Film Review
Admittedly, it is something of a horror potpourri - picking and mixing
elements from zombie, ghost and slasher movies with gay abandon - but
The Fog still manages to sustain its aura of menace
and dread anticipation brilliantly and stands as one of John Carpenter's
slickest and darkest offerings in the horror genre. Having scored a notable
success with
Halloween (1978), Carpenter was
under great pressure to deliver an equally effective horror film whilst
avoiding the trap that has claimed many directors of the genre, which
is simply to repeat what went before. With its depiction of a small close-knit
community under threat from evil murderous intent,
The Fog certainly evokes something
of the sinister, doom-laden atmosphere of
Halloween, and offers just as many sudden
visceral shocks, but it is more a ghost story in the
M.R. James tradition - a spine-chilling supernatural fantasy in a
present day setting.
Unlike
Halloween, which won
instant approval,
The Fog was
not universally well received on its first release and has taken almost
two decades to achieve its present status as a minor classic of the
horror genre. Admittedly, the film does have one or two flaws -
the design of the ghostly killers (complete with silly red demonic
eyes) is amateurish and the ending feels needlessly rushed. But
when you consider how effectively
The
Fog builds the tension to its dramatic climax, how brutally
horrific are the killings (the spectator imagines far more than he is
actually shown) and how masterfully Carpenter makes the fantastic
appear plausible, you can easily see why it is so well regarded
today. The casting of Janet Leigh as a potential slasher
victim (alongside her daughter Jamie Lee Curtis) is an inspired touch - her famous carve-up in
Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960)
is after all what set the gore-drenched ball rolling. Forget the inexecrably bad
2005 remake. If you want to be afraid, really afraid, stick with
original. As the eerily glowing bank of fog rolls in from the sea
and surges inland in search of victims, you can almost feel the icy
coldness of its touch on your skin. You will then discover the meaning of the word
nebulaphobia...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Antonio Bay, a small Californian fishing town, is about to mark its one
hundredth anniversary. On the eve of the centennial celebrations,
the town's pastor, Father Malone, finds an old diary in which he
uncovers a terrible secret. One hundred years ago, Malone's
grandfather conspired with five other men to sink a passing ship so
that they could plunder the gold it was carrying. The ship's crew
were lepers who were planning to establish a colony further up the
coast. At midnight, an eerie glowing fog rolls in from the
sea and envelops a trawler ship. The three fishermen aboard are
attacked and mercilessly slain by ghostly apparitions. Three
deaths are not enough. The fog must claim three more victims
before the ancient debt is settled...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.