23rd July, 2018.
OK, that’s the intro video done with.
Leaving me with something of a a conundrum.
Do I take five, or ten, minutes … to jump into the shower?
Actually?
It’s not a conundrum, at all.
I’ve just jumped in the shower.
Frankly, with a figure like mine, and on the hottest day of the year, a day when the Met Office has released an Amber Alert?
Washing off the sweat, makes sense.
Either way?
Can you blame a body for getting overheated?
I don’t think you can, to be blunt.
Especially not on a day like this.
Frankly?
It’s enough to make you stay in, it really is.
The only thing with that, of course?
Is having something to watch
Frankly, I did.
The 2005 film that is …
The Call Of Cthulhu.
And, even this long after reading the original HP Lovecraft short story?
I stil don’t know how to pronounce Cthulhu … !
~≈§≈~
The Call Of Cthulhu opens in an unnamed room: where an unnamed young man tells his listener about how — some time ago — he visited his dying great uncle.
And, after his great uncle passed?
Became the executor of his uncle’s estate: including a box of obscure papers.
Became the executor of his uncle’s estate: including a box of obscure papers.
Papers that tell of his uncle’s interest in the uncanny work of a local artist.
And of a visit paid by a police inspector to an archeology meeting.
The artist has been dreaming of a weird island inhabited by something called Cthulhu.
A thing that resembles the statue the police detective took to the archeology meeting …
Seventeen years earlier.
Seventeen years earlier.
The fact the artist forgets his dreams, after the second of April, 1925?
Is something our narrator can only lament.
Until he finds out about a ship called the Alert.
A ship that escaped from something …
On the other side of the planet: 47º 9’ 0” S, 126º 43’ 0” W
On the second of April, 1925.
You can bet something nasty’s happening, can’t you … ?
~≈§≈~
Now …
I thoroughly enjoyed The Call of Cthulhu.
There’s upsides and downsides to the thing, though.
The only real downside?
Simply the length: at just over forty-six minutes, it’s a length I usually associate with a modern TV episode.
For a film? The Call of Cthulhu seems a little short.
On the other hand?
Although it’s been a while since I read the original short story version, this particular film version captures the story, well.
Making it a silent film, instead of something a bit more modern?
Having a stop-motion Cthulhu, instead of a CGI animation?
Having a stop-motion Cthulhu, instead of a CGI animation?
Having that short length: and having a pace that fit the story in with no loss of plot elements?
Made it very watchable.
Made it very watchable.
There’s also the simple fact that — in going for a silent film — the producers have managed to keep the era’s feel, front and centre: making good use of a look reminiscent of The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari.
That?
Made The Call of Cthulhu a beautifully made piece.
I’d happily suggest you see The Call of Cthulhu …
You’d be seeing something beautiful and unique.
The Call of Cthulhu
★★★★
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