Blu-ray Review – Castle Freak

CASTLE FREAK Jeffrey Combs Barbara Crampton

In the curious career of writer/director Stuart Gordon, his dedication
to the work of author H.P. Lovecraft could never be called into
question. With cult classics such as "Re-Animator" and "From Beyond,"
the filmmaker has explored and cinematically transformed the celebrated
writer's fascination with depths of depravity and the hypnotic hold of
terror, turning fandom into a personal quest. Picking a 1926 short story
("The Outsider") as inspiration, Gordon returns to his Lovecraftian
cravings with 1995's "Castle Freak," a bluntly titled genre exercise
that provides the necessary amounts of lip-quaking panic and goopy gore,
gifted a mildly gothic touch by the picture's remote, forbidding
setting. It's a slim tale of redemption and survival, with excitable
acting that practically transforms the effort into 3-D, but the macabre
essentials are provided with skill by the helmer, who's clearly enjoying
this opportunity to romp around an empty castle, dreaming up way to
repulse and creep-out the audience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

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