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The Skeleton Key

 
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The Skeleton Key

  • Director: Iain Softley
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Gothic Film, Supernatural Thriller
  • Themes: Woman In Jeopardy, Voodoo, Ghosts
  • Main Cast: Kate Hudson, Gena Rowlands, Peter Sarsgaard, John Hurt, Joy Bryant
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 104 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

A young woman discovers a terrible secret while caring for an elderly man in this supernatural thriller. Caroline (Kate Hudson) is a care provider for the aged who is hired away from the hospice where she works by Violet Devereaux (Gena Rowlands). Violet needs someone to help take care of her husband, Ben (John Hurt), who is in poor health and doesn't have long to live. Violet and Ben live in a decaying rattletrap mansion not far from New Orleans, and as she settles into her work, Caroline spends her spare time exploring the house. It isn't long before Caroline discovers evidence that suggests Ben and Violet are members of a sinister voodoo cult, and that ghosts walk in the Devereaux mansion. The Skeleton Key also stars Peter Sarsgaard and Joy Bryant. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

For an hour, Iain Softley's The Skeleton Key gives off the buzz of a genre film pulled off with great craft. The spooky Southern gothic setting oozes menace, and the art direction of the spooky house itself seems appropriately sparse, until one realizes how detailed the little details are. The actors all understand what is required of them, and Softley gives them just enough room to find the right pitch for the performances. Gena Rowlands and Peter Sarsgaard walk the line of overacting without ever crossing it, and many of their moments offer the simple pleasure of watching very gifted performers enjoying themselves. Sadly the screenplay is unable to match their level of skill. Ehren Kruger's "twist" ending should be easy for any regular moviegoer to figure out, but that would be easy to excuse if there were any thematic weight to the film. Sadly, there is nothing for the viewer to take from the film other than the most surface of surface pleasures. Everything about The Skeleton Key is well-crafted, except the screenplay. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Cast

Isaach de Bankolé; Ronald McCall; Jen Apgar; Jamie Lee Redmon; Forrest Landis; Maxine Barnett - Mama Cynthia; Tom Uskali; Jeryl Prescott Sales

Credit

Drew Boughton - Art Director, Ronna Kress - Casting, Louise Frogley - Costume Designer, Gary Scott Marcus - First Assistant Director, Iain Softley - Director, Joe Hutshing - Editor, Clayton Townsend - Executive Producer, Clayton Townsend - Line Producer, Ed Shearmur - Composer (Music Score), Sara Lord - Musical Direction/Supervision, Christina Smith - Makeup, John Beard - Production Designer, Dan Mindel - Cinematographer, Michael Shamberg - Producer, Stacey Sher - Producer, Iain Softley - Producer, Daniel Bobker - Producer, Julia Levine - Set Designer, Mick Cukurs - Set Designer, Peter Devlin - Sound/Sound Designer, Ann Scibelli - Sound/Sound Designer, Harry Cohen - Sound/Sound Designer, Buddy Joe Hooker - Stunts Coordinator, Matt Sweeney - Special Effects Supervisor, Ehren Kruger - Screenwriter, Josh Bleibtreu - Second Unit Camera, Michael Trim - Second Unit Camera, Richard Malzahn - Visual Effects Supervisor, Dan Deleeuw - Visual Effects Supervisor, Wylie Stateman - Supervising Sound Editor, Perpetual Motion Pictures, Inc. - Visual Effects, Rhythm & Hues Studios - Visual Effects, Beauchamp Fontaine - Set Decorator

Similar Movies

The Serpent and the Rainbow; Angel Heart; The Gift; What Lies Beneath; The Believers; Dead and Buried; Identity; The Others; Venom; Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh; The Ritual; The Reaping
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The Skeleton Key

Promotional Poster
Directed by Iain Softley
Produced by Iain Softley
Daniel Bobker
Michael Shamberg
Stacey Sher
Written by Ehren Kruger
Starring Kate Hudson
Gena Rowlands
Peter Sarsgaard
John Hurt
Joy Bryant
Music by Ed Shearmur
Cinematography Dan Mindel
Editing by Joe Hutshing
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) UK July 29, 2005
USA August 12, 2005
Running time 104 min.
Country USA
Language English

The Skeleton Key is a 2005 psychological thriller film starring Kate Hudson, Gena Rowlands, John Hurt, Peter Sarsgaard, and Joy Bryant. The film focuses on a young hospice nurse who acquires a job at a spooky New Orleans plantation home, and becomes entangled in a mystery involving the house, its former inhabitants, and the hoodoo (folk magic) rituals and magic that took place there. The movie was released in cinemas in the United Kingdom on July 29, 2005, and in the US on August 12, 2005.

