Last Updated on October 12, 2021
Nice to see you again, fans of the cinema! This is the Face-Off, where two movies enter and both movies leave, but one leaves in a slightly better light. Yes, here we take two competitors and compare their key elements and see who comes out the champion. It's a fierce competition that results in blood, tears, and online arguments, but the more brutal the battle, the sweeter the victory.
Last weekend saw the release of all sorts of new movies in theaters, like the Disney remake ALADDIN and the pitch-perfect comedy BOOKSMART. Among those ranks was the new spin on the superhero genre, the horror-leaning BRIGHTBURN from producer James Gunn. With all the big-budget costumed-hero movies on the market this one hoped to break up the pack a little, and I thought it would be fun to look back at the genre and pick out two other movies that did the exact same thing years ago. Telling the stories of two tortured souls out for revenge, these two movies embraced the R-rating before Deadpool made it cool and ushered in two of the most unique entries in the genre: It's THE CROW vs. DARKMAN.
The first movie on the list is perhaps one of the most classic cult classics in the movie world, with entire generations being inspired by and fawning over THE CROW. It's style and commanding leading performance from the late Brandon Lee made it a surprise hit with critics and audiences, and has yet to be topped by failed sequels and imitators. A few years before that, EVIL DEAD director Sam Raimi got his shot at a big studio movie with DARKMAN, his own original take on both the superhero movie and the monster genre, delivering another cult classic on his portfolio. Utilizing Liam Neeson before anyone else thought to do so, the movie is violent, crazy, silly and, like THE CROW, it's own beast.
Which tale of the tortured hero will win out? Scroll down to find out!
Brandon Lee as Eric Draven
Ernie Hudson as Sgt. Albrecht
Michael Wincott as Top Dollar
Rochelle Davis as Sarah
Sofia Shinas as Shelly Webster
Bai Ling as Myca
David Patrick Kelly as T-Bird
Angel David as Skank
Laurence Mason as Tin Tin
Michael Massee as Funboy
Tony Todd as Grange
Jon Polito as Gideon
Liam Neeson as Peyton Westlake/Darkman
Frances McDormand as Julie Hastings
Colin Friels as Louis Strack
Larry Drake as Robert Durant
Ted Raimi as Ricky
Dan Hicks as Skip
From the moment THE CROW opens with the visual of several scattered buildings caught on fire across Detroit, you can tell Alex Proyas was making a different kind of dark comic book movie. Tim Burton’s BATMAN movies only a few years before painted Gotham City as a grounded, fantastical noir city, but here Proyas has established a world that’s vicious, unforgiving, terrifying and all kinds of f**ked. Here Proyas, with his first major movie, demonstrated a knack for impressive, dark-yet-enrapturing imagery that he would later use in DARK CITY, and which further cements THE CROW as one of the most unique movies in comic book/vigilante field. He all at once made a movie that can entertain audiences of any generation – with its slick, fast pace and abundance of somewhat cheesy but always awesome action – but that could only be made at one point in time. At a time when no one knew what to do with the genre outside of Batman movies, here is a movie that’s hard R with Proyas leaning into the adult themes with a moody, visceral hand. As for the world itself, Proyas created a world that feels raw and dangerous with its own network of characters and history – one filled with darkness around every corner but populated with just enough heart and wit and brought to life with enough dark beauty to not feel soul-crushing. Proyas made a movie that carved out its own place during its time, and one that holds that place even now, especially given the slew of superhero movies hitting screens today.
With DARKMAN Sam Raimi finally got to move out of the world of low-budget horror flicks and show a big Hollywood studio what he could with a couple million dollars and some movie stars at his disposal. As much as that could rob any director of their vision in the name of satisfying the big wigs, DARKMAN feels very, very much like a Raimi movie from top to bottom. The visual language has that high energy absurdness laced with terror and shock, and it can be just as violent as it is unabashedly silly (often both at the same time). Here he showed that even without being able to bring characters like Batman to the screen he could still find a way to make a movie with comic book thrills, while also paying homage to the Universal monster movies of the 20s and 30s. He always keeps the tragic struggle of the character at the core of the movie, as he descends into madness while trying to come to terms with his disfigurement and does so in a way that is at times completely bonkers and like a comic book page come to life. One scene that sums this up perfectly is when Westlake, donning the mask of his former face and spending the day at the carnival with his girlfriend, begins to lose his shit when a carnival worker refuses to give him the elephant he indeed won. Raimi brings to life the bubbling rage with the world around Westlake erupting in anger, with quick camera work and hellish visuals surrounding him, his eyes engulfed in fiery anger. It’s so over-the-top mad and then suddenly violent, which can only be brought to life with a filmmaker like Raimi at the helm. He doesn’t get as much out of his supporting cast as he does the one at its core, at least in the same ways Proyas does that keeps the movie moving when the lead isn’t around, but when it’s going the movie is totally bananas and evidence of a time when the director was off the leash and brilliant on a whole other level.
