1943 voodoo drama
Rating: 16/20
Plot: Nurse Betsy takes a job on a plantation in the Caribbean. The plantation owner's wife is in a sort of walking coma (you know, like a zombie), and Betsy decides to try to cure her. After some failed efforts, she begins to wonder if voodoo is the answer. Meanwhile, she begins to fall in love with the husband.
I'd wanted to see this a while back because of the Roky Erickson song of the same name. Since this has unofficially become Jacques Tourneur month, it seemed like the perfect time to finally check it out. It's a concise nearly-thrill-free thriller, low budget and maybe not as stylish as the other two Tourneur movies I've seen recently, but it does have a few nice scenes. There's a fine moody scene involving a shadowy staircase with the a woman in a black nightgown pursued by a predator in a white dress that's really nice, and there's an atmospheric romp through a field. Some voodoo nuttiness jazzed up things, and I really liked the freaky-eyed guy on the cover, the character who was the most zombified although the titular zombie was actually somebody else. The early depiction of a strange and exotic culture is a bonus. However, a warning: If you're looking for a good zombie movie, this one would likely disappoint.
3 comments:
A decent horror/melodrama film if you don't expect too much. Lots of atmosphere and the very cool voodoo guy liven up the overdone personal relationships. I am still shocked this was made in 1943, but the I should remember "Freaks" was made in 1931. A 15.
See, now you mentioned 'Freaks'...I was going to make 'Freaks' my first pick for the monthly movie club thing, but now I can't because you mentioned it.
Sorry. You should still do it, though.
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