Movie
Review | Dreamcatcher
Reviewed by: Brian
Orndorf
As four friends who share a psychic connection with one another,
Jonesy (Damien Lewis, “Band Of Brothers”), Henry (Thomas Jane,
“Deep Blue Sea“), Beaver (Jason Lee, “Mallrats”), and Pete
(Timothy Olyphant, “Go”) have retreated to their Maine cabin for a
weekend of laughs and memories of their childhood together. But as the
group begins to settle in, they realize that something sinister is
afoot. An alien force has come to Earth, and they use an eel-like
creatures, dubbed “weasels,” to take over their human hosts by
incubating in their stomachs, and exiting violently out their anuses.
While a special alien invasion branch of the government (lead by
Morgan Freeman and Tom Sizemore) works around the clock to quarantine
the town and find the source, the four men left alone in the cabin
must find other means to combat this ever-growing presence of evil.
“Dreamcatcher” has the distinction of being the first book
Stephen King wrote after the terrible incident in 1999, when he was
struck, and nearly killed, by a distracted driver while out for a
walk. This would explain the many instances of pivotal car accidents
in the story. As channeled through writer/director Lawrence Kasdan
(“The Big Chill,” “Grand Canyon,” and the underrated and
criminally underseen “Mumford“), “Dreamcatcher” embodies all
the best things about King adaptations and crams them into one single
motion picture. It has the alien invasions, the childhood memories
(shades of “Stand By Me“), the gifted handicapped, and the
tongue-twisting wordplay, which makes it often exhausting, but a
terrifically entertaining ride all the way.
Actually, this may also be the first film in history where
flatulence gags are a central and integral part of the storyline. So
there’s something to celebrate!
You do have to find a different state of mind while watching “Dreamcatcher.”
Kasdan has approached the film in a stylistically and verbally
heightened way. The film is directed very broadly, using elaborate and
unnatural dialog, and aggressively expressive characters to lead the
journey. This could be unsettling and irritating for some. It is also
a big, old fashioned, B-level monster movie, ripped from the 1950s,
complete with severe, John Wayne loving army generals and a distinct
(and welcomed) lack of pretension in dealing with the appearance of
the weasels. I have not read the King novel, and I’ve been informed
that the film’s final act differs greatly from what King conjured
up. Judging it solely as a movie, however, “Dreamcatcher” is
riveting genre entertainment, and is well-made all around (including
marvelous winter photography by John Seale). Because of King’s
always unique brand of the macabre, Kasdan has created a film that
defies easy explanation, and run circles around what other filmmakers
are doing with their overly hip attempts at sci-fi/horror.
As the main villain, the weasels are, unfortunately, a mostly CG
creation. However, Kasdan does have fun with their appearance, which
is a cross between the “Dune” sandworms and the face huggers from
“Alien.” Kasdan also finds creative ways to bring King’s bizarre
prose to the screen. A critical movement of the film takes places
directly, and quite literally, in the recesses of Jonesy’s mind,
which Kasdan and King imagine as this delightfully cavernous warehouse
where the memories of your life are stored as dusty old files. A
tricky concept, but well played here. Kasdan also sells the
“gifts” of the group well, employing his knack for storytelling
along with some dangerously corny CGI to keep the supernatural theme
running throughout the film.
Lawrence Kasdan is not known for his forays into this genre (though
he is the man who co-wrote “The Empire Strikes Back” and
“Raiders Of The Lost Ark”), but for a first timer helming an
otherworldly horror film, this is knockout stuff. If you can bend your
mind into the rhythm of this piece, you’ll find a rousing good time,
and one of the best Stephen King adaptations in recent memory.
Grade: 9/10
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