High
Spirits Provides Elevated Humor and Charm
by
Kristin Battestella
When
investors intend to foreclose on the struggling Castle Plunkett, down
on his luck owner Peter Plunkett (Peter O'Toole) and his faithful
staff pretend to be the most haunted castle in Ireland for a group of
American Tourists – including an on the rocks couple (Steve
Guttenberg and Beverly D'Angelo), a conflicted minister (Peter
Gallagher), and more. Unfortunately, the real ancestral ghosts decide
to give the Yankees what they came to see, leading to frights and
supernatural love triangles as the murdered Mary Plunkett (Daryl
Hannah) and her killer betrothed Martin Brogan (Liam Neeson)
interfere with the vacation plans.
Neil
Jordan (Interview with a
Vampire) wrote and directed
1988's High Spirits, and
the leaky roof, angry phone calls, and late payments waste no time in
setting the three week deadline, desperate employees, and humor mixed
with bleak situation. A seemingly senile mother who talks to the
unhappy castle ghosts gives them the hair brained idea to drum up
some smoke and mirrors ghosts, and the zany preparations give us a
chance to tour the castle complete with silly string, a mummy
swinging from turret ropes, roller skating knights in armor, and
rubber body parts under the tour bus. Banshees on the luggage rack,
out of control horseback phantoms, buses sinking in the swamp – the
fakery is off to a terrible start for these soggy tourists! Charming
music adds to the shenanigans while the layered script provides
passive aggressive nuances. It takes repeat viewings to catch all the
under the breath asides and off the cuff quips as eclectic guests and
parapsychologists nonchalantly hope the real ghosts are better than
spinning beds and sham theatrics. The kids aren't impressed after
seeing Nightmare on Elm
Street, either,
but the bungling staff take their drink, song, and home seriously –
especially as mortgage connections and family histories come to
light. Despite fun pacing and humor regarding real ghosts who could
have saved the castle had they appeared sooner, High
Spirits has
a darker undercurrent with rich American imperialism ready to put the
villagers out of work and phantoms who stab, chase, and terrorize.
This Victorian sense of the parallel realm on the other side of the
wall is not so whimsical thanks to violence, betrayals, and repeated
consequences accented by somber music cues, heavy breathing zooms,
and hidden point of view camerawork. The intercut supernatural action
doesn't need in your face boo shocks, for the idea that the ghosts
are watching from behind the stone walls and may interfere with human
business is creepy enough. These encounters are not part of the
tourism facade, and the dialogue carries much of the dual
storytelling and show within a show winks. The ensemble does its job
thanks to one sided phone calls, details on their neurosis, and
conflicting personalities – developing more character than our
contemporary try hard exposition and contrived conversations.
Perfectly timed lighting strikes, talking horses, guests covering
themselves with rugs or lampshades, and meddling, innuendo making
ghosts keep High
Spirits playfully
self-aware. Crisscrossed couples both living and dead are dangerous
yet preposterous amid the titular guide book, whistling whiting, and
The Big Bopper. Scary tense moments make up for anything dated or
silly because the frights and conflicts are being experienced by the
characters – these aren't just hollow special effects shockers
tossed out for the audience. Unfortunately, after a strong start,
some of the interesting ensemble players disappear while others are
featured. Indeed there are rumblings that Neil Jordan intended High
Spirits to
be very different from the PG-13 theatrical version, and the uneven
tone, disjointed scene transitions in the second half, and reduced to
irrelevant characterizations show such behind the scenes rifts and
editing changes. Ghostly tuppings, inter-spectral marriages, a
tempted priest, suicides, sexual consequences, and kinky, mystical
reversals also suggest High
Spirits
was meant to be darker and more mature. Skelping possibilities on All
Hallow's Eve when the spirit is moved and the flesh is willing lead
to scary nuns, kissing corpses, and forbidden relations. While true
love can bring the dead the back to life, interchangeable women and
mixed messages rush toward a quick finale when the story, characters,
and castle vignettes are entertaining themselves without the
seemingly easy happy results. I think we'd all like to stay a little
longer at Castle Plunkett!
