Product Details
Afraid of the Dark

Afraid of the Dark
Directed by Mark Peploe

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Product Description

Academy Award-winner Mark Peploe delivers a terrifying and haunting psychological tale inw hich all of the frightening circumstances of childhood, both real and imagined, are heightened to extremes. A madman is attacking blind people in their homes, and a small boy with disintegrating eyesight begins his own secret investigation into the brutal assaults. When he finally identifies the monster responsible for the chilling crimes, he finds himself face to face with something that everybody understands... the fear of the unknown. - Starring James Fox (CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY, PERFORMANCE), Fanny Ardant (CALLAS FOREVER, 8 WOMEN), Paul McGann (TV''s "Horatio Hornblower" and "Doctor Who"), David Thewlis (NAKED, HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN), Catriona MacColl (THE BEYOND, CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD) - "Chilling!" -Janet Maslin, New York Times - "One of the nastiest little psychothrillers around." -Mirabella - "Genuine terror... Gripping!" -John Anderson, Newsday


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #68832 in DVD
  • Brand: Image Entertainment
  • Released on: 2005-10-25
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.66:1
  • Formats: Color, Dolby, DVD, Full Screen, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 91 minutes

Customer Reviews

unusual, interesting, dreamlike terror....4
I enjoy watching a good thriller and decided on this video. Pay attention as there are alot of twists and turns to this very strange little tale of a young British boy and his adventures in the world of grown-ups and what you think is real is often not the case. Mystery and Psychological suspense to say the least! They don't make movies like this anymore.

Mark Peploe's Afraid of the Dark5
Mark Peploe, one of the Oscar winning screenwriters behind "The Last Emperor," comes up with his own tale of a little boy overwhelmed by his situation, and in the process scares the living daylights out of the viewer.

Ben Keyworth is young Lucas, a morose little boy whose blind mother Miriam (Fanny Ardant) dotes on him. His father, Frank (James Fox), is a cop and Lucas' hero. A madman is running around London slashing the faces of blind women, and the blind community is in a panic. Lucas is a little boy, hardly noticeable, and begins observing prime suspects. The ice cream man, the window washer, the photographer, even the overly helpful locksmith (played by a young David Thewlis), are all under the boy's suspicion. A neighborhood golden retriever is Lucas' only friend and confidant, and eventually Lucas has a showdown with the slasher, stabbing him in the eye with his trusty knitting needle...and then the film does a complete 180!

We find out Lucas was only imagining the first half of the film. The characters from the first half were not blind at all. Instead, it was Lucas who is slowly losing his sight. The day of his older half-sister's wedding, he is shunted aside. His mother goes into labor at the reception, and everyone forgets the poor little boy. Lucas still has the trusty dog Toby along, but his imagination gets the best of him. Toby is killed, and Lucas sets his next target as his new baby sister with the pretty blue eyes everyone comments on.

Ben Keyworth, as Lucas, is incredible. Some might see his delivery as flat and monotonal, but I thought his cold exterior was perfect. You will feel sorry for him, even in the throes of the madness that grips him in the latter part of the film. The beautiful French actress Fanny Ardant is great as his mother, and James Fox is always reliable as the dad.

Peploe's direction is so creepy it becomes uncomfortable often. The graveyard scenes are chilling, as is Lucas' hallucinations. Peploe also co-wrote the screenplay (with Frederick Seidel), so he knows these characters better than anyone. None of them are stupid, or do horror film-stupid things, and this adds to the squirm level. Plus, if you have any sort of phobia about things getting too close to your eyes (like I do), this may not be for you.

The pace is slow, as Peploe builds his characters, and this is actually a relief. The entire cast is good, and Peploe should direct more. All in all, "Afraid of the Dark" is one of those films that you will find bothering you days after you see it. I highly recommend it.

This is rated (R) for physical violence, gore, female nudity, some sexual references, and strong adult situations.

hair-raising5
Every so often a movie comes around that is different that the usual sludge that passes through our VCRs. More often than not, these films are foriegn. "Afraid of the Dark" is no exception... it is a mystery from the word "Go" and does an excellent job at showing how a child's mind can be traumatized by the vicious acts of a local serial killer who targets blind women (a particularly frightening scene is when the boy, Luke, stabs the offender in the eye).

This movie has all the eye-candy eeriness of movies like "The Shining", "The Omen", "The night of the living dead" and others, but it contains not one iota of anything paranormal.

Whatever your taste in movies, I'm sure you'll all agree that this tale is more than it seems.