The Grudge Movie Review
The Grudge Review
"The Grudge" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Takashi ShimizuProducer : Joseph Drake,Nathan Kahane,Carsten Lorenz,Sam Raimi
Screenwiter : Takashi Shimizu,Stephen Susco
Starring : Sarah Michelle Gellar,Jason Behr,Clea DuVall,William Mapother,KaDee Strickland,Bill Pullman,Ted Raimi
Sarah Michelle Gellar and the supernatural go together like peas and carrots,
to borrow a phrase from our friend Forrest Gump. The starlet’s signature role
had her slaying vampires as Buffy Summers. We all know what Gellar Did Last
Summer, but did you recall she also enjoyed a bit part in Wes Craven’s Scream 2
and appeared in both Scooby-Doo movies?
By this roundabout logic, Gellar seems a natural fit for The Grudge, Takashi
Shimizu’s sufficiently creepy remake of his own cult Japanese horror flick
Ju-on, a film he’s made versions of a shocking five times now. Americanized and
aimed squarely at the people who turned The Ring into a surprise hit, Grudge
should satisfy audiences seeking a few cheap jolts for their dollar this
Halloween season.
Few actresses can furrow a brow or bug their eyes better than Gellar, who gets
ample opportunity to do both as Karen, an exchange student living the
post-collegiate lifestyle with her grungy boy toy (Jason Behr). Karen passes
time between class working for a Tokyo-based hospital care center. Her first
official case finds her knocking on the door of a home possessed by the angry
spirit of a husband who died while harboring a grudge. Rumor has it – or so we’
re told – that when a person passes away before they can properly expel their
rage, a curse can form that victimizes anyone lucky enough to come in contact
with it. Sounds hokey, but it works in context, and that’s all we can ask.
Getting the original director to helm a remake doesn’t always work – check out
George Sluizer’s conflicting versions of The Vanishing to prove that point. Yet
Shimizu combines better elements from several of his Ju-on installments (there
are two plot points worth mentioning) to make a decent hodgepodge of ideas
here. One involves a teacher (Bill Pullman) who learns of an unfortunate crush.
The other centers around that creepy Japanese boy from this film’s trailer,
who’s absolutely terrifying no matter how many times we see him open his mouth
wider than the Grand Canyon and screech like a banshee.
Predictable things make us jump in Grudge. We see a tub full of water or an
attic filled with cobwebs, and we know scares are coming, but Shimizu startles
us all the same. Though the acting is routinely bland – Gellar is particularly
deadpan in a role that begged for more – the decent effects serve the story.
Grudge even tells its haunted house story in reverse, which keeps us engaged
when things start moving too slow. Shimizu’s deliberate pacing is off for a
97-minute movie. But there’s more than enough mood to drip down and fill the
gaps created by the film’s non-linear storytelling method. It ain’t Buffy, but
it will have to do.
The DVD includes a commentary by the Raimi brothers, Gellar, and others, plus
an exhaustive making-of documentary and a curious featurette on the "medical
explanation of fear response in film." Interesting.
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Review by Sean O'Connell
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