MVD Visual: Through the Shadow (2015) - Reviewed

Courtesy of MVD Visual
Brazilian writer-director Walter Lima Jr. has been an active film industry veteran since 1965 when he debuted his period drama Plantation Boy before going on to win the Silver Bear at the Berlin Film Festival for his 1969 critical favorite Brazil Year 2000.  Remaining active for the next fifty years, producing documentary films in between directorial efforts such as his 2008 musical drama Slightly Out of Tune, the filmmaker took a seven-year hiatus before turning his attention to period horror with his 2015 horror film Through the Shadow or the umpteenth billionth adaptation of Henry James’ 1989 ghost novella The Turn of the Screw. 

 
A classic ghost story about a governess who cares for two children on a remote estate at the turn of the century who grows suspicious the grounds and the children are being haunted, it was originally made into The Innocents in 1961 before being remade almost as many times around the world as Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, Shelley’s Frankenstein or Stoker’s Dracula.  

Amassing nine takes (The Turning being the latest) as well the Netflix series The Haunting of Bly Manor, this single story has been done to death with no end in sight.  Truly a thing that won’t leave, it is the ghost the cinema world can’t seem to exorcise.  In fact I’d expect there to be five more of these down the line.  The question is does this particular Through the Shadow Brazilian take on The Turn of the Screw manage to set this one apart from the pack?

 
In Walter Lima Jr.’s hands, Through the Shadow is picturesque with lovely cinematography, costume design and good performances from the ensemble cast.  With some minor changes made to the story, we meet Laura (Virginia Cavendish) mourning the recent death of her mother who takes up a new job as a governess looking after Elisa (Mel Maia) and her brother Antonio (Xande Valois) on their ornate wealthy estate grounds.  Also around is Dona Geraldina (Ana Lucia Torre) who is personable but surreptitious about the mansion’s past.  Within days of residence, Laura notices something is afoot when a mysterious figure keeps reappearing on the rooftop or front door, touching on fears of child kidnapping with an ever-growing sense of the supernatural and uncanny.
 
Readapted by Lima Jr. and Adriana Falcao, the film is lensed handsomely by longtime Lima Jr. collaborator Pedro Farkas who shoots the interior scenes in dim near-monochromatic sepia tones with soft hints of color, giving the film an eerie aged atmosphere.  The film’s soundtrack co-written by Lui Coimbra and Marocs Suzano lends an unsettling ambience to the strange and possibly otherworldly events real or imagined that are taking place onscreen.  

Combined with the film’s sumptuous production design, this version of The Turn of the Screw ends up being among the more hair-raising ones of the lot with a myriad of encroaching threats closing in on the protagonist.  Performances are also excellent with Virginia Cavendish exuding authority tinged with fear and vulnerability as the governess dealing with two children, played brilliantly by its child actors, who may not be what they seem. 

 
Like A Christmas Carol, this is a ghostly period story based on a legendary novella which invariably lends itself to cinematic adaptation after readaptation around the globe seemingly for all time.  Something of a subgenre unto itself for the sheer number of times these stories have been revisited on the big and small screens, the defining work of Henry James’ writing seen through the eyes of a longstanding singular auteur like Walter Lima Jr. is an interesting take on the timeless tale of horror.  

The quintessential creepy child story for all others to learn from and respect, The Turn of the Screw is a great story that makes for a mostly good film with Through the Shadow, one which doesn’t quite usurp the grandeur of Jack Clayton’s The Innocents but manages to unnerve in its own unique manner. 

--Andrew Kotwicki