The story of THE CROW is one any human on Earth can relate to: pure, unrelenting, bloodthirsty vengeance. Alright, maybe not *all* of you know what that feeling is like, but CROW is entirely driven by a revenge story with elements of the classic origin tale we all know well. Left for dead after the assault and murder of his fiancé, Eric Draven is brought back to life with the aid of a very special crow and is granted powers of healing, strength, and telepathy. He uses these gifts to hunt down the men who ruined his life one year after the event, right as Halloween is around the corner. While Proyas brought the seedy world of The Crow to life, writers David J. Schow and John Shirley took the character from James O’Barr’s comic and fleshed out an environment around him that feels just as rooted in a comic as it does the real world. The revenge sequences are written with just as much grit as they are black comedy, like when Eric goes in to take down Funboy and tells a Jesus joke as he’s being shot at – all before killing the crook with several heroin needles to the chest. Wrapped up in that scene you got some twisted humor, superhero-style elements (rapid healing) and some hardcore imagery that would be extreme in a major R-rated movie even today. That’s very much the tone of the script, which is filled with all sorts of colorful and deplorable characters, like Top Dollar and his band of cronies. The writers get the most props for bringing Draven to life, creating a concoction of Batman and Joker, a character who lives by night and takes down thugs, but is also a tinge mad and vicious himself, even with a beating heart underneath all the goth makeup. The side characters aren’t as interesting as the more colorful characters, but they serve a fine purpose in giving the movie some soul. But again, the script from Schow and Shirley is best commended for its world-building and juggling of various tones, which all together make this its own black-soaked beast in the field.
The DARKMAN script has a lot of cooks in the kitchen, namely Sam Raimi, Chuck Pfarrer, Ivan Raimi, Daniel Goldin and Joshua Goldin. The end result is a movie that is filled with an absurdity that can only come from an R-rated superhero movie by Raimi, but is also brimming with the tragedy of classic monster movies. The arc of Peyton Westlake is born of both a superhero of the Golden Age of comics, wherein a freak incident (with an R-rated crime thriller twist) gives him heightened strength and other sensations, but is mostly drawn from old monster movies wherein he struggles to come to terms with his disfigurement, hiding away from society. That angle is written well in the script, with enough pulled from other genres to give the movie its own voice and wild sensation, one filled with violence, humor and a touch of heart. If there are flaws, it lies in the plotting and abundance of unfascinating characters. Too much of the movie’s key plot moments hinge on a huge suspension of disbelief, like anytime Westlake has to infiltrate somewhere with only 99 minutes of free time before his fake skin starts to melt. So much of the movie relies on us just going with the flow of the madness and not thinking too much about everything else. Then there are Frances McDormand and Colin Friels characters, who aren’t given a ton of big moments until the end. Still, the script is whittled down to the barest of essentials, and its Raimi’s vision that really brings it to life more than the map laid out in the script.
For years, there have been attempts to recreate the magic of THE CROW through sequels, TV shows and attempts at a modern remake that have all fallen by the wayside, most recently with Jason Momoa and Corin Hardy bowing out of their planned new movie. The fact of the matter is the original movie is such a classic and totally irreplaceable, and a big reason for that is because of its star, Brandon Lee. The actor was perfectly cast to bring the resurrected hero to life, in no small part thanks to his incredible athleticism. There’s a dynamic and sleekness to the way his character moves and owns a room, and of course, he rocks it during some of the more intense fight sequences. More importantly, he brings humanity and wit to the character that poised him to be a major star. While you can sense his heartbreak underneath that mop of black, grungy hair, he adds to it with a slightly mad sense of humor that turns him into the hunky, crazy guy you love to root for when he’s blowing dudes away. He’s basically the equivalent of a grunge-era smolder come to life, and the ultimate tragedy of the movie is it was the last time we got to see his talent on the big screen after an on-set accident resulted in his untimely death. He could’ve great things after this movie, but at least we have this incredible example of his star-making talent.
It’s hard to remember a time when Liam Neeson wasn’t walking into the room and effortlessly kicking every ass while utilizing his stoic sense of Irish cool. But in 1990 he wasn’t quite the household name he soon became after SCHINDLER’S LIST, and yet, he still has much of that same infectious energy we all admire to this day. He’s a humble scientist one moment, but then the next he’s a scarred man both inside and out using his gifts (and his curse) to seek revenge against the men who ruined his life. Neeson is best in the moments when the character unleashes in a wave of rage and goes full bonkers, nailing the black humor and giving a character with no comic book origin a sense of identity. But he’s also such a good actor that even under the layers of soiled wrappings you can see the tortured man behind the eyes. It would be a few years before the world really saw his chops, but here he exhibits all the traits of a leading man and sows the seeds for the badass action star he would morph into over 20 years later.
