Stir of Echoes (28-Jul-1999)
Director: David Koepp Writer: David Koepp From novel: A Stir of Echoes by Richard Matheson Keywords: Horror
Name | Occupation | Birth | Death | Known for |
Kevin Bacon |
Actor |
8-Jul-1958 |
|
Everybody cut Footloose |
Illeana Douglas |
Actor |
25-Jul-1965 |
|
Grace of My Heart |
Kevin Dunn |
Actor |
26-Feb-1956 |
|
American character actor |
Kathryn Erbe |
Actor |
5-Jul-1966 |
|
Law and Order: Criminal Intent |
Jennifer Morrison |
Actor |
12-Apr-1979 |
|
Dr. Cameron on House, MD |
Liza Weil |
Actor |
5-Jun-1977 |
|
Paris Geller on Gilmore Girls |
REVIEWS Review by Walter Frith (posted on 9-Jun-2007) Kevin Bacon
usually does his best work as a character actor. His three best
performances are in 'Sleepers' (1996) where he played a sexually
abusive and brutally violent reform school guard. In 'Murder in the
First' (1995), he played a man driven to the brink of insanity after
being locked in the solitary confinement wing of prison for too long
and in 'JFK', he played a male prostitute with a passion for wanting to
tell the truth and his low rent state of mind displayed a protracted
passion for political ignorance. Despite his great work, Bacon has
never been nominated for an Academy award. Some of my friends liked his
work in 1992's 'A Few Good Men' and 1994's 'The River Wild' and it's
hard to ignore him in those films as well. "We bury our dead alive,
don't we?" This is a quote from an episode of television's 'The
X-Files'. An observation is made in that episode that conscience is
really the dead talking to us, those who have died violent deaths and
cry out for justice. An interesting theory and the idea of paranormal
intrigue involving the dead has long been a fascinating part of going
to the movies. But how many film makers and actors get it right?
Hypnosis. How much do we really know about it? According to what we
learn in 'Stir of Echoes', only about 8 per cent of the population can
really go under its influence. If this is true, Tom Witzky (Kevin Bacon
in a good leading role) is one of the 8 per cent. Tom and his wife
Maggie (Kathryn Erbe) attend a house party in their Chicago
neighbourhod one evening where the subject of hypnosis comes up and Tom
agrees to be put under the spell by his sister-in-law Lisa (Ileana
Douglas). Shortly after he is in a complete trance, Tom begins to
experience flashes of psychic visions involving a dead teenage girl and
her spirit roaming about in his home and around the neighbourhood. This
is a part of the plot carried out for the entire film. We learn that
the Witzky's son Jake (Zachary David Cope) can see the ghost of dead
people. And now dad begins to exhibit some of the same characteristics.
A clever way to portray this in the movie. Usually, in other films, we
see the eldest members of the family with this sense come forward first
and then the children but in this case it comes naturally to the child
while dad has it buried in his sub conscious mind and has it brought
out by the magic of hypnosis. 'Stir of Echoes' is a mind numbing and
adrenalin pumping thriller that uses the supernatural, a thrilling sub
text and crime as its main elements of entertainment. As the film
progresses, it appears to make no sense whatsoever, a merry go round of
unpleasant images that don't seem to tell us anything. But then it
clicks in in an anti-climactic manner to illustrate why it kept
stringing us along from the start. The film is based on the novel 'A
Stir of Echoes' by Richard Matheson whose other novel 'What Dreams May
Come', was brought to the big screen in 1998 starring Robin Williams as
a man who goes to heaven but learns his wife is in hell and strives to
bring her back with him to eternal paradise. Matheson has a fascination
with fantasy but 'Stir of Echoes' is more than that. It's an honest and
genuine thriller that sends shivers down one's spine and I was very
impressed with writer/director David Koepp's ability to keep the chills
coming and keep the whole thing seem credible to feed the notion that
things displayed in this film are possible if you believe the ideas of
some theologians and people who make a habit documenting the paranormal
experience. I immediately drew comparisons from this film to 1983's
'The Dead Zone' and this year's 'The Sixth Sense'. Those films have a
more human look to them that 'Stir of Echoes'. A more calculating sense
of emotion if you will. But for all of its effort, 'Stir of Echoes'
stops just short of being a great character study. It seems more
concerned with the chills than with developing great characters all
around. It still manages to haunt us with the miraculous wonder of
great storytelling and it may be one of the year's defining films that
keeps in check with the definition of "on the edge of your seat". Visit
FILM FOLLOW-UP by Walter Frith
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