FIND MOVIES
Movie List
Loading ...
or
Find Theaters and Movie Times
or
Search Movies

Review: Possession

By BETSY SHERMAN  |  November 12, 2012
3.5 3.5 Stars

posession

A Cold War of body and soul is waged in this 1981 English-language horror film by Polish director Andrej Zulawski, set in a nearly deserted Berlin. Isabelle Adjani and Sam Neill give mesmerizingly out-there performances as a troubled couple trying to hold it together for their young son. It starts with verbal histrionics, then things get weird, and bloody. If you think Adjani's effete older lover (Heinz Bennent) is slimy, wait until you meet the gruesome creature (made by FX master Carlo Rambaldi) holed up in her love nest. Adjani is in full high-strung form here, and Neill is raw and vulnerable as a man who thinks he can survive the madness into which he pursues his wife. Zulawski's camera swirls and prowls through the tunnels, corridors and staircases in which he places his protagonists and those unlucky enough to get involved with them. In this nightmare world, red blood is as cold as the blue light of the German winter.
  Topics: Reviews , English Language, Berlin, review,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY BETSY SHERMAN
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REVIEW: OSCAR NOMINATED SHORTS: DOCUMENTARY  |  January 30, 2013
    For this year's program of Oscar-nominated documentary shorts, it's best to bring tissues. Things can get emotional.
  •   REVIEW: THE OSCAR NOMINATED SHORT FILMS: LIVE ACTION AND ANIMATED  |  January 30, 2013
    Highlights of the live-action shorts include the beautifully direct performances by Somali refugees in "Asad," a contemporary story (with folkloric undertones) of a boy who wants to be a pirate; the del Toro–esque fantasy setting of "Death of a Shadow"; the blend of dark comedy and gritty drama in the New York story of a little girl and her black-sheep uncle, "Curfew"; and the warmth of memory giving way to cold reality for an elderly man in "Henry."
  •   REVIEW: A LIAR'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY  |  January 25, 2013
    The discovery of tapes of Graham Chapman reading from his 1980 A Liar’s Autobiography has made it possible for the expired Monty Python member to star, posthumously, in his own biopic.
  •   REVIEW: PARENTAL GUIDANCE  |  January 02, 2013
    Billy Crystal and Bette Midler star in what could have been a decent comedy, if director Andy Fickman hadn't made it such a tearjerker.
  •   REVIEW: LES MISÉRABLES  |  December 20, 2012
    For his adaptation of the kitsch-fest known as Les Miz, Tom Hooper ( The King's Speech ) bets heavily on his cast, and mostly wins.

 See all articles by: BETSY SHERMAN