How 'The Woman In Black' Reminded Me of 'Stepford Wives'

How 'The Woman In Black' Reminded Me of 'Stepford Wives'

Published: February 09, 2012 @ 1:40 pm
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By Carole Mallory

Is death ever kind?

Oh, I'm not speaking of mercy killing. I mean are there benevolent ghosts who do unto others as they would have others do onto them? Does a ghost always view death as deadly or is it kinder on the other side?

"The Woman in Black" is based on Susan Hill's haunting novel from a screenplay by Jane Goldman. It is the story of a tormented ghost and all of those who see her and her suffering. Whenever someone sees "The Woman in Black," something horrible happens to this person or this person's family.

Will this lawyer Arthur Kipps( Daniel Radcliffe) survive his visit to the foreboding estate of the recently deceased Alice Drablow? While Arthur Kipps (Radcliffe) has never looked more handsome and dapper and has made the leap to leading man with grace sans Harry Potter's wand, one wonders what on earth would possess him to enter this haunted home.

Home? It is a castle on an island surrounded by water on all sides and one can only enter when the tide it right. It reminded me of Mont Saint Michel in France though the movie was filmed in Sweden and the U.K.

Well, no one in his right mind would have the courage to go to this frightening place to do legal work. I'd change professions sooner than walk up its staircase. But Daniel Radcliffe is such a handsome and well-dressed star that nothing could ever happen to him or to his family. After all, he has left his little boy in the city and will meet him in three days -- after he completes his legal paper work dealing with the deceased Drablow's estate.

James Watkins' direction builds suspense steadily though there were a few moments where it lagged. There are a few too many shots of the "Woman in Black" peering out of windows and a few too many shots of a corridor to indicate terror, but the cinematography of Tim Maurice-Jones as well as the sets and the lighting are spectacular.

The highlight of the film is the talented Janet McTeer as Mrs. Dailey who is married to Clarian Danes (Sam Dailey). They have lost their child due to the Gothic spell of "The Woman in Black" and Mrs. Dailey has been mentally unstable ever since.

This scene reminded me of when I played a Stepford wife and had been murdered by the men of Stepford. I could not allow the audience to know I was dead because this would give away the plot. I had to act normal while allowing the dialogue to indicate my robot -like state. I had to recite absurd dialogue with an honest intention.

In one scene, Katherine Ross and Paula Prentiss -- who are not dead-yet -- come to my kitchen to ask me to join the Woman's Consciousness Raising Group of the Community of Stepford. I say, "I'm too busy with cooking and all. I know I shouldn't say this, but I just love my brownies."

My dialogue gives a clue to the audience that I am not normal.

Tags: Daniel Radcliffe, Janet McTeer, Movies, The Stepford Wives, The Woman in Black
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Carole Mallory is an actress, journalist, professor, film critic. Her film credits include “Stepford Wives” and “Looking for Mr. Goodbar.” As a supermodel she graced the covers of Cosmopolitan, New York, Newsweek. Besides her novel “Flash,” Mallory has written a memoir of her time with Norman Mailer, “Loving Mailer.”  After the writer's death, she sold her archive of his papers to Harvard. Her journalistic pieces on Vonnegut, Jong, Vidal, Baryshinikov, Heller have been published in Parade, Esquire, Playboy, Los Angeles Magazine, the Huffington Post. Her review of Charles Shields' biography of Kurt Vonnegut, "And So It Goes," was published in the Sunday Philadelphia Inquirer. She is teaching memoir at Cheltenham Adult School and Widener University and blogs at malloryhollywoodeast@blogspot.com.

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