superstitious Southern wife (Gena Rowlands), but more importantly it puts the skeptical Caroline on a path toward believing in the ghosts of lynched former servants that the old lady claims haunt the place.
Blessed with veins of sublimely spooky Cajun occult running throughout the script by Ehren Kruger ("Arlington Road," "The Ring") -- the thrust of which are that the more Caroline believes, the more she's in danger from the spirits in the house -- "The Skeleton Key" also boasts a handful of creative twists, some pointing toward a hoax, others hinting at something far darker than just ghosts.
These tempestuous possibilities should be downright terrifying as Caroline resolves to save herself and her stricken charge from the black magic (or maybe just the pretense of it) that soon seem to permeate the house. But director Iain Softley ("Hackers," "K-PAX") doesn't rise to the occasion. Adhering to a horror-movie template, he invariably favors cheap jump-scares (Hudson turns around in the dark and is startled by Rowlands as the soundtrack thunders for effect) instead of enveloping the picture in the mind-reeling and soul-rattling implications of the nurse's increasingly disturbing discoveries.
It's hard not to wonder what "The Skeleton Key" might have been in the hands of a director with a gift for visceral disquietude like Alejandro Amenábar ("Open Your Eyes," "The Others"), David Fincher ("Se7en," "Fight Club") or Darren Aronofsky ("Pi," "Requiem for a Dream").
Rowlands and Hurt are the film's best assets, providing performances that earn goosebumps in subtle and insinuating ways. The talented, chameleonic Peter Sarsgaard ("Garden State," "Kinsey") is wasted in a conspicuously underwritten role as the old couple's kindly, albeit suspicious, estate lawyer. But all three of them are more commanding on screen than Hudson, who also never manages to make the nosy, insolent Caroline likable enough for anyone to care if she lives or dies.
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