Lavishly produced
Egyptian-themed shocker The Awakening
starts out well enough, with atmospheric scenes of a studly scientist named Matthew
(Charlton Heston) tempting fate by exploring the tomb of an ancient Egyptian
queen. Rocks slide, traps are sprung, and victims accumulate as the movie sets
up the premise that centuries-dead “Kara” makes a magical connection with the
child Matthew’s wife delivers while he’s tampering with Kara’s resting
place. Throughout this very long prologue, The
Awakening effectively blends old-school mummy
mythology with modern evil-kid tropes along the lines of The Omen (1976). Then the picture cuts
ahead 18 years. Matthew’s daughter, Margaret (Stephanie Zimbalist), has become a young woman. Meanwhile, Matthew, long divorced from Margaret’s mother, has become obsessed with his greatest achievement, the discovery of the tomb. And then the story goes completely haywire, charting a downward spiral into nonsense as Kara’s spirit tries to possess Margaret’s body. Despite being adapted from a story by the
venerable Bram Stoker, of Dracula fame,
The Awakening is clunky and dull and episodic
and ridiculous, so the moodiness the filmmakers generated during the opening
scenes dissipates by the time the picture reaches its laughably over-the-top
climax. Making matters worse, Heston is quite terrible here, overdoing everything except his pathetic attempt at an English accent. So even though The Awakening is a highly
polished piece of work from a technical perspective, abysmal storytelling utterly neutralizes audience goodwill.
The Awakening: LAME
3 comments:
The early-1970's Hammer version of the same story "Blood From the Mummy's Tomb" is far superior in atmosphere & eeriness, as well as having the added benefit of casting the sublimely gorgeous Valerie Leon in the lead female role!
Nail on head, Darron.
With the lovely poster and an excellent musical score by Claude Bolling, which I heard before seeing the film - I had high hopes.
Well, I still have the music.
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