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Trance (1998)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
24 July 1999 (Japan) moreTagline:
Evil sleeps, but never dies.Plot:
An alcoholic American couple travel to Scotland with their son so he can meet his grandmother but they walk in on their crazed uncle who is in the midst of reviving a centuries-old Druid witch. full summary | add synopsisAwards:
1 win & 1 nomination moreNewsDesk:
Sonic Youth preps The Eternal for June release(From PasteMagazine. 14 January 2009, 1:45 PM, PST)
User Comments:
A clever cross between mummy movie and witchcraft thriller that didn't get the theatrical release and critical attention it deserved. moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Rachel O'Rourke | ... | Alice | |
| Lois Smith | ... | Mrs. Ferriter | |
| Alison Elliott | ... | Nora / Niamh | |
| Jared Harris | ... | Jim | |
| Sinead Dolan | ... | Nora's Mother | |
| Raina Feig | ... | Young Nora | |
| Jason Miller | ... | The Doctor | |
| Jeffrey Goldschrafe | ... | Jim, Jr. | |
| Paula Malcomson | ... | Bartender | |
| Paul Ferriter | ... | Joe / Niamh's Iron Age Lover | |
| Christopher Walken | ... | Uncle Bill Ferriter | |
| Niamh Dolan | ... | Iron Age Niamh | |
| David Geary | ... | Nora's Father | |
| Karl Geary | ... | Sean | |
| Mark Geary | ... | Anlo |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Michael Almereyda's The Mummy (USA) (working title)The Eternal (USA) (video title)
The Eternal: Kiss of the Mummy (USA) (video box title)
The Mummy (USA) (working title)
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MPAA:
Rated R for strong sexuality/nudity, language and vampire violence.Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
95 min | Canada:91 min | Germany:91 min | Japan:91 min | UK:91 min | Argentina:94 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
ColorSound Mix:
DolbyFun Stuff
Goofs:
Revealing mistakes: When the girl cuts her throat near the end, the wound is clearly already there before she slices it. Additionally, she does not slice it directly where the wound is. moreQuotes:
[first lines]Alice: In the beginning of the world, the earth and the sky were one creature, and it was the hardest thing to tear them apart. They loved each other so much. And that's why it rains. Because the earth and the sky are always trying to get back together. Mrs. Ferriter told me that, after my mother died, a long time ago, before I met Nora and Jim.
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You might say that 1998 was the Year of the Mummy. Decades went by like desert sands in an hourglass without seeing so much as a single atrophied undead Egyptian dragging his moldy bones and rotting cerements out of the tomb and across the silver screen. Then, all of a sudden, there were not one but three mummy projects in the works. The most high profile and successful was Universal's bone-headed, big budget re-make of "The Mummy". The competition, Russell Mulcahey's "Talos the Mummy", was retitled "Tale of the Mummy" and downgraded to a DTV (Direct-To-Video) release. Likewise, Michael Almereyda's "Trance" - the tale not of an Egyptian mummy, but an Irish one - was re-titled "The Eternal: Kiss of the Mummy" and by-passed movie theatres in favor of a video release. And that's a shame, because Almereyda (who made his mark with the arty "Dracula's Daughter" remake "Nadja") crafted an eerie little Gothic fairytale that is far more interesting and inspired than its boring and bloated competition.
The plot concerns Nora (Elliott), a young American woman of Irish origin who, well, lives up the stereotype of her people and is a bit of a lush. She and her equally inebriated husband Jeff (Harris, who played Dracula's son in "Nadja") are coming home from their latest drunken binge one night when Nora takes a tumble down the stairs of their New York apartment building. Nora survives the fall, but is soon visited by headaches, nosebleeds and hallucinations for her trouble.
Determined to dry out for the sake of their young son, the couple head to Ireland (not *exactly* the best place to give up the sauce) where they pay a visit her grandmother and Uncle Bill (a typically gaunt and creepy Chris Walken) in their huge, labrynthinian mansion. Uncle Bill harbors a dark and fascinating secret in the basement: the perfectly preserved, mummified remains of a Druid witch; one of those fascinating "bog-men" you might have read about in National Geographic or seen on the Discovery Channel. Only this one is considerably livelier than your average bog-person and, as it happens, turns out to be a distant ancestor of Nora's.
Poor old Uncle Bill quietly explains to her that the druid witch was neither good not evil in her life, but more like a force of nature. But he and we learn different when the mummy gets her groove on and sets out to steal the body, soul and identity of her hapless descendant.
One of the things I like about Almereyda's neo-Gothic-monster movies is the fact he doesn't shy away from the kitschier and pulpier elements inherent to the genre. On the contrary, he rushes to embrace them for his own purposes. During the last reel, our heroes try to burn, break, stake, and even ELECTROCUTE the Druid bitch in an orgy of retro mayhem reminiscent of old 50's Sci-Fi horror epics like "The Thing".
It's a damn shame this clever cross between a mummy movie and a witchcraft thriller didn't get the theatrical release and critical attention it deserved. Like Stuart Gordon's ghastly gem "Castle Freak", this is a DTV release well worth the rental. It has all of the atmospherics and snappy dialog of "Nadja" without any of the annoying and pretentious Pixelvision crap. Here's hoping Alemereyda takes a shot of re-vamping werewolves next! The boy got game.