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Category:    Home > Reviews > Horror > Comedy > TV > Masters Of Horror – Clive Barker’s Haeckel’s Tale

Masters Of Horror – Clive Barker’s Haeckel’s Tale

 

Picture: B-     Sound: B-     Extras: B-     Episode: B-

 

 

Originally intended as a project to be directed by George Romero, Clive Barker’s Haeckel’s Tale is still the best installment we have seen to date of the often awkward and very disappointing installments despite the often big names connected.  Though Barker is more miss than hit, the story here had great potential with Romero interpreting it.  As it stands with Henry – Portrait Of A Serial Killer director John McNaughton, it is like an hour-long Night Gallery that could have been darker, but that is still more competent than most installments have been.

 

In Romero’s hands, it could have even been a classic or great in-joke piece with its use of zombies, but at least it has its moments.  A man who has lost the love of his life goes to a woman who may be able to help him bring her back to life.  To explain why he might not want his wish, we get a story told in flashback about the title character (Derek Cecil) who believes totally in medical science and is not religious.  He too has a love in his life and death is going to come a knockin’, but there is also the mysterious Montesquino (Jon Polito, often stealing scenes) who also has a connection to the undead and too might be able to summons them at will.

 

Even with the conclusion of this show and loss of a real “master of horror” like Romero, it is obvious that the series is not interested in doing real Horror genre work with any point or weight.  Everything feels like second-rate John Landis comedy, with even the actual Landis turning in a lame installment.  With each guest director, it is almost like The Muppet Show where they show up to do one installment and disappear, except that you don’t want to rewatch them years later.  It just perpetuates the reputation of this show as a bad package deal and their continued censorship of darker installments further verifies that image.  Well, this is better than nothing.

 

Extras include an audio commentary by director McNaughton, "Breaking Taboos: An Interview with John McNaughton" featurette, "Working With A Master: John McNaughton" featurette, "Behind The Scenes: The Making of Haeckel's Tale" featurette, On Set separate interviews with Leela Savasta, Jon Polito & Derek Cecil, Script To Screen: Haeckel’s Tale, trailers, still gallery, John McNaughton text biography and both DVD-ROM accessible teleplay and screensaver.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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