The horror film from director André Øvredal, The Last Voyage of the Demeter, feels like it was intended to be a gothic set piece that affected a slow burn on the crew and audience to create a lasting horror experience. Instead, the film proves neither interesting nor scary in the sense that it is ostensibly supposed to be a horror film.
The story is culled from a chapter in the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker, that chronicles the journey of the merchant ship Demeter as it transports unmarked wooden crates from Carpathia to London. Once at sea, strange occurrences beset the ship and when the ship finally arrives on the English shores, it is a crewless, derelict wreck.
Working from a screenplay by Bragi F. Schut, Stefan Ruzowitzky, and Zak Olkewicz, director Øvredal appears adrift in the maritime horror setting. It ultimately feels as though the story needed a bit more updating to be an effective vessel for Øvredal’s vision. Whereas the director debuted in 2010 with the far superior Troll Hunter, this new film comes across as a step backwards as it lacks the passion and devotion that was at the core of his earlier work.
Throughout one gets the sense that the film should be far moodier, and perhaps a bit more riveting, than it ultimately is. There are numerous horror-film moments where the crew insanely goes their separate ways only to meet with individual gruesome deaths. It also doesn’t help that the visage of the vampire is so prevalent in the film’s promotional materials that it renders the fiend’s final reveal particularly impotent.
The cast does their best to keep things afloat, but there is little that standouts like Corey Hawkins as the main character Clemens, Aisling Franciosi’s Anna, or even David Dastmalchian’s Wojchek can do to steer the wandering plot in the proper direction.
Ultimately, The Last Voyage of the Demeter fails to deliver on its promise of classic tale of gothic horror. It had the opportunity to be a period version of something along the lines of John Carpenter’s The Thing (1982), but it failed in the sense that the film seems hopelessly out of step with its setting and desperately wants to connect on a more contemporary level.
Mike Tyrkus
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