Yes,
he made some epics, but I don't care I love Peter O'Toole in this and
Supergirl. Drunk and
desperate, Peter dons a tuxedo and pretends to be a gracious host,
but he's not really a showman and insists that minor unexpected
inconvenience should be expected because that's what's in the
brochure. He's not sorry he lied about the castle being haunted when
their home is at risk, and although we don't get the sense we see him
acting, O'Toole looks to be having fun with the role thanks to
theatrical seriousness, over the top soliloquies, and near slapstick
physicality. The for the back row elevates the winks, and when not
sleeping in his roll top desk, Peter has it out with his dead dad
before complaining about these fickle Americans who couldn't wait to
leave over fake ghosts but now stay longer for the real ones. Steve
Guttenberg's (Police Academy) Jack feels at home in Castle
Plunkett, innocently enjoying the bad performances and trying to make
amends with his wife. He drinks and wanders the castle, interfering
with ghostly patterns and confessing how cold-hearted his wife really
is. Jack is smitten by Daryl Hannah's (Splash) alluring
specter Mary Plunkett, but the situation is almost too much for him –
“You're a ghost, I'm an American, it would never work out.” Mary
is forced to relive her murder every night, and when Jack ends her
torment, she instantly falls in love. She thinks this newfound peace
is a miracle that brought them together. Sir Jack saved her from
being doomed forever, but Beverley D'Angelo (National Lampoon's
Christmas Vacation) is a deliciously snobby wife more interested
in Valium and sleep masks – a daddy's girl with ulterior motives
for this ridiculous trip. The Brogan versus Plunkett history is just
business, and it takes a lot of high maintenance creams, high strung
supplements, and obnoxious curlers for Sharon's satin and pearls to
look so good. For her, Castle Plunkett is a nightmare; everyone hates
her and Sharon is ready to leave until big, brutish, and bemusingly
wicked Liam Neeson (Taken) pops
up in her bathtub. He's cruel to Mary, smelly, squishing, and
jealously stabs her but gives Sharon really great back rubs so she's
not too sorry about ditching Jack when Martin takes an interest in
her wee vixen.
Chaste
soon to be priest Peter Gallagher (While
You Were Sleeping),
however, is having second thoughts on what was supposed to be this
spiritual retreat before his final vows. He has to cover himself with
his collar when stormy spirits rip away their clothes, and the impure
thoughts mount when watching the marshmallow voiced guest Jennifer
Tilly (Bride of Chucky)
exercise. Evil nuns make Brother Tony think twice – a chilling
scene with a smoking crotch that assures he gets the message. Tilly's
Miranda is here solo after breaking up with a boyfriend who booked
the trip. He's a hairdresser who devil worships on the side and ran
away with a monk instead, but Miranda has no problem innocently
flirting with a priest thanks to some kinky innuendo and scantily
clad moments. Unfortunately, their story seems to get shorted during
High Spirits. At
times, they aren't present even in group scenes, and with these
characters' backgrounds, it's a missed opportunity
to further explore Catholicism, local folklore, and New Age thoughts
on the ghostly events. Despite enough scares and nothing to keep them
at Castle Plunkett, Tony and Miranda seem there just to round out the
mayhem alongside likewise underutilized parapsychologist Martin
Ferrero (Jurassic Park)
and his family, who occasionally object and scream over the kids in
peril. Delightful Mrs. Plunkett Liz Smith (The
Vicar of Dibley) knows her
son is an idiot and fills in the details on tupping with dead
relatives, but she and her husband Ray McAnally (My
Left Foot) deserved more.
In the end, High Spirits is
blessed with too much of a fine ensemble and no way to use them all.
Fortunately, on location
castles with rugged stone, arch windows, sweeping fireplaces, hidden
nooks, enchanting crannies, maze like corridors, and winding
staircases provide an excellent backdrop for all High
Spirits' possibilities.
Phantom winds, billowing
curtains, cobwebs, and dust add to the four poster beds, antiques,
throne chairs, tapestries, candles, portraits, and clutter. When
you're doing a castle haunt theme for your Halloween house, this is
what it should look like! Rainy coasts provides dreary amid perilous
swamps and overgrown greenery. The rough and worn, moody blue scale
comes in the chilly stone and bleak skies – unlike over saturation,
this feels old, drafty, and natural with bitter hotel staff dressed
in ratty layers and stretched out sweaters. Zany buses and whimsical
fiddle music provides impish charm, for even the hokey, two
dimensional marionette monsters and fake tentacles offer drunken
parody, child fears, and sloshing water drenching everybody. That Pan
Am flight to Ireland also has one of those wonderfully huge and
unrealistic cinematic flight cabins! Boob tube television
poltergeists, retro eighties does forties silky blouses, and
voluminous ladies hair also look fine, and the women enchant with
gray costumes, wispy Regency frocks, white slips, black lingerie, and
red dresses as the innocent and pure fun escalates to more saucy cuts
as the ghostly encounters increase. Bemusing ghost trickery,
appearing and disappearing transitions, going through objects
effects, and lighting pops accent the ethereal sheen, catacombs, and
zombie corpses climbing out of the walls. Today's productions often
work so hard in trying to be spooky or snarky, but who knew some
ghostly body glitter could go such a long way?
While
there may be a few adult scenes and scares that could be too much for
young viewers, High Spirits
is
ripe for re-watching. Though I loved this in my youth, some of the
critical panning is not undeserved – High
Spirits could
have been a flawless classic instead of just late night Halloween
fun. However, despite
apparent editing problems or behind the scenes changes, High
Spirits balances
the humor for the
family, ghostly spoof turnabouts, and mature undertones for wise
adult audiences thanks to a delightful cast, heaps of atmosphere,
cheeky wit, and spooky but carefree charm.