Tales
from the Crypt Season Seven an Unexpected Denouement
by
Kristin Battestella
In
Spring 1996, the thirteen episode final season of Tales from the
Crypt moved to the UK, and
despite several fine stories, the sardonic horror suffers thanks to
the identity crisis in this awkward end. Our Crypt Keeper is eating
flesh and chips and doing a little fright seeing complete with Big
Ben, London Bridge, and double decker buses in “Fatal Caper”
before director Bob Hoskins (Who Framed Roger Rabbit?) sends
his dying client to lawyer Natasha Richardson (The Handmaid's
Tale) to handle his will. Three sons have been disowned, but
without them there is no legacy or title. Two are summoned to accept
the terms of their inheritance – find the eldest brother unseen for
fifteen years. However, if one brother remains, he gets everything.
Arguments, heart attacks, saucy, and killer suggestions lead to
rigged seances, apparitions, and ditching folks in the ancestral tomb
as each tries to out scare the other. With the jolly good demented
mood, it's easy to presume this is a one off on location special for
the premiere – except the Keeper is staying to collect souvenears
and worries about getting in trouble with the Die-R-S again in “Last
Respects.” Freddie Francis (Dracula Has Risen from the Grave)
directs Emma Samms (Dynasty) as a monkey's paw changes the
fortune of three sisters and their floundering curio shop in this fun
Charmed meets Friday the 13th: The Series combination.
Debates about which sister will be a spinster or the most hated have
them vying over the talisman, and each thinks they can outsmart it's
curse. However, the windfall is not what it seems thanks to injuries
and insurance plans, and the bemusingly dry mortician isn't surprised
by the ghoulish bodies, turnabouts, and revenge. To start the season,
Tales from the Crypt relies
on classic horror twists sourced from some of the earliest issues of
Tales for the Crypt, Vault of Horror, Shock SuspenStories,
and Haunt of Fear. In “A Slight Case of Murder” our
astrologer Crypt Keeper warns us to stay away from romantic
enstranglements this month, but mystery writer Francesca Annis (Dune)
has an estranged husband and a pesky old lady neighbor – a wannabe
author after more than just a cup of sugar. English to the face charm
contrasts the under the breath zingers, and divorce settlements
provide gunpoint threats, fireplace pokers, and burying bodies in the
basement. Our cupcake and biscuit forget about the car keys left on
the dead as matters of murder remain so polite. After all, the Crypt
Keeper says we have to just grim and bear it.
Director
Russell Mulcahy's (Highlander) inside heist goes wrong for
“Horror in the Night,” leading to creepy hotel hideouts, Art Deco
askew, and femme fatale Elizabeth McGovern (Downton Abbey). Drab
patinas and rattling trains accent the distorted sense of reality
alongside repeated events, delirium, and scotch. The bloody linens
and leaky pipes spewing blood escalate with disturbing sex scenes and
gruesome guts. Suspect door numbers, never ending hallways, past
secrets, and fatal mistakes combine in the superbly bizarre Tales
from the Crypt justice we expect
yet this might have made a great horror movie unto itself.
Commander CK, meanwhile, plays astronaut with his skeleton crew.
They're going where no ghoul has gone before because they've got the
rot stuff. Crows, fog, and spooky trees open “Report from the
Grave” as scientist James Frain (The Tudors) enters a crypt
to capture the mental powers of a surprisingly well preserved
murderous hypnotist. His machinery may unite the physical and
metaphysical, but a good zap and mechanical shock results in asylum
restraints, visions of the deceased, and more medical experiments.
Lightning, screams, and equations provide a Frankenstein motif
for the nineties as motherboards and monitors update the mad science.
Saucy and sadness can't stop the pain of death thanks to grave
robbing, ghosts, and bloody bathtubs in another Tales from
the Crypt gem. Of course, The Keeper does his best Gorelone
Godfather send up before Daniel Craig (Skyfall) impresses
the advertising agency with his swagger in “Smoke Wrings.”
He calls out the old fashioned campaigns, making the other agents
look bad, but it's all a con with an underground accomplice and a
device that manifests the power of suggestion. Subliminal signals
over candies and colas begat knives, revenge, and double crosses like
it's Melrose Place on acid
but it's a Victorian minister in the saucy for “About Face.”
Imelda Staunton's (Maleficent) husband wants another young
secretary for his sinful rhetoric, but unbeknownst twin daughters
played by Anna Friel (Timeline) come knocking on his door.
They'll say their adopted to maintain his righteous image, but one
daughter is unable to forgive his wolf in sheep's clothing as shadows
of the cross imagery accent the scripture and damnation. Perhaps
it's obvious, but slit throats, strangulation, and impalements
provide enough twisted drama. Unfortunately, we need diefocals
because we have terrible eyesight from watching too much Tales
from the Crypt according to Dr.
