The Ghost and the Darkness
Dir: Stephen Hopkins
1996
**
Loosely based on the true events that happened in
1898 during construction of the Uganda-Monbase railway, screenwriter William
Goldman first pitched The Ghost and the Darkness
to Paramount in 1989 as a cross between Lawrence
of Arabia and Jaws. After
seven years of development, I found the finished item to be more of a cross
between Bridge
Over the River Kwai and Jaws:
The Revenge. The story goes that two Lions, acting most uncharacteristically,
attacked, killed and ate 135 workers who were building a railway bridge in
Tsavo, Kenya. The truth is that the number of people killed is more like 35 and
the Lions are a completely different kind than the ones featured in the film.
Val Kilmer's character John Henry Patterson was a real person, he oversaw the
construction of the bridge and was hailed a hero by the workers when he killed
both Lions, ending their reign of terror. However, Michael Douglas' character
Charles Remington, is fictional. In fact, most of the film is fictional is even
described in it's own synopsis as being 'A fictionalised account of a true
story'. A pet hate of mine. If a story is worth telling, it is worth telling
correctly. William Goldman is a great screenwriter but even he was
disappointed with the film, claiming Douglas' portrayal of an aged hunter
ruined the production. Personally I think Douglas' performance was the least of
the film's problems, the main issue being that it is incredibly boring. There
is absolutely no sense of terror or suspense. The story doesn't
progress any further than the first twenty minutes. The editing is horrible and
the performances are wooden. Only Bernard Hill and Om Puri give acceptable
performances but both are short. The direction is fairly hollow too, the story
goes round and round in circles without the viewer learning anything new about
the situation, Stephen Hopkins gets nothing from his actors, and he barely
even convinces us that Africa is hot. The sound was excellent though
and the film deserved the Oscar, it's just a shame that the rest of the
film wasn't handled with the same dynamic.
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