It's always nice when you can get a couple different subgenres
running together with some kind of accuracy, and A DEAD CALLING will
show very nicely how the ghost story and the murder mystery can work
together. As for this whodunit, Elizabeth, our intrepid reporter heroine, has just left New York
following the death of her fiance. Getting back on the horse, she
takes a job with her hometown television station and begins doing a
piece on the architecture of the great houses in the area. One of
these great houses has a history to it that revolves very intimately
around Rachel and, as we'll find out, will take a lot of blood and
corpses to make sense out of it.
First, they did a very, very solid job building the tension
throughout about the first half-hour of the movie. All the shots of
our intrepid young reporter roaming about the abandoned house are
wracked with tension, and by the time we get to our first killing, the
tension built explodes to maximum effect. It's a good, standard way to
make a scary part of a movie--build tension, release. The more tension
built, the bigger the release should be.
Also, there'll be plenty of those good old-fashioned
who's-going-crazy moments to go around. You know, those moments where
they try to establish that somebody's seeing things that really aren't
there? And a few possibly unintentional laughs, besides--check out the
intrepid reporter's dad (Sid Haig, back in yet another nicely done
non-clown role), as he teaches the basics of handgun safety.
A DEAD CALLING boils down to fairly simple terms. It's a nice
murder mystery, a fairly taut ghost story, and overall, pretty solidly
done, although the last forty minutes or so watch like one of
Lifetime's endless array of execrable made for TV movies. But there are some problems--for instance, the back of the box
will give away a major plot point. Thanks to a major typographical
error, we learn the truth about our intrepid reporter a whole lot
sooner than we want to. Not to mention a whole lot sooner than the
movie actually intended.
The ending gets really sinister really fast, which comes as a real
surprise given the tone of the whole rest of the movie. Think about
watching a Lifetime original movie that accidentally got the last
fifteen minutes of THE EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE dubbed in by mistake.
Think about that and you'll think just how incredibly big a dichotomy
that is. As if that weren't enough, a couple extra nifty twists will
find their way into the plot.
The special features include Spanish subtitles, English closed
captions, director's commentary, a photo gallery, audio options, and
trailers for A DEAD CALLING, AN AMERICAN HAUNTING, BLACKWATER VALLEY
EXORCISM, BLOOD STAINS, THE DESCENT, ZOMBIE NATION, and SEE NO EVIL. All in all, A DEAD CALLING is nicely done. There's a whole lot of
elements in this little stew, and bringing them all together like this
should prove very enjoyable.
RATING: *** (out of four)
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