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Masters of Horror - John Mcnaughton - Haeckel's Tale by John McNaughton
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DVD detailsActor: Derek Cecil, Gerard Plunkett, Micki Maunsell, Pablo Coffey, Steve Bacic Director: John McNaughton Brand: STARZ/SPHE Producer: Adam Goldworm Producer: Andrew Deane Producer: Ben Browning Producer: Bo Altherr Producer: Grant Rosenberg Writer: Clive Barker Writer: Mick Garris DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo; English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo Format: Color, DVD, NTSC, Widescreen Picture Format: 1.77:1 Running Time: 60 minutes DVD Release Date: 2006-11-14 Audience Rating: Unrated Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
DVD Reviews of Masters of Horror - John Mcnaughton - Haeckel's TaleDVD Review: A twisted and distubingly intersting take on the classic Hammer Film horror Summary: 4 Stars
Masters of Horror has been good but very uneven in its execution. Haeckel's Tale is the last episode for Season One and it sure ends the season on a disturbingly kinky compilation of twisted grotesqueries. The story is from a Clive Barker short story that's been adapted by Mick Garris (fellow Masters of Horror director and also its brainchild) and produced by George A. Romero to be directed by John McNaughton.
Already, one wonders why Romero would be producing instead of directing the piece. Scheduling conflicts prohibited Romero from taking the director's chair and he instead recommended John McNaughton (his one film which earned him Master of Horror status is one of the best horror films of the last qurater century: Henry - Portrait of a Serial Killer). The fact that Romero was originally chosen to direct Barker's Garris adapted short story means there's got to be zombies or some form of undead within. I, for one, was glad that Romero decided that he wouldn't be able to direct and chose another in his stead. Barker's short story does indeed include zombies but it also has a heavy sense of the old classic technicolor Hammer Films vibe to it. Haeckel's Tale under the capable hands of McNaughton takes those Hammer Films conventions and ramps it up into overdrive.
Even though John McNaughton really has only one true horror film under his belt (he also directed a little-known cult scifi-horror called The Borrowers which had fledgling effects shop KNB FX still doing things guerilla-style), but his work in Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer more than earns him his horror creds. In Haeckel's Tale, John McNaughton clearly has a bit of fun making the only true period piece in the whole Masters of Horror series. McNaughton goes for the classic Hammer Films look for this episode and it shows in the gothic, fog-shrouded atmosphere in the outdoor scenes. The look of the costumes and even the dialogue harkens back to those Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing Hammer Films.
The story is a mixture of the Frankenstein tale with a some Cemetary Man mixed in. Haeckel's Tale begins somewhere around the 1800's and I'm assuming close to the end of it from the costume worn by Steve Bacic who played Mr. Ralston who arrives to seek the help of Miz Carnation who is purported to be a necromancer who can grant him his wish to have his dead wife brought back to life for him. Miz Carnation rebuffs Ralston, but after some begging she makes a deal with him to hear Haeckel's Tale. If he still wants his wife brought back to life after hearing it then she would do so. Ernst Haeckel (played by Derek Cecil)is a young medical professor whose obsession to conquer death mirrors that of a certain eccentric European scientist he so admires. Unlike his idol, Haeckel's attempt to use electricity to put the spark of life back into a corpse fails dramatically. He's soon investigating the rumor of a certain traveling necromancer who goes by the name of Montesquino (played by Joe Polito) who he thinks to be a fraud, but he soon finds out that Montesquino is all he says he is when Haeckel stumbles upon Wolfram (played by Stargate SG-1's own Maybourne, Tom McBeath) and his stunning young wife Elise (the drop-dead gorgeous Leela Savasta).
Haeckel quickly lusts after the young Elise, but as Wolfram will later tell him as the story nears it's climax (in more ways than one), Elise cannot be satisfied by him or Haeckel. Her obsession with a dead husband she loves and cannot let go brings Haeckel to a scene that he cannot comprehend nor accept as something she truly wants. I must say that Leela Savasta's performance as the dead-obsessed Elise is only surpassed by Anna Falchi's own work as "She" in Dellamorte Dellamore. Leela's pretty much spending most of her screentime fully naked and writhing around in an orgy not typical of most horror movies. It's also in this orgy scene where we get the biggest Clive Barker feel to the story. Anyone how has read Barker earlier work knows the man can mix horror and sex like no other.
The ending of the episode brings to it a slight twist with Miz Carnation being more than she says she is. This Masters of Horror episode is not the best of the lot, but it is one of the better looking ones in terms of cinematography and it's leads. It also doesn't have much in terms of genuine scares. The story gradually builds up the dreads and disturbing images but never anything that will put a genuine heart-stopping scare on the viewer. Like McNaughton's own foray into horror with Henry, Haeckel's Tale lets the story's own disturbing themes on obsession and the darker side of love put the horror in the story. It does have a nice gore-laden sequence courtesy of Howard Berger and Greg Nicotero and their KNB FX team.
In the end, Haeckel's Tale is a very good episode which has its flaws like the rest of the Masters of Horror episodes. What sets it apart from the rest of the series entries is its unique Hammer Films look and the return of McNaughton back in the director's chair as a horror filmmaker. It's no Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, but Haeckel's Tale will have enough disturbing images to burn itself to its audiences' minds.
More Masters of Horror - John Mcnaughton - Haeckel's Tale reviews: 1 2 3 4
Description of Masters of Horror - John Mcnaughton - Haeckel's TaleIn a time when the laws of science battled the secrets of magic, medical student Ernst Haeckel (Derek Cecil) believes the power of life, death and resurrection lay in his arrogant hands. But on a journey to visit his gravely ill father, he finds shelter in the home of an older man and his seductive young wife (Leela Savasta) who cannot be fulfilled by mortal hungers. Somewhere in the darkness of a nearby necropolis, a defiant necromancer (Jon Polito of BARTON FINK, MILLER?S CROSSING) will now summon them all to an orgy of the undead and unleash the ultimate depravity for those who do not heed the warning of HAECKEL?S TALE. Directed by John McNaughton in association with horror legend George A. Romero, this startling mix of erotic desire and gut-ripping horror is adapted by series creator/executive producer Mick Garris from the short story by Clive Barker. DVD Features:Widescreen Presentation enhanced for 16x9 TVs,AUDIO COMMENTARY WITH DIRECTOR JOHN MCNAUGHTON,BEHIND THE SCENES: THE MAKING OF HAECKEL'S TALE,BREAKING TABOOS: AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHN MCNAUGHTON,DVD-ROM: SCREEN SAVER,DVD-ROM: SCREENPLAY,JOHN MCNAUGHTON BIO,ON SET: AN INTERVIEW WITH DEREK CECIL,ON SET: AN INTERVIEW WITH JON POLITO,ON SET: AN INTERVIEW WITH LEELA SAVASTA,SCRIPT TO SCREEN: HAECKEL'S TALE,STILL GALLERY,STORYBOARD GALLERY,TRAILERS,WORKING WITH A MASTER: JOHN MCNAUGHTON
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