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What helps “Let’s Scare Jessica to Death”
pave the way as a genuine horror film, is that it’s more content with
examining the pure madness of the human mind than it does splashing
blood on the walls. Which is not to say there isn’t blood, but the
madness of the entire premise is perfectly exemplified thanks to the
often desolate set pieces before us. The farm house in which our
characters reside, the small town down the road, and even the lake, are
all spots that are perfectly maddening and morbid to the story. Hancock
nails the pure dementia of the situation with scenic settings that feel
utterly claustrophobic at all times. And worst of all, once the
mysterious drifter in their house corrupts their lives, things take a
turn for the worse. Hancock successfully will bring audiences to
constantly question Jessica’s perceptions, as opposed to our own and
always leaves us at odds.
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Whose eyes should we believe?
Our own or Jessica’s? Is Jessica just outright nuts, or is
the town she’s in filled with vampires? I was never sure,
and the movie never really informs us one way or another.
And that’s the point. Hancock and crew make a clear mission
to never confirm one way or the other if Jessica is just
insane, or she’s actually stalked by vampires. And Hancock
does this by breaking the conventions of the vampire
character.
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The way they breed and mark are
much different, and they often represent ghosts than actual conscious
beings. And this helps the attempt to confuse the audience just as much
as Jessica is. Reality or Fantasy, Dreams or Nightmares, as Jessica
states, she’ll never know. And we’ll never know, either. We can debate
all we want, but at the end of the day, this film will surely have you
talking about what was the possible conclusion. Was Jessica just loony?
Was all that occurred in the farm house just a woman battling the
monsters in her mind? Or is that just what the vampires wanted her and
us to believe? Perhaps they were all vampires, and no one will ever
believe a mental patient. When a movie can keep you guessing after it’s
over, it’s succeeded in its work.
Ah, the elusive “Let’s Scare Jessica to
Death,” a movie I’ve tried to seek out for years and years, and just
never could grasp. Much like “Cannibal Holocaust,” Hancock’s thriller is
a film I’ve heard about since I was a child, yet have never come into
direct contact with. Thankfully, a great friend lent me this, and I
latched onto it for dear life. And sadly, “Let’s Scare Jessica to Death”
is another hyped horror film that just gets too much credit. In a blunt
nutshell, Hancock’s film is boring. Not just boring but sluggishly
boring. There are pacing problems from the beginning, which attributes
to the sluggish storytelling in “Let’s Scare…” Sometimes the film is
competent enough with spine-tingling moments, but then it just
completely slows down and we are just too focused on the relationships
between these characters to focus on forward motion for Jessica and her
notion that something is trying to get her.
I’ve never seen a horror film that’s so inherently inconsistent with
pacing that speeds up then settles down, and then speeds up again, and
never really accomplishes sympathetic characters for the screen.
Particularly, Jessica who is really not only an unlikable character, but
one we never fully get to know. Hancock is much too focused on the
sanity/insanity persona to really give us an insight into her character
and pull us into her. And I was never really convinced that this was a
woman on the verge of breaking. Zohra Lampert as Jessica looks more
insane than a woman on the brink of insanity. She quivers, and giggles,
and looks outright loony from minute one. And that’s mainly because
Zohra gives an utterly awful performance, failing to draw any sympathies
and is just completely over the top. “Let’s Scare Jessica to Death” has
the potential to be better if the leads were much more competent in the
end, but it’s sadly another overrated horror classic.
In the end, it’s just another overrated
horror classic, sadly. Hancock’s horror thriller has its surefire high
points, but I could either take it or leave it. That’s due to the poor
performances, and the utterly unbalanced pacing that brings down an
otherwise interesting premise.
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