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This month's featured film:
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SLEEPY HOLLOW
Release date: November 19, 1999
Cast:
Ichabod Crane: Johnny Depp
Katrina Van Tassel: Christina Ricci
Lady
Van Tassel: Miranda Richardson
Baltus Van Tassel: Michael Gambon
Brom
Van Brunt: Casper Van Dien
Paramount presents a film directed by Tim Burton. Written by Andrew Kevin Walker
and Kevin Yagher. Based on Washington Irving's story "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow."
Running time: 100 minutes. Rated R (for graphic horror violence and gore,
and for a scene of sexuality).
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What it's about:
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Yes, it's based on the original story by Washington Irving, about a small town in
upstate New York haunted by a phantom known as the Headless Horseman, and Ichabod
Crane's fateful encounter with the demon - but that's about as much as it retains
from the original tale.
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The Review
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times
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Tim Burton's "Sleepy Hollow" begins with a story that would not have distinguished
one of the lesser films from the Hammer horror franchise and elevates it by sheer
style and acting into something entertaining and sometimes rather elegant.
It is one thing to see a frightened lawyer being taken for a ride in a carriage
by a driver who has lost his head along the way. It is another to see the carriage
bouncing down roads that have been modeled on paintings from the Hudson River
School. This is the best-looking horror film since Coppola's "Bram Stoker's
Dracula."
It is not, however, titled "Washington Irving's Sleepy Hollow,"
perhaps because the story has been altered out of all recognition from
the Irving classic. Perhaps not. No power on earth could persuade me to reread
the original and find out. What it depends upon is Burton's gift for bizarre and
eccentric special effects, and a superb performance by Johnny Depp, who discards
everything we may ever have learned or thought about Ichabod Crane and starts
from scratch.
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Johnny Depp as Ichabod Crane in "Sleepy Hollow"
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Depp plays Crane at the "dawn of a new century, as 1799 rolls over to 1800." It is
time to discard the barbaric torture of the past, he believes, and bring the
legal system up to date with improved methods of investigation and justice. He
sees himself as a detective of the new order, and a New York judge, impatient with
his constant interruptions, banishes him to the upstate hamlet of Sleepy Hollow,
where there has been an outbreak of decapitations. Let him practice forensics
there.
As Crane journeys north, the movie casts its visual spell.
This is among other things an absolutely lovely film, with production design,
art direction and cinematography that create a distinctive place for the imagination.
Not a real place--hardly a shot looks realistic, and some look cheerfully
contrived--but a place in the mind. I loved the shot where mist extinguishes
the torches that have been lit by the night watch.
Burton's Sleepy
Hollow is a dour place, the houses leaning together for support, the shutters
slammed against newcomers. There is never a sunny day here. The faces of the village
fathers are permanently frozen into disapproval. And the body count is mounting,
while the head count stays at zero. The Horseman, it appears, not only
decapitates his victims, but takes their skulls with him. "The heads were not found
by the bodies?" exclaims Ichabod after his briefing on arrival. "The heads
were not found--at all!" says a village elder. Another snarls: "Taken! By the
Headless Horseman! Taken--back to hell!"
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We meet some of the locals. Old Baltus Van Tassel (Michael Gambon), richest of the
burghers. His comely daughter Katrina (Christina Ricci) and her shapely stepmother
Lady Van Tassel (Miranda Richardson). And other local citizens, including
one played by Jeffrey Jones, who always seems to be regarding us dubiously from
above, at an oblique angle. The magistrate (Richard Griffiths) seems to know
a good deal, at one point whispering to Crane that there are "four graves--but
five victims!"
Crane dismisses it all as a case of
superstition. He comes equipped with cases full of bizarre instruments of his
own invention, including a set of eyepieces that make him look like the optometrist
from hell. It becomes clear fairly quickly, however, that Ichabod is stronger
on theory than practice, and has not much stomach for disinterring bodies,
performing autopsies or examining wounds. One head was "cut off--and the wound
cauterized!" he exclaims, looking a little sick to his stomach. The locals explain
that the Horseman's sword was forged in the fires below.
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Above: Christina Ricci as Katrina Van Tassel in "Sleepy Hollow". Below: the town cemetery.
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Johnny Depp is an actor able to disappear into characters, never more readily than
in one of Burton's films. Together they created Edward Scissorhands and Ed Wood,
and now here is an Ichabod Crane who is all posture and carefully learned mannerism,
attitude and fastidiousness. It's as if the Horseman gallops ahead in
a traditional horror film, and Depp and Burton gallop right behind him in a satire.
There's a lot of gore (the movie deserves its R rating), but it's not mean
gore, if you know what I mean--it's gore dictated by the sad fate of the Headless
Horseman.
The ending is perhaps too traditional. We know the requirements
of the genre absolutely insist on struggle between Crane and the Horseman,
followed by an explanation for his strange rides, and harsh justice for
those who deserve it. Burton at least does not linger over these episodes, or exploit
them; he's too much in love with his moody setup to ruin the fun with final
overkill. The most astonishing thing for me about the movie wasn't the Horseman
anyway, but the fact that I actually found myself drawn into this old Classics
Illustrated material--enthralled by a time and place so well evoked that the
Horseman almost seemed natural there.
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Note: No power on earth could drag from me the identity of the unbilled actor who
plays the Horseman when he has a head. But you will agree he is the only logical
choice.
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Other Reviews:
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The Blair Witch Project (1999)
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The Sixth Sense (1999)
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Fight Club (1999)
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Click below to return to
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