1922 FULL MOVIE REVIEW
1922 full movie review :-
For years, one of the most famous legends surrounding Stephen King was
about the time he sat on his writing desk in the early ‘80s, proceeded to
embark on an indefinite cocaine binge, and when he regained consciousness,
found a complete manuscript laying in front of him. Even years later, he barely
remembers writing it, he said. The book was Cujo, which, like most of King’s
works, was soon adapted into a film. That was the Golden Age of Stephen King
adaptations when landmark films such as The Shining and Carrie were produced.
And while there has never really been a lean period for King adaptations in the
decades that followed, 2017 will, in hindsight, always be seen as being the
bringer of a new Golden Age.
Such is the appeal of his stories that in one year alone, his work has
inspired the highest-grossing horror picture of all time (It), a critical and
commercial disaster (The Dark Tower), and two films that weren’t released in
theatres at all – the fantastic Gerald’s Game, and the movie we’re going to be
discussing here, 1922, both of which were released on Netflix. In
1922,” growls Thomas Jane in a voiceover that looms, like a tragic Greek
chorus, throughout the film, “a man’s pride was a man’s land.”
Wilfred
James, the tobacco-chewing, perpetually sweating character Jane plays, lives on
his sprawling property with his wife and teenage son. He is a proud man, as he
says in that voiceover, because of his land, and his son, Henry, who will
inherit it when the time comes. He works the fields in the days, and sits on
his porch in the evenings, sipping cold beers and surveying his vast kingdom.
And then, all of a sudden, his wife snatches it all away. She proposes
that the family sell their land and move to the city, an idea that Wilfred
reacts to as a demon would to the sight of Holy Water. He tells her as much,
but receives only an ultimatum in response: If Wilfred does not comply; she
would file for divorce immediately and take their son to the city with her.So
Wilfred is left with a choice, which is a key theme in the film: To give in,
and be emasculated by a woman, or to listen to that voice in his head, a voice
that reminds him that he is the man of the house.
“Every man has a
choice,” he booms. And in 1922, Wilfred James makes the wrong one: Together
with his son, whom he coerces into joining him in his foolhardy plan, he
attempts to murder his wife in cold blood — and makes a mess of it. After
slicing the wrong arteries, too feebly to leave a mark, Wilfred resorts to
hacking away at her general direction, mauling her face beyond recognition. She
dies a horrible death, and is laid to rest among hungry mice in a forgotten
well.
1922 is a
terrific example of just how powerful horror movies can be. Not only does
writer-director Zak Hilditch employ a gorgeous, psychological slow-burn
approach to the storytelling, he punctuates it with sudden bursts of visceral
horror. It’s a film that strides just as confidently through scenes of
duplicitous dialogue as it does in moments of shocking gore.
Unlike
It, which at 1,300 pages is a monumental work of horror fiction, 1922 is based
on a 117-page short story, written in the manner of a confession by a man utterly
consumed by the guilt of his actions.
By
murdering his wife, and attempting to cover it up in front of suspicious
lawyers and lawmen, Wilfred sets into a motion a chain of tragic events that
take away not just his pride, but also his sanity. And Thomas Jane is quite
terrific in the central role. He adds tiny, almost unnoticeable nuances to his
performance - frowns of confusion, sharp looks of warning - nuances that help
create a character that is both conniving and pathetic at the same time.
His
crimes haunt him, often literally, and he turns into a paranoid wreck of a man,
plagued with the sound of scurrying mice, and the smell of rotting flesh, and
the sight of his decomposed wife.Together with the lush visuals of DP Ben
Richardson, and the equally grand score by Mike Patton, Hilditch has made a
stately horror picture about broken families, jealousy, and the sins of the
father — all staple Stephen King themes.And that’s what makes King’s stories so
universally terrifying. They could be transported to any time, to any place,
and still resonate, always uncomfortably close to the truth. The ideas he toyed
with in 1922 could easily be brought to modern day India — in all its toxic
patriarchy and systemic inequality. Notions of honour, of manhood, and of a
woman’s place in this world — they’re all just as relevant to us today as
turn-of-the-century America.
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