Book Review - Dark Shadows: The Visual Companion
London, Titan Books, November 2012, hardcover $39.95 (192 pages).
Dark Shadows: The Visual Companion is another “not the making of” art book that nevertheless contains “scores of photos, concept drawings, production designs, and interviews with the cast and crew,” to quote the back-cover blurb. This book is more for the Dark Shadows fan than for the filmmaker looking for VFX technical information, but the latter will still find much of interest here.
Dark Shadows the Tim Burton/Johnny Depp movie, released in May 2012, is inspired by and a tribute to the original Dark Shadows “gothic soap opera” television series of June 1966 to April 1971, created by Dan Curtis. The 2012 movie is a summary of the plot of the five-year TV series. In the 1760s-1770s the Collins family emigrates from Liverpool, England to the Maine seacoast in North America and establishes a prosperous fishing village, Collinsport, dominated by an ornate mansion, Collinwood. Barnabas Collins, the young heir of the family (Johnny Depp), forms a romantic relationship with the family maid, Angelique (Eva Green), but is not interested in carrying it beyond a momentary flirtation. Angelique, a jealous powerful witch, kills Barnabas’ parents and bespells his true love, Josette du Pres (Bella Heathcote), into jumping from a cliff into the sea. When Barnabas, grief-stricken, follows her to his death, Angelique curses him to become an immortal vampire. Angelique leads the Collinsport villagers to capture and bury him.
Almost 200 years later, in 1972, Barnabas’ coffin is dug up by construction workers, releasing him. He returns to Collinwood to find it a decaying remnant of its past glory, inhabited by only seven people: Elizabeth (Michelle Pffeiffer), the current family leader, her 15-year-old daughter Carolyn (Chloë Grace Moretz), her weak brother Roger (Jonny Lee Miller), Roger’s 10-year-old son David (Gulliver McGrath), David’s live-in psychiatrist Dr. Julia Hoffman (Helena Bonham Carter), Willie the sullen caretaker (Jackie Earle Haley), and David’s just-hired governess, Victoria Winters, who Barnabas recognizes as the reincarnation of Josette. Barnabas, struggling to restrain his lust for blood, poses as a distant relative come to rebuild the family fortune, revealing his true identity and nature only to Elizabeth to show her a rich treasure hidden within the mansion. Elizabeth has Collinwood cleaned and renovated, and Barnabas and Victoria resume their interrupted love; but Angelique, who has used her witchcraft to remain young and to impoverish the Collins over 200 years, is furious. She destroys the Collinsport fishery, turns Carolyn into a werewolf, and again incites the townsfolk against all the inhabitants of Collinwood. In the dramatic climax, Barnabas’ and Angelique’s true natures are exposed, and Angelique tries to destroy Collinwood and the last of the Collins family in a spectacular sorcerous battle.
The book begins with photos of director Tim Burton together with Johnny Depp in his Barnabas Collins makeup, and a few publicity photos of the original TV series featuring Jonathan Frid as Barnabas. The “History” reveals that it was Dan Curtis who approached Johnny Depp early in the 2000s about starring as Barnabas Collins in a theatrical feature remake of Dark Shadows. Depp liked the idea, but at the time he was contracted for other films. Later, after completing his other commitments (and unfortunately after Curtis had died), Depp took the idea to Tim Burton who enthusiastically undertook it. The story of the making of the film is detailed.























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