Keeper in “Confession.” Swanky
fedoras and cigarettes belie headless victims, and the police fear
headlines of headless girls in the topless club. Profiler Ciaran
Hinds (The Phantom of the Opera) interrogates
suspected screenwriter Eddie Izzard (Shadow of the Vampire), for his movie about a
serial killer is a box office hit. However, the police don't believe
his expertise in killing is just from research thanks to freak show
heads in jars, nasty history, and their insistence that no one is
ever really innocent. Flashbulb cameras, two way mirrors, and dank
rooms add to the congested tension, bowling ball bags, and
psychological one on one, combining the seriousness of a noir
thriller with self-referential winks. Viewers will see the twist
coming, but that cheeky matches the optometrist bookends, and this
would have been a fitting if subdued series finale.
After
starting well, Year Seven falters with several mixed bag entries
before going downhill with the back and forth betrayals in “Escape.”
German prisoners in 1945 England object to making coffins and want
all the comforts to wait out the war – yet they also plot for
useful information about tunnels below their castle jail. Sirens and
bloody clues add to the period atmosphere, but none of the
motivations are likable, and the supersized Season Three World War I
episode “Yellow” remains superior. A convenience store robbery
goes wrong for Ewan McGregor (Shallow Grave) in “Cold War”
leading to gunshots, arguing couples, colorful clubs, and awkward
dance offs to Tom Jones with Colin Salmon (Tomorrow Never Dies).
It's a thoroughly British
tale, almost alienating to an audience at the time tuning in for
American sleaze. Off the mark racism commentaries and love triangles
are terribly dated, and it takes to too long to get to the apparent
but fun undead twist. While the Crypt Keeper's playing Wimbletomb, a
pawnbroker takes in a pregnant woman only to become jealous of the
interfering baby in “The Kidnapper.” The lame narration and
warped abduction plan is too disturbing – real world horror caused
by a pathetic dude wanting sex to make it all better. It's not
entertaining, and even the terribly fake babies during action
sequences can't make this better. Eventually, viewers won't get Slay
Mart cashier Keeper and his boo light special joke, and “Ear
Today...Gone Tomorrow” provides safe cracking failures,
sophisticated bookies, and a saucy mobster's wife who says they can
help each other. Hearing loss has ruined his trade, but she knows a
doctor using radical innovations and multi-species benefits. Visuals
amplify his newly owl heightened hearing but the animal twists are
laughable. There's more nudity in this half hour than the rest of the
season and maybe it's not a terrible story, but we've seen similar
crime episodes on Tales from the Crypt already.
The animated “The Third Pig” finale is also an odd gimmick
that both makes one wonder why Tales from the Crypt didn't
do adult animation more often when it had the chance and why they are
unnecessarily doing it now. This Three Little Pigs spin
has John Kassir as the Crypt Keeper narrating Drinky, Smokey, zombie
pigs, and mad science – going on and on with humor that requires
you to be likewise drunk or high and it's baffling how anybody
thought this was a good way to end the series.
Tales
from the Crypt's production move
to Britain immediately shows with outdoor filming, grand estates,
Tudor windows, cluttered antiques, and tweed. Fine woodwork, ornate
chairs, carriages, candles, and oil lamps set off great looking
period episodes alongside bangers and mash, plenty of accents, and
across the pond slang. Swelling music and winking, whimsical notes
add suspense or humor while chanting, heartbeats, and retching sounds
match the blood, poisons, and tombs. Typewriters, big old
televisions, cassettes, and dated fashions continue the nostalgia
while overhead camera angles, distorted views, and sped up
visuals keep the sardonic humor. Rather than eighties garish color,
mid century crime, or noir settings, Tales from the Crypt embraces
the British horror tone – putting aside the hip and edgy
that was getting a little passe by the mid nineties. Every episode
has a spooky, windswept atmosphere with cemeteries, cobwebs, and
shrewd lighting accenting the pale, sickly pallor, zombie strung out,
chopped off heads, and veiny skin. Despite boobs, splatter, and the
gory deceased, this season is relatively tame compared to what
viewers may expect from Tales from the Crypt. If
a pushing the envelope, mature macabre, cheeky big bang finale is
what you're looking for, this serviceable but not the best the series
has to offer exit will be a disappointment. Compared to Tales
from the Crypt's finest, this
more serious season definitely feels like a different anthology. For
fans of British programs there are plenty of familiar faces, but at
the time it was probably tough to accept such English bits and bobs
on late night HBO. If you can overlook the off brand demented fun
then Season Seven has enough gothic morose for a quick and easy
marathon.
No comments:
Post a Comment