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Three years ago there was The
Gift and What Lies
Beneath. Now there is Gothika, the latest in a horror subgenre that
features wet female ghosts popping out of the scenery and goosing screams out of the
protagonist and the audience. Invariably the main character is a beautiful and talented
woman dismissed as unstable by the authority figures around her. Invariably Something
Awful has happened, resulting in the Wet Female Ghost bedeviling the heroine. Invariably
there is a Perfidious Male Who Knows All About It secreted somewhere in the cast. The plot
is driven by the heroine figuring out the identity of the Perfidious Male, the nature of
the Awful Something, and its connection to the Wet Female Ghost.
In this case, the main character is Miranda Grey, a beautiful criminal
psychologist who works with her husband in the psychiatric ward at Woodward Penitentiary
for Women, a place that, with its turrets, tiles, flickering lights, and art-deco windows
practically qualifies as the film's title character. After a weird encounter with a
drenched, badly beaten teenage girl on a lonely road, Miranda wakes up three days later to
find herself an inmate of Woodward, accused of chopping her loving husband into Lincoln
Logs.
With little memory of the past three days beyond terrifying flashbacks
of blood and mayhem, she must struggle to piece together what really happened while
contending not only with skeptical former colleagues but the phantom of the teenage girl,
who is still wet and seems pretty angry about it. Fortunately, Miranda is not only
good-looking and (the other characters keep insisting) smart, but she's also made out of
an especially durable form of rubber so that she loses neither her good looks nor her
mobility even after being repeatedly hurled against a concrete wall by malevolent
spiritual forces.
Halle Berry (Monster's
Ball, X-Men) is Miranda
Grey, Charles S. Dutton her doomed husband, John Carroll Lynch (Restaurant) her husband's best friend, and
Penelope Cruz (Woman on Top,
Blow) is a fellow inmate. Robert
Downey Jr.(The Singing Detective)
plays a psychologist who goes from being Miranda's co-worker to her doctor and is given
very little to do other than look alternately concerned and exasperated. Director Mathieu
Kassovitz (Amelie) and
screenwriter Sebastian Gutierrez both know how to make an audience jump and scream, but
they also ascribe to the mistaken notion that horror requires no real verisimilitude
beyond special effects. The logical holes in the script are so obvious they become
distracting.
There are some tense, truly disturbing moments, as when Miranda
revisits the house where she allegedly murdered her husband, but there are no real
surprises in this film. It follows the conventions of mainstream American horror with
paint-by-the-numbers efficiency, down to the inevitable one-on-one interview between the
heroine and the about-to-be-unmasked villain. In the end, everything is as the audience
knows it will be, with order restored, justice done, and the horror defanged. Those who
like their chills diluted may enjoy it, but anyone who prefers their horror straight up is
likely to find the film a disappointment.
- Pamela Troy