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Deadly Blessing is a well made but somewhat variable effort. On the plus side, it contains some of Wes Cravens best directorial work. The film is beautifully photographed, shot in faded autumnal off-colourings and the colour tinted a monochrome sepia-tone. Craven sets up a number of terrifying set-pieces like the scene with the petrol-doused car trying to back away from a trail of burning fuel; or where Maren Jensen finds a poisonous snake in her bathtub (although this scene has gone onto to become a classic among goof spotters as Jensen is clearly visible wearing a pair of black panties beneath the soap suds); or the sequence with Sharon Stone well over a decade before Basic Instinct (1992) trapped in a barn being slammed by seemingly supernatural forces of incredible power. There is one dream sequence where Wes Cravens ongoing preoccupation with oneirism and reality reaches a particularly beautiful and surreal height in a scene where two clawed hands reach out to a dreaming Sharon Stone as an unseen voice whispers, beckoning her to open her mouth whereupon a spider dangles down on a strand of thread and drops between her open lips. However, Deadly Blessing also has a script that is tied in an unruly knot. There are too many suspects and victims Hittites and unbelievers are butchered indiscriminately alike. The mixing of supernatural and mundane psychological attacks fails to work with neither being brought to a satisfying conclusion. The Hittites are built up as villains of the piece but this prove to be a red herring, while the dream sequences ultimately amount to nothing at all. The fact that the film had two endings in international prints, the killer is mundanely revealed to be an ordinary individual, while in many American versions of the film a demon figure bursts up from under the floorboard to snatch Maren Jensen down to Hell is indicative of the haphazard nature with which the plot was slung together. Wes Cravens other films are:- The Last House on the Left (1972), Summer of Fear/Stranger in the House (1978), Swamp Thing (1982), Invitation to Hell (tv movie, 1984), A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), Chiller (tv movie, 1985), Deadly Friend (1986), The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988), Shocker (1989), Night Visions (tv movie, 1990), The People Under the Stairs (1991), Wes Cravens New Nightmare (1994), Vampire in Brooklyn (1995), Scream (1996) Scream 2 (1997), Scream 3 (2000), Cursed (2005), My Soul to Take (2010) and Scre4m/Scream 4 (2011). Wes Craven has also written the scripts for A Nightmare on Elm Street III: The Dream Warriors (1987), Pulse (2006) and The Hills Have Eyes II (2007), and produced Mind Ripper (1995), Wishmaster (1997), Carnival of Souls (1998), Dont Look Down (1998), Dracula 2000 (2000), Feast (2006), The Breed (2006), The Hills Have Eyes (2006) and The Last House on the Left (2009). He also created the tv series The People Next Door (1989) and Nightmare Cafe (1992).
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