Sleepy
Hollow (1999)
Rated R
Starring: Johnny Depp, Christina Ricci,
and Miranda Richardson
Rating:

out
of

|
Tim Burton
has directed some of my favorite films, including Ed
Wood and Big Fish. Even if a project he's
worked on doesn't quite work, like Mars
Attacks! or Batman,
the resulting film still is interesting to look at from a cinematic
point-of-view and always full
of his unique stylistic touches. Sleepy Hollow, a re-telling
of the classic Washington Irving story, not only includes Burton's characteristic
style
but a lot of the charm as well.
Ichabod Crane (Johnny Depp), a constable from New York City, is aggravated
with the state of criminology in the post-Revolutionary War era. While
he's working on scientific methods of crime detection, his peers still
use primitive torture devices and outmoded beliefs to solve crimes. While
confronting the court's lack of recognition for his ideas, he is given
the opportunity to put his scientific knowledge to the test in Sleepy
Hollow, a farming community that's been the target of a murderer with
a penchant for removing the heads of his victims.
Sleepy Hollow is a rural farming
community in upstate New York that's full of superstitions and tales
of a headless horseman who prowls the
countryside looking for his head. Crane's arrival in the town signals
relief for some of the townsfolk, but the elite of the community look
upon him with disdain. When they try to explain the recent murders as
the work of the headless horseman, Crane laughs the story off as a tale
of "ghouls and goblins." After meeting more of the townspeople,
including Katrina Van Tassel (Christina Ricci), daughter of the town's
mayor, and a young boy who's father was murdered (Mark Pickering), Crane
begins to put the pieces of the puzzle together. It's not quite what he
was expecting to find.
Johnny Depp and Tim Burton seem to have a chemistry that brings out each
other's best work. Depp is excellent as the eccentric Crane, who straddles
a fine line between the serious and comic. His sense of timing while delivering
dialogue is impeccable and the most effective in a great cast. Christina
Ricci's Katrina is very alluring, if strangely so. The fine collection
of actors that makes up the core of the town's elite (Ian McDiarmid, Jeffery
Jones, Michael Gough, Richard Griffiths and Michael Gambon) is also worth
noting. Even with these fine performances, it is Burton's direction that
makes this film worth seeing. His combination of the real and the other-worldly,
along with an over-the-top performance by Christopher Walken, give the
film just the right dose of supernatural power to make it work.
Alas, the film is not perfect. Some plot points are a bit confusing and
the viewer may be lost at times during the film's pre-climax wrap-up,
but things do eventually come together as a cohesive whole. This is really
the only problem with the movie. The script, which is almost completely
different than the original Washington Irving story, is a fine gothic
mystery.
Overall, Sleepy
Hollow works due to the lush visuals, outstanding special
effects, a great cast and fantastic direction. If you're looking for a
movie that delivers a good time, Sleepy Hollow is well-worth the money. Trivia: The
scene where Ichabod Crane crosses the covered bridge and hears the
frogs underneath croaking "Ichabod" and "Headless Horseman" is
a tribute to Disney's 1949 animated version of "The Legend of
Sleepy Hollow," in which Ichabod Crane, crossing a bridge, hears
the frogs croaking the same words.
(Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |