Review of From Hell

From Hell (2001)
From Hell is heavenly!
26 October 2001
Smoky opium dens, sugar-saturated absinthe, bloody red skies,

dark alleys shadowed with fog, and silver knife-blades that glint

and reflect the light of pure evil… It's 1888, Jack the Ripper is living

his glory days, and you are right there with him.

It's easy to get drawn into this seamy, fascinating world. From Hell

is loosely based upon the real events, presented in a beautifully

dreamy, surreal fashion. It's the most visually pleasing

Victorian-England horror offering since Coppola's version of

Dracula, which came out nearly ten years ago. The cinematographer is Peter Deming, a David Lynch favorite (he did

2001's Mulholland Drive as well as Lost Highway). He does some

very interesting things with time-lapse styled photography and

stop-motion techniques without getting too trick.

Directed by The Hughes brothers (their last feature was 1995's

Dead Presidents), who supposedly met with everyone from Sean

Connery to Brad Pitt to Jude Law before deciding upon Johnny

Depp for the starring role of Inspector Frederick George Abberline.

They made the right choice: as usual, Depp seems to immerse

himself in the role from diction to demeanor to dress, and

whenever he is on the screen your eyes are on him. Teamed up

with Heather Graham as the ill-fated prostitute Mary Kelly, Depp

almost brings her up to par. Almost. Graham does a fine job, but

compared with the other actors in the film -- Depp, Susan Lynch as

'Long Liz' Stride, and Ian Holm as Sir William Gull -- she's miscast.

There is nothing about her to ignite the romantic sub-story, and as

a consequence that part just doesn't work.

Luckily, it doesn't get in the way, either. This movie is not only

visually stunning and well-acted, it's very aptly directed. The

Hughes Brothers took a risk here, wishing to shrug off their image

of being 'urban' or 'black' filmmakers, and it's paid off. They bring to

life, in short flashes, the legendary curiosities of Victorian life: the

advent of the frontal lobotomy; legal, psychotropic drugs; John "The

Elephant Man" Merrick on public display; and the eccentric Queen

Victoria with her strange secrets. Like the devil, it's in the details,

and The Hughes Brothers have paid attention to all of them.

Although the murders were re-created in detail on a set in Prague

(and if you've seen the actual crime-scene photos, as I have, you

will appreciate this), they are not as gory as the directors would

have liked. Thus challenged, they manage to evoke a feeling of

what it must have been like -- from experiencing the brutal killings

and eviscerations themselves, to the aftermath of curious crowds

wanting a glimpse of the forlorn, desecrated bodies of these

women who once lived -- and it's chilling.

Like a red rose gone black at its edges, still smelling sweetly of

life even as it decays, From Hell manages to straddle the fine line

of meshing delicate beauty with bleak death.
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