Bits:
City on Fire
The Crow Rises
The Past Comes Calling
Swallowing Bullets
The Transformation
Crow vs. Tin Tin
Knife Catch!
Pawn Shopping
Crow and Albrecht
Crow vs. Funboy
Crow and Albrecht 2
Crow Sends T-Bird Soaring
Moody Guitar Smash
Crow Takes on the Room of Thugs
Crow vs. Top Dollar
Lines:
Eric: "He was already dead. He died a year ago the moment he touched her. They're all dead. They just don't know it yet."
—–
Eric: "Can't rain all the time…"
—–
Albrecht: "Police! Don't move! I said, "Don't move!"
Eric: "I thought the police always said, "Freeze!"
—–
Eric: "Suddenly I heard a tapping, as of someone gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door."
Gideon: "What are you talking about?"
Eric: "You heard me rapping, right?"
—–
Eric: "Victims; aren't we all?"
—–
Sarah: "If the people we love are stolen from us, the way to have them live on is to never stop loving them. Buildings burn, people die, but real love is forever."
—–
Funboy: "Jesus Christ!"
Eric: "Jesus Christ? Stop me if you heard this one: Jesus Christ walks into a hotel."
—–
Eric: "Is that gasoline I smell?"
—–
Top Dollar: "Our friend T-bird won't be joining us this evening on account of a slight case of death."
Bits:
Leg Gun!
Opening Shootout
Westlake Attacked
Rejected by Julia
They Took My Hands!
Rick Sticks Out of the Sewer
First New Face
A Circus Freak
Reunited With Julie
Darkman/Durant Burns His Hand
Which is the Real One?!
Exlpoding Over the Elephant
Rooftop Firefight
Multiple Masks
Helicopter Ride
Swinging into Action
Letting Strack Fall
Peyton is Gone
Bruce Campbell!
Lines:
Darkman: "I'm everyone – and no one. Everywhere – nowhere. Call me… Darkman."
—–
Peyton: "Take the fucking elephant!"
—–
Rick: Oh, god! Don't! I've told you everything!
Darkman: I know, Rick. I know you did…But let's pretend you didn't!
—–
Eddie Black: I was engaged to a girl once with a wooden leg.
Skip: Yeah? What happened?
Eddie Black: Had to break it off.
—–
Darkman: "Burn in Hell!"
—–
Louis: "You truly are one ugly son of a bitch!"
—–
Darkman: "You! Have! Been! A! Very! Bad! Boy!"
—–
Peyton: "Don't look at me."
Julie: "I want to look."
—–
Julie: "If you're not going to kill me… I have things to do."
Awards:
3 Wins & 6 Nominations per IMDb
Praise:
Rotten Tomatoes: 81% (90% Audience Score)
Metacritic: 71 (8.7 Audience)
IMDb: 7.6
$50 million domestic
Awards:
3 Wins & 8 Nominations per IMDb
Praise:
Rotten Tomatoes: 84% (59% Audience Score)
Metacritic: 65 (8.7 Audience)
IMDb: 6.4
$33 million ($48 million globally)
As I said above, the moment THE CROW starts with that incredible visual of the city on fire, establishing an apocalyptic visual palate that sells some of the biblical themes, you can tell this one is in a whole other class of comic book movie. From there on out Proyas, cinematographer Dariusz Wolski, production designer Alex McDowell and art directors John Marshall, Simon Murton collaborated to craft a movie that looks like a Tim Burton movie if it got sentenced to prison for triple homicide. It’s bleak and moody and aggressive and utterly compelling to look at, especially whenever the orange, hellfire lighting meshes with the pitch black of the city. There’s a dangerous personality to it that perfectly sells the movie as gritty comic book movie it sets out to be. You believe these people and this main character would all exist in this same space, and for how dreadful it all is I always wish there were better follow-ups that explored it more.
DARKMAN is far more polished that THE CROW, what with its studio backing and money (even though the $16 million budget of CROW $15 million, before the latter got an extra $8 million to finish reshoots), which was used to fund some pretty terrific makeup work and what then probably made for impressive digital effects. All things considered, the more expensive effects hold up better than other movies of the era, and the bigger finale with the helicopter chase is, indeed, quite dope. The movie looks the most unique, though, the crazier Raimi gets. Notable moments for this are when Westlake is being attacked, with the neon cinematography adding that extra violent edge, and the aforementioned carnival scene when his screws fall out. The movie can look pretty bonkers and brings to life some fun comic book-y thrills, but for the sake of this competition, it just doesn’t compare to THE CROW on a visual level.
