Movie Reviews
| TOP STORIES |  | |  | | | RETRO |  | |  | | | BEAT THE CRUNCH |  | | | OUR YOUNG STARS |  | |
|
|
|
Shutter (15)
Dir: Masayuki Ochiai
With: Joshua Jackson, Rachael Taylor
Reduce, reuse, recycle. Hollywood has always been a green kind of town when it comes to foreign films, believing there's no such thing as a good idea that can't be stripped of its subtitles and repackaged for domestic consumption. Shutter, a remake of the 2004 horror from Thailand, shows what a futile exercise it can often be.
Joshua Jackson (Dawson's Creek) and Rachael Taylor (Transformers) play handsome newlyweds Ben and Jane. As the opening scenes make clear with all the subtlety of a flash gun in the face, he's a photographer. Just in case you don't make the connection between this, the title, and the theme of the movie, director Masayuki Ochiai presents some shots like photos.
Ben and Jane quit their flat in New York for a loft in Tokyo, where a fab new job awaits him. After an incident on the way, ghostly images begin to appear in the couple's snaps. These "spirit photographs", explains a local, are a way for unquiet souls to make their presence felt. Try that one next time you ruin the Christmas photos.
The original Shutter was built around the same dodgy premise, but it also had the kind of exotic, otherworldly air that makes the task of swallowing complete guff so much easier. Here, Ben and Jane seem like a pair of daft tourists having a bad holiday. They jump out of their skins on cue and look suitably disturbed as events unfold, but they never seem convincing. Nor does the ghost, who has hot-footed it from whatever department in central casting previously staffed The Grudge and its imitators. If you've seen the original, the 2008 version is pointless and dull. If you haven't it's simply dull.
12:42am Thursday 15th May 2008
Print 
Email this
Comment
What are these links for?
If you liked this article and would like to share it with others on the web who might be searching for good content we've made it easy for you to do it.
At the bottom of all articles, you'll see links to six sites. These sites - commonly called 'social bookmark' or 'social news' sites - have large communities of web users who share and rate interesting, useful and fun things on the web.
Clicking the links will automatically add the address of the story you are reading to one of these sites, letting you share it with others. Each site will ask you to register to share stories. Registration is free and once a member, you can store, recommend and search for stories that interest you.
More on Digg
More on del.icio.us
More on Furl
More on reddit
More on NowPublic/
More on Yahoo!