| The years second
scariest film (after The Blair Witch Project)
comes from an unlikely source
writer/director David Koepp (The Trigger
Effect), who adapted the script from Richard
Mathesons book (he also wrote the novel What
Dreams May Come). Echoes will
unfortunately open after the similar but
big-budgeted Bruce Willis flick The Sixth
Sense, but is still one of the
creepiest films to be released since Se7en. Echoes
opens with a little boy named Jake staring into
the camera while sitting in the tub. Hes
answering questions that nobody appears to be
asking. Is it an imaginary friend? His parents
seem to think so, but Jake is really conversing
with the spirit of a missing local girl named
Samantha Kozak.
Kevin
Bacon (Wild Things) plays Tom Witzky,
Jakes blue-collar working father that has
spent his entire life within a six-block radius
of one Chicago neighborhood. Hes
disappointed with his boring life and dead-end
job. His hippie sister-in-law Lisa (Illeana
Douglas, Grace of my Heart) talks a
disbelieving Tom into undergoing hypnosis at a
party. He only sees a second or two of seemingly
unrelated and fragmented flashes, but when Tom
comes to, hes been told that he was out for
several minutes. To make matters worse, Lisa also
plants a suggestion into Toms subconscious.
Not the kind that will make him cluck like a
chicken when somebody says the word
"omelette," but rather an innocent
appeal to be a bit more open-minded.
Before
he went under, Tom crowed "Cmon
whats the worst that could happen?"
Well, the worst does happen - amateur hypnotist
Lisa accidentally opened the door to his mind
instead of making him open-minded. What does that
mean? Just that Tom slowly is able to see and
hear the same things as his son. He catches more
glimpses of the spooky images that he saw while
under hypnosis, and even catches a glimpse or two
of Samantha. He also drinks a lot of orange juice
and begins to unwind mentally, putting a strain
on his wife Maggie (Kathryn Erbe, Dream with
the Fishes).
When
Lisa puts Tom under a second time in an attempt
to close the Pandoras box, he instead gets
a one-word message from beyond: "Dig."
What follows is very reminiscent of the slow
descent into madness previously seen in The
Amityville Horror and The Shining. In
fact, you cant help but think of Amityvilles
George Lutz (James Brolin) digging up his
basement while watching Bacon do the same thing.
And maybe youll be reminded of Bacons
Flatliners. The story is derivative of
both films (and many others), but its still
original enough to raise the hair on your arms on
several occasions.
The
story is fairly predictable (I called it about 40
minutes into the film) but seems oddly short.
Its almost like a lot was carved out of the
final cut Toms rock band,
Jakes baby monitor, Maggies pregnancy
and a cop named Neil all seemed destined to have
more screen time, but were curiously skipped over
after careful introductions. But the film is
worth the price of admission just for Bacon and
the young sons eerie performances.
1:35
for brief nudity,
sexual content, adult language and violence
|