So, 1996's The Frighteners, Peter Jackson's strange, hodge-podge mess of a horror-comedy, remains a film about which I cannot be objective. I know it's tonally all over the shop. The then-cutting edge CGI looks hopelessly dated and just real enough to be completely distracting. It's incapable of pulling off the scares it attempts.
Yet, for a film that found itself in possession of a decent-sized budget ($26m), its filled with idiosyncrasies and an inherent strangeness which gives it an endearingly scrappy and edge-frayed feel. It flopped upon initial release but has since gained a cult following, particularly after Lord of the Rings drew new eyes to Jackson's earlier films.
I can't help it. I love The Frighteners. I love it despite and maybe slightly because of its flaws and the strange tangents it adopts. It strives for the Tales from the Crypt fusion of horror and slapstick comedy, but then never really balances itself between the two. Instead, it feels as though Loony Toons spawned a love child with House on Haunted Hill.
Casting Fox goes a long way in mitigating Frank Bannister's innate sleaziness. He has good comedic timing and charisma to spare, so we're willing to have some affection for him even when he's doing pretty despicable things. When Lucy Lynskey (Trini Alvarado), who initially uses Bannister to channel her recently deceased husband, begins to develop some semblance of feeling for him, it's almost believable, because who wouldn't develop feelings for Michael J. Fox? The film eventually becomes about Bannister's redemption from douchebag to good guy, and it helps that Fox's considerable appeal make the douchebag portion of the film a bit more tolerable.
Dammers thinks Bannister is psychically killing all of the recent heart attack victims. The true culprit is eventually revealed to be the ghost of a serial killer played with uninhibited nuttiness by Jake Busey and the mortal girlfriend (Dee Wallace Stone) who still pines for him.
Honestly, the plot's a mess. The movie plays with so many different narrative strands that it ends looking like a collection of cables gnarled and tangled in someone's junk drawer. It's a good 30-40 minutes in before you realize it's actually about the heart attacks happening around Michael J. Fox and his flim-flam ghostbusting.
Here's What Else We've Watched So Far:And yet, I have massive goodwill towards this quirky little studio oddity. It just has too much in its favor to disregard, whether the dark yet juvenile sense of humor, the CGI that had to have felt downright revelatory at the time, or the totally committed performances from all involved. It's nowhere in the vicinity of a perfect film, but it's completely worth watching. Speaking of which...