THE
LIGHTHOUSE (2019)
Starring
Robert Pattinson, Willem Dafoe and Valeriia Karaman as the
not-so-little mermaid. Directed by Robert Eggers. (109 min)
ON
BLU-RAY FROM LIONSGATE
Review
by Fluffy the Fearless😸
Watching
The Lighthouse, I couldn’t help but think this is the
aesthetic approach Stanley Kubrick should have taken with The
Shining, especially since he
jettisoned most of the supernatural aspects King’s novel, anyway.
Of course, we all know Kubrick was probably not capable of such
minimalism.
Robert
Eggers is, though. Shooting in chromatic black & white in a
nearly extinct aspect ratio (1:19) establishes an oppressive,
claustrophobic tone right away. We feel the isolation of the film’s
only two characters before we even meet them: crusty, cantankerous
lighthouse keeper Thomas Wake (Willem Dafoe) and newly hired-hand
Ephraim Winslow (Robert Pattinson), the latter of whom appears to be
trying to escape his past.
A
19th Century New England lighthouse is already an ideal
setting for a horror film, even more so for depicting a descent into
madness, which is ultimately scarier than less tangible terrors. But
what’s interesting about The Lighthouse is – if one were
so inclined – it could still be taken on face value as a
supernatural horror film. But what would be the fun in that?
Willem sometimes needs burping. |
Instead,
the isolation slowly drives Wake and Winslow mad, exacerbated by
their already adversarial relationship, no-small-amount of booze and
a storm that delays the monthly supply ship. However, since Wake
already seems a few cans short of a six-pack, maybe it’s only
Winslow who’s losing his grip on reality. The story unfolds from
his point of view and the increasingly disturbing hallucinations are
all his. One could even go out on a limb to suggest Wake himself is
just another product of Winslow’s delusions. A relatively weak argument,
but there is some circumstantial evidence.
And
if Eggers’ The Witch veered from the beaten path, The
Lighthouse doesn’t even set foot on it. In the disc’s
behind-the-scenes documentary, Pattinson stated he was looking for
something weird. Well, young sir, mission accomplished. Nearly every
aspect of the film – both visually and narratively – is
fascinatingly bizarre, reciprocated by all-in performances from both
leads. Dafoe’s no stranger to such roles, but Pattinson is turning
into a really interesting actor, something none of us would have
predicted 10 years ago.
All
of which means The Lighthouse is likely to spark plenty of
love-it-or-loathe-it debates, which automatically renders it a unique
film worth checking out by adventurous horror fans. Unpredictable,
maddening, ambiguous and surreal – even quite funny, on occasion –
one thing the film definitely isn't is boring.
EXTRA
KIBBLES
"THE
LIGHTHOUSE: A DARK & STORMY TALE” - Considering
its unique technical aspects, this is a pretty interesting
behind-the-scenes doc, running nearly 40 minutes.
AUDIO
COMMENTARY – By Director/Co-writer Robert Eggers.
DELETED
SCENES
DIGITAL
COPY
KITTY CONSENSUS:
PURR-R-R...LIKE A GOOD SCRATCH BEHIND THE EARS.
Actually it was BORING.
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