The Hangman's Curse Movie Review
The Hangman's Curse Review
"The Hangman's Curse" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Rafal ZielinskiProducer : Rich Cowan,Joe Goodman,Bobby Neutz,Ralph Winter
Screenwiter : Kathy Mackel,Stan Foster
Starring : David Keith,Mel Harris,Leighton Meester,Douglas Smith,Bobby Brewer,Daniel Farber,Edwin Hodge,Andrea Morris,William R. Moses,Frank Peretti,Jake Richardson
According to The Hangman’s Curse, there are select citizens secretly
commissioned by the government to investigate strange mysteries, crimes, and
unusual occurrences across America. Working undercover, these people are known
as The Veritas Project (Veritas is Latin for truth).
The Hangman’s Curse, which is based on a novel by Frank Peretti, opens as Abel
Frye—a troubled student in small town Washington state—hangs himself in the
dark corridors of Rogers High School. Apparently Abel’s peers teased him to the
point where he didn’t want to live any longer.
The film cuts to ten years later. It’s a beautiful, sunny day. A football game
rages on Rogers High School athletic field. Fans watch from the stands.
Suddenly, a player becomes violently ill, sees a ghost, and then dies. Now, at
most high schools this would be unusual—but not at Rogers High. This kind of
thing happens all the time. In fact, it’s becoming so frequent, the government
decides to call upon the Springfields, a family that is part of The Veritas
Project.
The Springfields work together to get to the bottom of the mysteries at Rogers
High School. Sarah (Mel Harris), the mother, investigates the scientific side
of the calamities; Nate (David Keith), the father, poses as the school
custodian; and their teenager children, twins Elisha and Elijah (Leighton
Meester and Douglas Smith), merge their way into the social groups of the
school. With the help of an eccentric professor (horrendously played by author
Frank Peretti), they undercover suspicious geeks, callused coaches, evil
witchcraft, legendary ghosts, ghastly graffiti, and a few $50 bills that are
laced with a crystalline substance, all which appear to be connected to Abel
Frye’s death ten years earlier.
Unless you suspend all rationality, The Hangman’s Curse makes little sense. In
the logical world, after a series of suspicious deaths, any high school would
be shuttered until authorities said it was safe for the students to return.
Yet, the folks at Rogers High don’t cancel a single day of class, despite the
fact that students are dropping dead left and right. And, after ten years,
wouldn’t someone have removed the rope that Abel used to kill himself? Since
the rope is still hanging from the high school ceiling—I guess not. And does
anyone else find it odd that the walls in Rogers High School contain miles of
pipelines large enough for a full sized teenager to crawl through?
Although it’s intellectually stupid, The Hangman’s Curse does have more wisdom
than most teen thrillers. The film has a certain respect for its characters;
they are not mindless puppets of the plot, and seem to have an understanding of
how friendship is different than love, love is different than sex, and
relationships and friendships are developed through a process. Most teen films
don’t even bother to develop characters, let alone relationships. These
characters feel like genuine people. I actually wanted to get to know them—now
there’s a novelty.
Furthermore, The Hangman’s Curse gets kudos for taking the ultimate risk: it
allows its characters to demonstrate Christian values. But this isn’t another
fanatical Left Behind franchise. The film might exemplify Christian values, but
it isn’t evangelical. It has enough Christian flavor to make a point, but it
never becomes a sermon or a homily. Religion isn’t the subject of the film, and
director Rafal Zielinski (Fun, Screwballs) doesn’t allow it to overwhelm the
movie.
But the refreshing, family-friendly values do have a downside: They seem to
prevent the film from getting itself dirty and taking risks. The movie thinks
its audience is primarily Christian; therefore, it wants to stay inside a
“comfort zone” and avoid violence, bloodshed, and scariness. Now, I suppose
that’s good if you’re making a family film, but this is supposed to be a horror
movie. Because it never leaves its comfort zone, The Hangman’s Curse is about
as scary as watching Cookie Monster stroll down Sesame Street. There are a few
decent surprises at the end, but even those are more interesting than they are
frightening.
With its sweet, earnest quality, I really wanted to like The Hangman’s Curse—
but it’s sweet and earnest when it should be scary and suspenseful. For a
Christian horror film to work, it needs to find a happy medium in exemplifying
Christian values while still offering thrills and chills. The Hangman’s Curse
doesn’t have the balls to do that. But it is a noble effort. It’s the first
film adaptation of Frank Peretti’s work, and I hope it is not the last.
The DVD features two bonus featurettes including “Frank Peretti: From Page to
Screen” that interviews Peretti and the filmmakers about the making of the
movie, and “The Spider Wrangler: The Spiders of the Hangman’s Curse” that
showcases a behind-the-scenes look at the unique use of spiders in the film.
Reviewer: Blake French





