The Dark Movie Review
The Dark Review
"The Dark" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul W S Anderson, Jeremy Bolt, Robert KulzerProducer : Paul W S Anderson, Jeremy Bolt, Robert Kulzer
Screenwiter : Stephen Massicotte
Starring : Sean Bean,Maria Bello,Richard Elfyn,Maurice Roëves,Abigail Stone,Sophie Stuckey
With a marquee that features the names Sean Bean (The Lord of the Rings) and
Maria Bello (A History of Violence), plus the current infatuation with
supernatural horror, you'd think a film like The Dark would merit a better fate
than heading straight to DVD.
Well, someone at the studio must have actually watched it when they were making
the decision. The Dark is a confusing and derivative mess of a film, though its
strong start and solid performances would have you believe otherwise.
The story begins with Adèle (Bello) and daughter Sarah (Sophie Stuckey) on a
road in Wales. The car gets stuck, Adèle falls asleep and dreams that Sarah has
vanished, and when she suddenly awakes, sheep are menacingly standing around
the car! Yes, sheep. Eventually we find out that the duo is visiting Adèle's
estranged husband James (Bean), and soon enough Sarah has vanished for real.
Adèle decides that the local legend of a girl named Ebrill (Abigail Stone) that
vanished to a place between life and death must be true. And so she decides to
try to go there to find Ebrill, who she's certain is holding Sarah there with
her.
The mood, the characters, and the plot are all extremely reminiscent of The
Ring, which is probably what sunk the film more than its completely
incomprehensible second half. Otherwise sane individuals go nuts at the drop of
a hat. Rationality flies out the window as director John Fawcett goes for cheap
thrills and chills instead of anything resembling coherence. Ultimately I lost
interest altogether during Adèle's supernatural spiral.
Based (loosely, it seems) on a book called Sheep (ahem).
The DVD includes an alternate semi-happy ending.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





