Phantoms backdrop
Phantoms poster

PHANTOMS

1998 • US HMDB
janvier 23, 1998

Une force obscure sévit dans la paisible ville de Snowfield. Un groupe de jeunes gens va se mettre sur son chemin.

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Equipe

Production: Harvey Weinstein (Executive Producer)Bob Weinstein (Executive Producer)Steven A. Lane (Producer)Michael Leahy (Producer)Robert Pringle (Producer)Joel Soisson (Producer)
Scenario: Dean R. Koontz (Screenplay)
Musique: David C. Williams (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Richard Clabaugh (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini •
Deux sœurs, de retour d'un voyage, rentrent dans leur pays et découvrent que tous les habitants ont disparu. Elles commencent à errer dans la ville et réalisent rapidement que leurs concitoyens n'ont pas quitté le pays mais sont tous morts : elles retrouvent certains de leurs cadavres en état de semi-décomposition ou horriblement mutilés. Peu après, elles rencontrent le shérif du comté voisin avec deux de ses hommes, venus en ville parce qu'intrigués par un appel qu'ils avaient reçu de la police locale. Le groupe commence à avoir des visions étranges et est attaqué par des créatures inconnues ; pendant ce temps, l'armée est arrivée sur place avec quelques chercheurs. Le mystère est révélé : une créature pluricentenaire connue sous le nom de "l'ancien ennemi" a décidé de sortir des entrailles de la terre pour trouver de la nourriture... Tiré d'une nouvelle de l'écrivain fantasy-horreur Dean Koontz, le film commence bien (les séquences initiales où les deux femmes errent dans la ville abandonnée sont riches en suspense) mais se perd ensuite en devenant banal, pour se terminer par une fin invraisemblable. Au casting, on note la présence de Ben Affleck. Le film est sorti en Italie au cinéma pendant un seul week-end avec peu de succès.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (3)

John Chard

John Chard

7 /10

The first thing we'd like to know is what we're dealing with, biological, chemical, or other.

Directed by Joe Chappelle and written by Dean Koontz, who adapts from his own novel, Phantoms (not the greatest title all things considered) is a considerably well put together amalgamation of horror/sci-fi/creature feature tropes. If at times it feels clichéd and formulaic, then that is ultimately a curse of the cinematic genres it lives and breaths in.

Plot basically has two sisters played by Rose McGowan and Joanna Going arriving in the town of Snowfield, Cololrado, to find most of the inhabitants dead, diseased or dismembered. A trio of coppers turn up played by Liev Schreiber (shifty malevolence), Ben Affleck (square jawed bastion of heroism) and Nicky Katt (fodder of course), and thus a fight for survival ensues as Peter O'Toole's sharp doctor character comes flying in to become the fulcrum of the story. So yep! There's something very evil and nasty at work here and the makers expand upon the reasons why with a drip-feed mixture of mad science and intelligent thematic ideas.

The effects work is more than adequate and the strong cast list perform well up to scratch (nice to see O'Toole doesn't phone it in to denigrate the story). Things are taken very seriously throughout, the makers in no way biting the hand that feeds them, while the requisite insertions of jump - shocks - twists and mayhem are handled with care and attention by the director. You may come away as I did with a hunger to dig out your copy of John Carpenter's sublime The Thing? Which in truth is never a bad "thing," but this is still sturdy stuff, a pic caked in genre cement, and crucially it doesn't waste the time invested by the genre compliant viewers. 7/10

Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

The Thing’s long lost cousin (sort of) in an isolated town in the mountains of Colorado

Two sisters (Rose McGowan & Joanna Going) visit a town in the Rockies, which is mysteriously absent of people except for a few corpses. They eventually encounter a Sheriff (Ben Affleck) and his deputies as the mystery deepens (Liev Schreiber plays one of the deputies). Peter O'Toole is on hand as an eccentric British writer who assists the group while Clifton Powell plays the commanding officer of an Army unit sent to the town.

The movie came out in 1998 and was written by heralded horror author Dean Koontz (both the screenplay and the novel). The story is basically “The Thing” (1982) set in a Rockies town with various nuances, like the addition of two females. Speaking of whom, Rose and Joanna have stunning faces, but their beauty is never really capitalized on in the film. Joanna, for instance, wears ridiculously baggy tan slacks the entire runtime.

The first half is nice & mysterious with several genuinely creepy sequences whereas the second half focuses on the incredible source of the horror and the complexities thereof. People complain about the latter portions, and I can see where they’re coming from, but I like the way the protagonists put their heads together to try to figure out and defeat the diabolical phenomenon.

The film runs 1 hour, 36 minutes and was shot in Georgetown, Colorado.

GRADE: B-

JPV852

JPV852

5 /10

I had last seen this probably back in 2000 on DVD but don't remember a damn thing about it and really only remember the line in Jay and Silent Bob Stike Back, "Affleck was the bomb in Phantoms". In any case, some of the effects were decent and cool shots here and there, but the quick editing, likely to cover the deficiencies in the effects, was annoying. Watchable I guess but had so much potential to be better. Kind of surprising nobody has tried to adapt this in a mini-series. 2.5/5

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