Contents

Plot

Caroline Ellis (Kate Hudson) is a New Orleans hospital aide from Hoboken, New Jersey, who, after one of her patients dies alone, quits her unsatisfying nursing job in the city. Caroline’s own father also died alone because of her life on the road with a traveling rock band, and she tries to get over this guilt by taking care of others as they die. After leaving her job at the hospital Caroline takes a position as a private hospice caregiver at an isolated plantation house deep in the bayous of southern Louisiana's eerie, enchanting Terrebonne Parish. The lady of the house, Violet Deveraux (Gena Rowlands) is a diffident, old-fashioned Southern matron in need of help for her husband Ben (played by John Hurt), a severely disabled stroke victim who is expected to die soon. At first Caroline is skeptical about taking the job as Violet is very hostile and distrustful towards her, however after some prompting from the family lawyer, Luke (played by Peter Sarsgaard) she accepts the position.

Ben, unable to speak because of his stroke, piques Caroline’s interest when he grabs her arm one night and squeezes her until it hurts, his only way of communicating. Another night Caroline wakes to find Ben crawling out his window and across the roof in an attempt to leave the house. Ben falls off the roof and continues to crawl away while Caroline comes out to save him. Caroline returns to Ben’s room to fetch his wheelchair and discovers that he had written the words "help me" in dirt on his bed sheets. Violet becomes very flustered at Ben’s attempt to leave the house and suggests they up his medicine intake.


Violet gives Caroline a skeleton key to open every room in the house, and Caroline soon finds the mansion has a dark past. Finding her way into a secret room in the attic, where Ben supposedly had his stroke, Caroline discovers dolls, a book of spells, potion jars, and other instruments of magic. Violet tells Caroline that the room belonged to two black servants who had worked at the house in the 1920s. Mama Cecile (Jeryl Prescott) and her husband, Papa Justify (Ron McCall) were, in their day, renowned practitioners of hoodoo, a form of Afro-Caribbean folk magic. But to their white employers, they were nothing more than servants, and Justify and Cecile were lynched when it was discovered that they were performing spells with the children of the house owners. Caroline dismisses Violet's fear of Justify and Cecile's ghosts dwelling in the house as superstition, but more strange events occur, piquing her curiosity about the obscure (to her) swamp religions and their relationship to the physical condition of Ben, whom she has become determined to save and restore to health.


Caroline, intrigued by the idea that Ben is sick because of his belief in magic, goes to a witch doctor’s store to buy magical instruments to attempt to heal him. The witch doctor working there tells Caroline that Hoodoo is an individually based magic that only works if the practitioner believes in it. This reinforces Caroline’s belief that Ben is sick because he believes that the magic has made him sick. While Caroline doesn’t necessarily believe in this healing process she thinks that the psychosomatic process might allow Ben to get over his ailment. Later that night, Caroline conducts the ritual but the ‘healing’ process doesn’t fully work. However, Ben does voice the words ‘help me’ and when Caroline asks Ben who he is afraid of he points to Violet. This causes Caroline to become even surer that Ben’s ailment is all in his head, and that Violet is somehow responsible for Ben’s magical affliction.

In order to find answers about the ever-present Hoodoo magic, which seems to be the root cause of Ben’s illness, Caroline goes to a local gas station where she earlier saw Hoodoo artifacts. An old woman at the gas station tells Caroline of one of the most powerful Hoodoo conjurations, the Conjure of Sacrifice. Earlier, while in the secret room in the attic, Caroline found a record with this title written on it, and feels as though it has something to do with Ben’s illness. The old woman tells Caroline that this spell is powerful because it keeps the caster from dying, For the spell to work you have to sacrifice someone and take the remaining years of their life. After hearing this Caroline senses that Ben is in danger and she rushes back to the house to try and get him away from Violet.


After unsuccessfully trying to save Ben and take him out of Violet’s reach Caroline seeks the help of the young lawyer Luke. Luke was with Caroline when she learned of the Conjure of Sacrifice and he is aware of Caroline’s suspicion of Violet. While in Luke's house, Caroline discovers clues leading to the revelation that Luke is actually assisting Violet. Just as Caroline is about to act, Luke captures her, ties her up and gags her to take her back to the manor.

Caroline is held captive, but manages to get free and "rig" (roughly, enchant) the house with brick dust, which is said to keep away those who mean one harm. This brick dust enchantment succeeds in keeping Luke away but Violet gets to Caroline and blows a potion in her eyes that distorts her vision. After a brief struggle Caroline manages to push Violet down the stair and break her legs. With Luke and Violet now downstairs Caroline flees to the attic to find that the room has been set up for some kind of ritual. Following a piece of paper she snatched from Violet earlier, Caroline forms a protective circle around herself. Unfortunately the protective spell was a trick intended to capture Caroline instead of protect her. Violet comes into the ritual room, and explains that "they" have been waiting for her to believe in the magic of Hoodoo. Caroline realizes that it was in fact herself who was in danger and not Ben. Caroline tries to deny the fact that she now knows Hoodoo, but cannot convince herself, because over the course of her stay in the manor, and her involvement with Ben, she has come to believe in it.


Violet pushes a mirror at Caroline, which contains the image, initially of the little girl, then of Violet and ultimately of Mama Cecile. The mirror smashes into Caroline, knocking her unconscious. Caroline then wakes up and walks over to Violet, who is barely awake. She takes Violet's cigarettes, and begins to smoke, while she utters the words "Thank you, child," revealing to the audience that the soul of Mama Cecile is now inside Caroline's body. The mirror acted as a portal, and transferred Mama Cecile's soul into Caroline's body, while placing Caroline's soul in Violet's body. Luke walks in, and it is revealed that he too is not who he claims to be. His body is possessed by the soul of Papa Justify. Ben, who was previously the host to Papa Justify's soul, is revealed to be the real Luke.


Mama Cecile (in Caroline's body) gives Caroline (in Violet's body) a liquid (the same liquid that Ben was given as a ‘remedy’), which causes a pseudo stroke. This prevents her from talking, so that she can't reveal the presences of Mama Cecile and Papa Justify. The film ends with "stroke" victims Violet and Ben in an ambulance looking at each other and Caroline realizing she and Luke are trapped in Violet and Ben's bodies.

The final chapter is that "Ben" and "Violet" left the house to "Caroline", thus leaving Mama Cecile and Papa Justify to continue occupying the house. It can be inferred that in the 1920s, the pair used hoodoo to transfer their souls to Martin and Grace, the children of the home's owner, leaving the real children to die in the lynched bodies of Justify and Cecile. In 1962, the pair once again transfer their souls from the aging bodies of the children to Ben and Violet, a couple looking to buy the home. Once Ben and Violet's bodies became old, they performed their ritual once more on Luke and Caroline. Thus, Mama Cecile and Papa Justify have occupied the house in various forms since the 1920s.

Cast

Actor Character
Kate Hudson Caroline Ellis
Gena Rowlands Violet Devereaux
John Hurt Benjamin Devereaux
Peter Sarsgaard Luke Marshall
Joy Bryant Jill Dupuy

Setting

The movie was filmed at the historic Felicity Plantation, actually located on the Mississippi River in Saint James Parish, Louisiana, not the coastal, swampy Terrebonne Parish. At the end of the movie, the aerial shot of the house and its grounds was actually done with CGI technology. In that shot, the house and the grove of trees surrounding it are real, but the swamp that seems to be on the verge of engulfing the house was created by the director for the movie. Behind the house actually lie hundreds of acres of fields. In reality, the house is not really run down; it was decorated with ivy, among other things, to set the tone.[citation needed]

Reception

Reviews

The film received generally mixed reviews from critics. In the review of Rotten Tomatoes reported that 39% of critics gave positive reviews, based on 142 reviews.[1] In another review, Metacritic reported 47% with a score of 6.2, based on 32 reviews.[2] Scott Brown of Entertainment Weekly called the film "For anyone zombified by creaky thriller clichés, Skeleton is a fine little shot in the head". Manohla Dargis of The New York Times said "One of the most enjoyably inane movies of the season, this faux Southern Gothic offers an embarrassment of geek pleasures". Furthermore, critic Peter Hartlaub of San Francisco Chronicle gave a negative review of the movie and said "A well-intentioned horror film that is weighted down by stellar cast members who for the most part act as if they do not want to be there".

Box office

The film was a financial success, raised in its first weekend of $ 16,057,945, number 2 at the box office in America and grossed $ 47,907,715 worldwide grossed reached $ 47,907,715.[3]

References

External links

See also

Hoodoo (folk magic)



 
 

 

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