The saga of Bob and Harvey Weinstein is one filled with ugliness, with the pair employing strong-arm tactics to help dominate the film industry. For a while in the 1990s and the early 2000s, it worked, with the siblings managing to build their company, Miramax, into a major player during awards season and on weekly box office charts. Part of this corporate approach involved the acquisition and alteration of genre pictures, with Bob's Dimension Films notorious for re-editing features, reducing length and occasionally softening violence, allowing the company to sell PG-13 experiences to young audiences. 2002's "Darkness" is one of many efforts subjected to the Weinstein treatment, with the Spanish production shelved for two years, eventually handed a quickie Christmas release in a version roughly 15 minutes shorter than its original cut. At the time, "Darkness" was awful, finding director Jaume Balaguero's trendy visuals and inability to summon suspense making for a hard sit. Now his initial version is available (including this Blu-ray release), and the offering is…slightly less awful. That's not to suggest the Weinsteins were correct in cutting down Balaguero's endeavor, but the material and execution are deeply flawed, generating a tedious ghost story. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

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