Event Horizon
This dark, eerie, genuinely creepy outer-space thriller is hardly original, yet
director Paul Anderson manages to blend the archetypal elements of horror and
science fiction into a stomach-fluttering experience that maintains its
suspenseful edge from the opening thump to the final ka-bang.
It's set credibly in the near future, with Sam Neill starring as the creator
of the Event Horizon, a spaceship equipped with a gravity drive designed
for interdimensional travel. The ship has been absent for seven years, so when
it resurfaces, Neill requisitions Laurence Fishburne's deep-space
search-and-rescue unit to aid him in his Ahab-esque quest. At the far recess of
the solar system, they encounter the Event Horizon, crewless and
dormant. But something unfathomable has returned with it. First apparitions
appear and rattle the team's sanity -- imagine The Exorcist or The
Shining remade on the set of Alien. Then, after more inexplicable
goings on, the carnage begins. The why and what of the destructive force is
never quite explained, which is annoying, but this film is really about mood,
set design, and crisp editing, all of which Anderson achieves with a master
hand. Nothing too inspirational here, just plenty of well-orchestrated frights.
At the Harbour Mall, Showcase, Starcase, Tri-Boro, and Woonsocket
cinemas.
-- Tom Meek
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