Gothic backdrop
Gothic poster

GOTHIC

1987 GB HMDB
febrero 27, 1987

La historia de la terrorífica velada entre Lord Byron, Percy Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft y el Dr. Polidori, que, aislados a orillas del lago Ginebra, se propusieron sufrir el miedo en carne propia. Ese fin de semana nacieron las inspiraciones para las novelas "Frankenstein" y "The Vampire".

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Equipo

Produccion: Al Clark (Executive Producer)Robert Devereux (Executive Producer)Penny Corke (Producer)Robert Fox (Producer)
Guion: Stephen Volk (Screenplay)Lord Byron (Story)Percy Bysshe Shelley (Story)
Musica: Thomas Dolby (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Mike Southon (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
Estamos en el siglo XIX, dos poetas excéntricos, uno de los cuales es Lord Byron, deciden hacer una sesión de espiritismo con sus respectivas amantes; el resultado son extrañas apariciones de serpientes, ratones, sanguijuelas, fantasmas y cadáveres. Pasada la noche todo parece volver a la normalidad, pero un destino trágico se cierne sobre ellos... El excéntrico Ken Russell dirige, como de costumbre, una película barroca y "excesiva", que sin embargo no resulta tan exitosa como su anterior "I Diavoli". El reparto es discreto (en el que encontramos a Gabriel Byrne y Julian Sands), original el tema, pero malas la guionización y, sobre todo, los diálogos. Se podría definir como la "película clásica de terror" con todas las componentes del caso: sesión de espiritismo, apariciones, cadáveres pero, desgraciadamente, con muy pocos "sustos". Despreciable.
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Wuchak

Wuchak

4 /10

Looks great, sounds good, but a load of dull, pretentious, perverse dreck

The writer of Frankenstein (Natasha Richardson), her beau (Julian Sands) and half-sister (Myriam Cyr) visit the mad, bad recluse Lord Byron (Gabriel Byrne) at his lavish estate on Lake Geneva in Switzerland. There they meet Byron’s equally bizarre physician friend (Timothy Spall) and spend the stormy night of June 16, 1816, in hallucinatory revelry, including a challenge to write a spooky story, which gave birth to Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” and John William Polidori’s “The Vampyre,” the first published modern vampire story.

The premise of “Gothic” (1986) is great, the first act is interesting and the short epilogue is effective. Unfortunately, the hour in between is meandering, hedonistic, perverse, outrageously overdone and utterly tedious. I can handle the unsavory elements (and expected them) as long as the story is compelling, but that’s not the case. It’s basically a string of coked-up theatrics and perversions in an attractively gothic setting.

Speaking of attractive, one of the few consolations is the jaw-dropping Natasha Richardson in her prime. She was Liam Neeson’s wife from 1994 until her death in 2009 from a skiing accident.

If you want to see a gothic flick set in the 1800s that’s actually decent, check out “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (1992). For a movie that treads similar terrain that’s really good and in some ways great see “Marie Antoinette” (2006). “Gothic” is trash by comparison and fittingly bombed at the box office. Sometimes director Ken Russell’s unique projects work, like “Altered States” (1980), but not this.

The film runs 1 hour, 27 minutes, and was shot at Gaddesden Place & Wrotham Park in Herfordshire, England. Thomas Dolby wrote the score, his first and last.

GRADE: C-/D+

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB