![]() If the producers had tried to recreate an actual 1920s style silent film in all aspects I think the result would have been a parody, not to mention wholly unsuitable to the subject matter. While the movie itself, and many of the filming techniques that went into making it, are intended to evoke a bygone era, the acting, thankfully, is modern and naturalistic. Perhaps my biggest disappointment with the look of the movie is again due to budget, and that is it was recorded on digital video, rather than film, which somewhat spoils the illusion of age created by the otherwise spot-on scratches and graininess of the image. The Louisiana swamp full of cultists is probably the most successful set-piece in the film, in which models, props, green-screen, and clever use of light and dark all come together to create a truly effect scene. Still, this is a limitation any film is going to come up against, and what The Call of Cthulhu has managed to achieve with its limited resources is nothing short of remarkable (a must-see ‘making of’ special on the DVD entertainingly reveals the backyard sets and ingenious props used in the production). Though wisely kept mostly in the shadows at first, the climactic sequence does give us a bit more of a clear look at Cthulhu than I think is strictly wise - and, whether he be a nicely done model as in this film or the very best CGI from a major studio, I still think less is more when cosmic dread is the effect one is shooting for. Therefore, it should come as no real surprise that when we finally see everybody’s favorite tentacled monstrosity emerge cranky from his long slumber as a stop-motion model the impact is less than the viewer yearns for. In our age of seeing the Great Old Ones on the covers of CDs and plush Cthulhu toys at conventions, a lot of the mystery has gone out of things that Lovecraft wisely left to the imagination. Far from it - if anything he may be one of the least filmable writers around relying, as he does, on evoking a feeling of dread and awe as much by what he leaves unsaid as by what he reveals. Of course, not everything about Lovecraft is suited to film. The protagonist Thurston’s investigations into his great uncle’s files (here cleverly titled to reflect the chapter sections in the original short) give us the opportunity for grand set pieces (the swamp, the ship, R’lyeh) and bring him closer to a madness that is revealed in a clever way at the end. It could even be said that the elements that make ‘The Call of Cthulhu’ itself sort of an unusual short story - the fact that nearly all of it takes place off-stage, as it were, in various journals, newspaper clippings, or stories related by another character - are better suited to film which, after all, can just show us everything that Lovecraft was telling. ![]() The story, of course, is familiar to fans of Lovecraft, and The Call of Cthulhu sticks very closely to the text during its 47 minute runtime with but a few minor exceptions that I didn’t even notice ( I had to look them up). In surmounting the very limited budget for this project, the choice could not have been better. In leaving some things unseen and unsaid, and in creating an at times stylized environment, this film activates the viewer’s imagination to fill in the blanks - and speeches or effects which would seem silly or dreadful when laid bare in a modern film are instead left in the shadows. Firstly, it does help evoke the period of Lovecraft in a way no film before it ever has (all of the ones I’ve ever seen where contemporary pieces, for a start), and also makes it feel like a world apart from our own. The choice to make this a silent film was a smart one. Not only that - and here’s the really interesting bit - the movie itself is a black and white silent film, as if it had been filmed at the time of the story’s publication in the 1920s. Lovecraft Historical Society, that adapts Lovecraft’s foundational short ‘The Call of Cthulhu’ in as loyal and accurate a way as possible. But then I heard about this little gem, distributed by the H.P. ![]() And they generally show the limits of their budget as well as being both poorly shot and acted. Lovecraft, as they have all tended to stray pretty far from what makes Lovecraft’s stories interesting in the first place. I cannot say I’ve ever been impressed with any film I’ve seen purporting to be based on a story by H.P. Directed by Andrew Leman starring Matt Foyer, Chad Fifer, Noah Wagner, Ramon Allen Jr., and Ralph Lucas.
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