Laced in with Graeme Revell's ominous, mystical score is a soundtrack that's just about as famous as the movie itself. Featuring music from Nine Inch Nails, Stone Temple Pilots, Pantera, The Cure and other bands you discovered as a teen but moved on from later, they add that accent of raw, rock 'n' roll energy that made that movie so much more a product of its time. But the score itself from Revell also deserves praise for creating an atmosphere as dark and unsettling as the visuals and production design. Tracks like "Birth of the Legend" have an air of mysticism and tribal feel to them, while also working some old-school cop movie vibes and orchestrational cues towards the end. Other tracks from the score paint a portrait of unique sounds that bounce between dread and action, like "'Her Eyes…So Innocent'" and "Tracking the Prey." It's a great score, and funny enough seems to take dark inspiration from the man in the next column…
Danny Elfman concocted the sound that would go on to define Tim Burton movies like BATMAN and EDWARD SCISSORHANDS with their ethereal, sweeping, heartfelt and sometimes cooky sounds. With DARKMAN, it seems the studio was again looking for something that would remind audiences of BATMAN, as the score certainly has a similar sound to Elfman's work there. Of course, there are more tragic cues that hit harder and recall some monster movies of the past, like in "Woe The Darkman…" Simply put, as great and reliable as Elfman's music always is his work on DARKMAN feels all too familiar, and he wasn't breaking any new, original ground. As for the incorporation in the movie, the score has a dominant role across the entire run as Westlake plots and plans…but also during random conversations where a prominent Elfman score doesn't really fit.
There’s a lot of villainy that lingers on the streets in THE CROW, like the drug-addled thugs who “kill” Draven and assault his fiancé, each having their own over-the-top, madcap personalities. None of them are terribly complex or make for much of a fight against Draven, but they get to chew the scenery quite a bit all before they're killed in vicious, sometimes bizarre ways. Then there’s the big bad, Top Dollar, who looks like Dracula if he listened to a lot of Nine Inch Nails. Michael Wincott has this low intensity about him that makes his delivery of some cheesy lines quite a thing to listen to. In the case of his character, it’s all about the look and atmosphere and putting him and Draven in the same room together to create a cataclysm of smoldering vibes and moody personalities. It’s during the finale where he really gets to shine meshing his vampire-meets-heroin vibe with some swordplay.
Much like THE CROW, DARKMAN is filled with all sorts of colorful henchmen characters overseen by one maniacal figure with a large presence. In this case, while the supporting players don’t quite live up the ratty bunch in CROW, the lead figure makes up for it, and that figure is Larry Drake. A large man with a penchant for sudden outbursts, Drake lives up to the playful, colorful villain angle with ruthless abandon, chopping off fingers and collecting them so he can…well, it’s hard to say what he does with them. Still, he’s just as crazy as the movie itself, and when he’s taking on double duty as both Durant and Westlake *pretending* to be Durant, well, that’s just a delightfully weird piece of art.
Both of these movies deal heavily in deranged figures, and THE CROW itself certainly has no shortage. The quick editing and splicing of scenes by Dov Hoenig and M. Scott Smith make for some insane and unsettling work, like whenever there’s a recap of the events in the loft. It plays like a delirious hallucination, an assembly of half-remembered moments. But, hey, as dark as that is, the characters (especially the thugs) lend that extra dose of silly crazy to their scenes, especially the character Skank, who is like is what a squirrel addicted to speed and arson would look like if it became a human being. But then there’s Lee’s Draven, who has his own case of the crazies and Lee wrings a lot of black humor and devil-may-care charm out of his scenes. Then there’s the kinetic action of it, making for a rip-roaring action flick that doesn’t skimp on the bonkers and is perhaps one of the wildest comic book movies you’re likely to see.
However, taking the prize here is DARKMAN, which is, easily, the most bananas superhero movie ever made. What else would you expect from Sam Raimi? The first scene has a guy wiping out a room of armed thugs with a wooden leg converted into a machine gun, the man it was attached to left to hop around as the carnage goes down. Then there’s Darkman himself, who has an argument with a cat which leads to him dancing around his lap calling himself a circus freak. All the humor and visuals are wild when watching them in any time period, and there’s no way a studio superhero movie like would ever get made again, so let’s all be thankful this exists as it does forever and always.
DARKMAN is as bonkers a superhero movie as you're likely to see, and in that way, it's almost endlessly entertaining and a unique entry in Sam Raimi's already impressive directing portfolio. But on so many counts, THE CROW is just more of a well-rounded and strong outing. Visually it's staggering, even 25 years later, the music is on point, it's dark and gritty but also strange and funny enough in ways to keep things moving. It's truly a one of a kind, and featuring a performance that would've made Brandon Lee a household name, and could've made for some great sequels. But still, THE CROW is the perfect movie of its kind for the audience and time it came out, from the tone, music, style and everything else that defined the era. It's a great little gem in the comic book canon that will forever stand out from its peers and that, try as studios might down the road, can never be replicated.
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