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Tag Archives: Desmond Harrington

Ghost Ship

11 Thursday Mar 2021

Posted by vinnieh in Movie Reviews

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

2000's, Alex Dimitriades, Desmond Harrington, Emily Browning, Gabriel Byrne, Ghost Ship, Horror, Isaiah Washington, Julianna Margulies, Karl Urban, Ron Eldard, Steve Beck, Supernatural Horror

A derivative horror movie that never quite reaches the greatness of its startling opening, Ghost Ship still has some good moments. Overall it’s a rather routine affair that isn’t exactly going to go down as a horror classic.

The film begins with a salvage crew retrieving a substantial amount of money following another successful operation. The crew consists of much experienced Captain Sean Murphy ( Gabriel Byrne) , tough talking Epps( Julianna Margulies), second in command Greer(Isaiah Washington) , pair of jokers Dodge and Munder( Ron Eldard and Karl Urban). This is rounded out by mechanic Santos( Alex Dimitriades) . After their latest success, a man by the name of Jack Ferriman( Desmond Harrington)inquires about their skills and wants them to help him with something. Being a guy who works with the weather department, Jack has seen a ship floating and seemingly abandoned in Bering Sea . As it’s in an area that’s classed as international waters, whoever finds something valuable there owns it. This intrigues the crew, though they don’t realise that this trip will be something very chilling for everyone involved. Using their salvage tugboat, the group that’s headed by Sean and joined by the mysterious Jack, head into the Bering Sea on what they think is just going to be another standard operation that they’ve carried out time and time again . Soon enough after sailing through stormy and extremely treacherous conditions, they come across the Antonio Graza, a large Italian liner that was declared missing in 1962 and hasn’t been seen since. Once boarding the creepy ship that catered once to the rich and powerful of the world, all manner of strange and supernatural events happen. Epps swears that she sees a little girl who swiftly vanishes following a near fatal fall through unsafe flooring by Munder, dead bodies are found in a flooded compartment and doors seem to lock by themselves. Discovering a multitude of boxes filled with gold bars, the team think they’ve got it made, but a malevolent force has other ideas. Tragedy strikes when they return to the tugboat, resulting in a fatality and the vessel being severely damaged when an invisible, mysterious force causes most of it to blow up . With the tugboat now out of action, the group must go back on the in hopes of getting it started again. The ghostly atmosphere and events from the past is not going to make it easy for any of those remaining as a haunting begins to occur with gruesome intent on its mind.

Steve Beck as director manages some moments of tension and scares but parson the pun, is all at sea when it comes to the nitty gritty of events. As a result, Ghost Ship never rises above being merely watchable. Now the main area to praise is the opening sequence which also sadly provides the big highlight for Ghost Ship. We begin back with misleading titles that look romantic and sweeping in the grand Old Hollywood tradition . Drinks are flowing and the party is in motion, just before carnage strikes. A thin wire cord is tightened by an unseen person then set free across the dance floor. It manages to leave all the passengers bisected in immensely graphic fashion because of how taut and quick it is. The only one spared is a terrified and lonely little girl named Katie(Emily Browning) , who because of her petite stature avoided being brutally butchered. The scene is pretty horrifying and the use of practical effects and camerawork truly makes it one that stays with you. It’s such a shame that after such a promising opening and hints of greatness, Ghost Ship retreats down the seen it all before route. Still some of the ambience works on the ship, especially from a visual standpoint. Unfortunately mostly everything ends up hamstrung by stupid decisions from characters and some questionable moments that really make it seem very amateurish. Take for instance when we learn a bit more about the ship; this is told from the perspective of Katie, who initially survived and is now something of a haunted presence. What should be intense sequences of dread and startling revelation are drowned out by a modern cross between rock and some kind of ambient dance that just does not fit at all. It baffles me as to why the people behind the film decided to go down this avenue, also peppering events with no real sense of logic to glean.

The cast for the most part are pretty decent in what is a misstep of a movie. Gabriel Byrne bristles with intensity and a sense of leadership, complimented well by his authoritative voice and internal struggle that threatens to burst out. The big standout of Ghost Ship is Julianna Margulies, who brings a tough attitude and feeling of grounded emotion to the part. Margulies makes Epps the most resourceful character as well as the one who is explored the most throughout. It helps that she’s the most rational person as well, making it easy for her to stand out even when at the mercy of unfocused material. Desmond Harrington has a certain enigmatic quality that makes you wonder if his character is letting more on than he is. Unfortunately, the rest of the cast predominately isn’t that great. Isaiah Washington is pretty ineffective as the second in command who seems to spout various parts of exposition and attempts at knowing, while falling foul of the cliches inherent in the genre. Ron Eldard and Karl Urban are left with thankless roles as the alleged comic relief with the same also going for Alex Dimitriades. Thankfully a young Emily Browning is rather impactful as the young guide through the ship; her haunted visage and habit of appearing then vanishing greatly benefitting a threadbare story.

