Last Updated on August 3, 2021
This week, with Tim Burton‘s MISS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN hitting theaters and October right around the corner, I thought it would be interesting to look at two gothic horror/romance films of the past few years. Burton’s own DARK SHADOWS revamped (sorry) the classic television show with a comedic spin, while Guillermo del Toro‘s CRIMSON PEAK brought us a more dramatic tale of love, betrayal, and ghosts. Without further ado, let’s find out which film will survive and which will be left to roam the halls of the internet for eternity.
Michelle Pfeiffer as Elizabeth Collins Stoddard
Eva Green as Angelique Bouchard
Bella Heathcote as Victoria Winters / Josette
Helena Bonham Carter as Dr. Julia Hoffman
Jackie Earle Haley as Willie Loomis
Jonny Lee Miller as Roger Collins
Chloë Grace Moretz as Carolyn Stoddard
Gulliver McGrath as David Collins
Christopher Lee as Clarney
Tom Hiddleston as Thomas Sharpe
Jessica Chastain as Lucille Sharpe
Charlie Hunnam as Dr. Alan McMichael
Jim Beaver as Carter Cushing
Burn Gorman as Holly
Leslie Hope as Mrs. McMichael
Doug Jones as Edith’s Mother / Lady Sharpe
These are both stellar casts to be sure, and CRIMSON PEAK features three powerhouse performances, but I’m giving this one to DARK SHADOWS for how fun, colorful, and disparate the characters are.
The fusion of Georgian/Colonial style with the culture of a 1970’s American fishing village makes for a unique setting, with the Collinwood estate and its mysterious hidden passages at its centerpiece.
The mansion here is absolutely stunning and serves as another character in the film. Even the locations outside of the mansion are exquisite and make almost every frame a treat for the eyes.
“I was awakened, by a giant dragon with millions of teeth and a thousand shining eyes!”
“Do you think the sexes should be equal?”
“Heavens, no. Men would become quite unmanageable.”
“I think we’re going to get along fine.”
“My beloved home, what have they done to you?”
“Are you stoned or something?”
“They tried stoning me, my dear. It did not work.”
“My name is Victoria Winters. Please, call me Vicky.”
“Enchanted. But I shall call you Victoria, a name so wonderful to me that I could not stand to lose a single syllable of it.”
“She has the most fertile birthing hips I’ve ever set eyes upon.”
“You’re weird.”
“I am reminded of a line from Erich Segal’s ‘Love Story’: ‘Love means never having to say you’re sorry.’ However, it is with sincere regret that I must now kill all of you.”
“What sorcery is this? Reveal yourself, tiny songstress!”
“I guess the only thing missing is Alice Cooper.”
“Perhaps you should go and acquaint yourself with the evening’s entertainment. Ugliest woman I’ve ever seen.”
“Here are my terms: Goest thou to hell, and swiftly please, and there may Azmodaeus himself suckle from your diseased teat!”
“You may strategically place your wonderful lips upon my posterior and kiss it repeatedly!”
“I suppose, strictly in the name of her honor, I must now defile myself for a few seconds…”
“Sleeping flame, I summon thee / To your form return / Make the night as bright as day / And burn, baby, burn!”
“I’m a werewolf, okay? Let’s not make a big deal out of it. Woof.”
“I killed your parents and every one of your lovers. They kept us apart.”
“If I can’t have you, my love, I’ll destroy you!”
“I have spent the last two centuries locked in a box, with nothing to keep me occupied but a glimpse into the dark shadows of my soul.”
“It is said that blood is thicker than water. It is what joins us, binds us… curses us. My name is Barnabas Collins, and my curse has finally been broken.”
“It seems he’s a baronet.”
“What’s a baronet?”
“Well, an aristocrat of some sort.”
“A man that feeds off land that others work for him. A parasite with a title.”
“This parasite is perfectly charming and a magnificent dancer. Although, that wouldn’t concern you, would it, Edith, our very young Jane Austen? Though, she died a spinster, no?”
“Actually, Mrs. McMichael, I would prefer to be Mary Shelley. She died a widow.”
“Where I come from, ghosts are not to be taken lightly.”
“I cannot leave you here. In fact, I find myself thinking about you even at the most inopportune moments of the day. I feel as if a link exists between your heart and mine, and should that link be broken, either by distance or by time, then my heart would cease to beat and I would die.”
“Goodness. How many rooms are there?”
“I don’t know. Would you like to count them?”
“They’re dying. They take the heat from the sun, and when it deserts them, they die.”
“How sad.”
“No, it’s not sad, Edith. It’s nature. It’s a world of everything dying and eating each other right beneath our feet.”
“Surely there’s more to it than that.”
“Beautiful things are fragile… At home we have only black moths. Formidable creatures, to be sure, but they lack beauty. They thrive on the dark and cold.”
“What do they feed on?”
“Butterflies, I’m afraid.”
“You’re so… different.”
“From who?”
“Everyone.”
“You’re monsters. Both of you!”
“Funny. That’s the last thing Mother said, too.”
“The horror was for love. The things we do for love like this are ugly, mad, full of sweat and regret. This love burns you and maims you and twists you inside out. It is a monstrous love and it makes monsters of us all.”
“I won’t stop until you kill me or I kill you.”
“I won’t stop until you kill me or I kill you.”
“I heard you the first time.”
“Ghosts are real, this much I know. There are things that tie them to a place, very much like they do to us. Some remain tethered to a patch of land, a time and date, the spilling of blood, a terrible crime… There are others, others that hold onto an emotion, a drive, loss, revenge, or love. Those, they never go away.”
Rotten Tomatoes: 37% (Audience Score: 46%)
Metacritic: 55 (User Score: 5.7)
Domestic Total Gross: $79,727,159
Rotten Tomatoes: 71% (Audience Score: 55%)
Metacritic: 66 (User Score: 7.6)
Domestic Total Gross: $31,090,320
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