The 1983 Susan Hill novel, “The Woman in Black” spawned a 1987 play, a 1989 television movie, and in 2012 a feature horror film. Young director James Watkins sets up a chilling tale that proves the genre of Horror is alive and well in the present day.
“The Woman in Black” begins in a completely creepy way as three young girls playing with disturbing looking porcelain dolls simultaneously turn and stare into the room at something off camera. The girls then emotionlessly walk to the bedroom window and jump to their deaths. Two minutes in and your heart is pounding like a native’s bongo.
In present day London (the setting is sometime in the early 1900’s) a young lawyer Arthur Kipps (Daniel Radcliffe) is preparing to visit an old estate to examine papers left by the deceased owner. Kipps lives with his four-year-old son Joseph and a nanny (Jessica Raine.) Kipps’ wife died in childbirth and when Joseph shows Arthur a drawing he made of the family, Arthur notices he is making a sad face in each picture the child drew. Joseph explains it’s because he is always sad.
Arthur arrives at the desolate mansion and begins seeing ghostly apparitions, including a woman dressed in black. Piece by piece, Arthur begins to unravel the dark and sinister mysteries enshrouded within the walls of the home.
At just twenty-four, Daniel Radcliffe is a shoe in for stardom. All grown up from his “Harry Potter” days, Radcliffe’s demeanor and facial expressions of fright put the viewer smack dab in the middle of the haunted house and the horrifying ordeals Arthur is encountering. Arthur attempts to maintain his steadfast logical thinking, despite the ghoulish visions he is having. The mystery is pieced together with the help of friend Samuel (Ciaran Hinds) and his wife Elisabeth (Janet Mc Teer), a couple who also suffered tragedy when their young son drowned under mysterious circumstances. As if not creepy enough, Elisabeth claims that the deceased son communicates through her – and then terrifies Arthur at the dinner table by having an “episode.”
“The Woman in Black” is a great horror film and would defiantly be worth owning for your collection. I actually got additional chills just writing this review. Pop it in and dim the lights, and get ready for a genuine frightening. I bet you’ll never look at a rocking chair the same way again.
by – Matt Christopher
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