So with a cracking opening and decent cast, Ghost Ship has two things in its arsenal. Sadly, there’s little else to really get excited about here. Anyone who watches will see what I mean.

Wrong Turn

31 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by vinnieh in Movie Reviews

≈ 41 Comments

Tags

2000's, Desmond Harrington, Eliza Dushku, Emmanuelle Chriqui, Horror, Jeremy Sisto, Rob Schmidt, Wrong Turn

Film Title

Wrong Turn

Director

Rob Schmidt

Starring

  • Desmond Harrington as Chris Flynn
  • Eliza Dushku as Jessie Burlingame
  • Emmanuelle Chriqui as Carly
  • Jeremy Sisto as Scott
  • Kevin Zegers as Evan
  • Lindy Booth as Francine
  • Julian Richings as Three Finger
  • Garry Robbins as Saw Tooth
  • Ted Clarke as One Eye

Rob Schmidt harks back to 70’s horror film such as Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Hills have Eyes with Wrong Turn, a derivative but effective slasher set in the West Virginia Mountains and woods. If it’s originality you’re looking for, this won’t be for you. If it’s a slasher film with nerve-shredding music, attractive cast and creepy assailants, Wrong Turn may well appeal to you.

Chris Flynn is a young doctor travelling through the West Virginia Mountains to an important meeting. Because of a chemical spill on one of the roads, he decides to take another route to get to his destination quicker. After taking this turn, he collides with a stalled SUV in the middles of the woods. The SUV belongs to six friends; Jessie, Carly, Scott, Francine and Evan. Their vehicle has stopped because someone has placed barbed wire on the road causing their tires to blow. Teaming up with the group, Chris follows them through the woods in search of help, while lovebirds Francine and Evan stay with the damaged vehicles and smoke pot. The rest of the group eventually come across a ramshackle cabin and they decide to enter. Once inside they realise that this is cabin does not exactly belong to the friendliest of people, as bodyWrong Turn Chris and Jessie parts, hoards of keys and blooded belongings to campers are discovered. Just as they are about to leave, the occupants arrive. It turns out they are cannibalistic mountain men who are horribly disfigured through generations of inbreeding. They have been turning the woods into a hunting ground and kill anyone who trespasses. Now it is a life or death battle as the group is pursued by the ravenous troika of mountain men. Cue for gory death, chases a plenty and the ambience of a 70’s horror flick as Wrong Turn shifts into fast gear and doesn’t let up until the end.

Whilst low on originality( the film owes more than a debt to Deliverance and Chainsaw Massacre), Wrong Turn still has enough thrills to last it’s 80 minute runtime. Rob Schmidt manages this through unusual camera angles and contrasting lighting. The make up department should be praised for creating menacing villains, we only get a few glances of their faces but the killers are still a startling sight. The trio is all the more scary for their interesting and modern hunting methods, one is a deft archer whilst another has an uncanny gift for smell. The atmospheric and exciting is perfectly attuned to the fast-moving pace of the film.Wrong Turn Eliza Dushku

The two leads, Desmond Harrington and Eliza Dushku, turn in the heroics as the laconic de facto leader and athletic and resourceful babe of the bunch. Jeremy Sisto as the wise-cracking best friend has his moments, but is chronically underused. Emmanuelle Chriqui is also lumbered with an uninteresting character, the screaming girl of the bunch who is basically there to eventually die in some gruesome way. The lack of character development with these two can be distracting, though you probably won’t notice because of the breakneck speed of Wrong Turn.Although it has its fair share of gore( one victim has her mouth torn open with rusted barbed wire), it is the things we don’t see that are most chilling. This is illustrated when the cannibals arrive home and the young group who are hiding, watch in horror as the cannibals eat their daily meal of another unwitting teenager. We don’t really see anything, it is what we hear that makes the blood run cold. Schmidt manages some thrilling, nail-biting sequences such as the group’s discovery of a car and caravan necropolis andWrong Turn car graveyard their attempt to sneak out of the cabin without becoming the next meal for the trio of mountain men.

So in short, Wrong Turn doesn’t bring anything new to the table. But, it does have two interesting lead characters, some seriously scary killers and a relentless pace that leaves the knuckles white and the blood chilled. Not the best horror film but one that surely packs a punch with gruesome discoveries and eerie surroundings.

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