Two things become clear with this DVD issue of the original special edition laserdisc director's cut of The Frighteners, the action/horror/comedy wedged between Jackson's art house Heavenly Creatures and his box office gorilla, The Lord of the Rings: that the movie is a mess (and Jackson details the reasons why throughout his first-ever commentary), and that he was just as big a film geek before LOTR came along. The film chronicles enterprising psychic Frank Bannister (Michael J. Fox), who uses his otherworldly contacts to swindle innocent victims; convinced they're being "haunted," he collects when he arrives to do his exorcist thing. The action gets crazier when he discovers a real psycho killer is actually haunting this small community. But that's not all Jackson throws at us Bannister has a complex, personally haunted back-story of his own; his relationship with various ghosts is complexly layered; and the various hauntings and evil-doings are thrown at us willy-nilly. The Frighteners, born of a two-page outline to studio heads, was green lit quickly and then pushed hard to a completion date; the result is a mishmash that Jackson readily admits was being radically overhauled almost every day on set. Basing a film on the first draft of a written script has resulted in a story that's a bit (okay, a lot) of a mess, but is chock-a-block with interesting, unfulfilled potential. That doesn't stop Jackson from chronicling the film's every step though, as he did so remarkably with LOTR; The Frighteners also features extensive "behind the scenes" footage more than three-and-a-half hours worth, in fact. It mostly concerns the digital effects that were considered groundbreaking in 1995 and laid the groundwork for Weta Digital's work on LOTR. It's more than a bit of overkill for what must be considered a minor work in the Jackson canon, but no one will ever accuse the director of giving short shrift to anyone who might be remotely interested. (Universal)
The Frighteners
Peter Jackson
BY James KeastPublished Feb 1, 2006