| This isn't from movie | 
Dark Shadows - loved it in a Royal Tenenbaums Go Gothic sort of way. Be 
warned though, it is a summary of about 1000 episodes of daytime tv soap opera so subplots appear and disappear as mysteriously as the 
characters.
Example : the completely peripheral psychiatrist character and her hypnotism? In the tv series that was the plot device that warped the story into long flashbacks to earlier centuries.
Consensus among us was that this new semi-comic film version was the best Tim Burton film since Sleepy Hollow.
Example : the completely peripheral psychiatrist character and her hypnotism? In the tv series that was the plot device that warped the story into long flashbacks to earlier centuries.
Consensus among us was that this new semi-comic film version was the best Tim Burton film since Sleepy Hollow.
Just 
for once Depp gets a cast that it right up there with him, in fact Eva 
Green almost spirits the movie away on her own. 
From the trailers Depp 
seemed to be following up his fascination for the Fast Show by doing 
Barnabas Collins as Rowley Birkin, but thankfully for most of the movie 
he keeps it relatively straight.  
It opens with the best use of Moody Blues' "Nights in White Satin" I can ever remember (and best use of an existing track in a movie since King Crimson's "Court of the Crimson King" in Children of Men), over a sweeping 
credits sequence that introduces us  to Collingwood and is worth the price 
of admission alone. The well chosen score swoops in an out of an achingly beautiful movie with early 70s soulless sheen (see 
also The Ice Storm, Zodiac), making Burton's previous effort, Alice in 
Wonderland, seem even even more of a pointless computer generated cartoon. 
The sartorial
 comment to vampire Barnabas Collins, "That wierd swinging London thing 
isn't working", got a big laugh in our cinema on Baker Street. Must say the Everyman cinema is a great little place and the beer does flow well (I'm still sobering up)
Some pub ranting after the movie compared Dark Shadows to The Adams Family and the Munsters. Dark Shadows was originally of course supposed to be serious. And as it comes later into the cynical 60s and 70s features a far less nuclear, more fractured family. Again Ang Lee's Ice Storm comes to mind.
Some pub ranting after the movie compared Dark Shadows to The Adams Family and the Munsters. Dark Shadows was originally of course supposed to be serious. And as it comes later into the cynical 60s and 70s features a far less nuclear, more fractured family. Again Ang Lee's Ice Storm comes to mind.
It perhaps works best as a pilot for another Dark Shadows tv reboot, though
 with the new Munsters, Mockingbird Lane,  on the way (with Eddie Izzard as granpa) that 
seems unlikely in the short term.
Dark Shadows the original tv series was never shown in UK, the nearest we got to characters in Dark Shadows was trying to 
suck some kind of second hand menace from David Selby's villian in Falcon Crest. I imagine we never saw it because the cheap fantasy thriller
 slot in the UK was filled by Dr Who, which had already mutated from 
childrens scifi show into weekly Quatermass-lite.
With no Dr Who would Hammer studios have been tempted to create 
their own version of Dark Shadows for domestic UK tv market? What would 
that have been like? 
Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde meets Acorn Antiques most
 likely;
<Miss Babbs, totally naked, explores her body in a full length mirror. Mrs Overall enters>
Oh Miss Babbs, your very mysterious twin brother was in very late last night
Oh Miss Babbs, your very mysterious twin brother was in very late last night
Yesss.. Mrs Overall...I notice you've gone all hairy again
Yes Miss.. it's that time of the month I've afraid.. would you like a macaroon?



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