Count Magnus
- El episodio se emitió el 23 dic 2022
- 30min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,4/10
506
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaThe inquisitive Mr Wraxhall discovers that a long-dead Swedish nobleman does not lie easy in his tomb.The inquisitive Mr Wraxhall discovers that a long-dead Swedish nobleman does not lie easy in his tomb.The inquisitive Mr Wraxhall discovers that a long-dead Swedish nobleman does not lie easy in his tomb.
Barry McStay
- Erik
- (as Barry Brett-McStay)
Luie Caballero
- Man walking out of public house
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
As a lover of the annual English Christmas ghost story tradition, I was hoping for a lot more than what was actually served up to us with this 2022 Christmas ghost story treat.
Zero atmosphere, poor casting, dull predictable cinematography which lacked subtly and imagination, the Director stomps his way through this tale with as much presence as the omnipresent smoke machine which loyally pumps away in the background throughout most of the shots in this poor visual effort of a film. Please Mr Gatiss allow someone else to take on the next Christmas ghost story installment, or unfortunately this wonderful christmas tradition will die a unremarkable death. M. R. James will never forgive you.
Zero atmosphere, poor casting, dull predictable cinematography which lacked subtly and imagination, the Director stomps his way through this tale with as much presence as the omnipresent smoke machine which loyally pumps away in the background throughout most of the shots in this poor visual effort of a film. Please Mr Gatiss allow someone else to take on the next Christmas ghost story installment, or unfortunately this wonderful christmas tradition will die a unremarkable death. M. R. James will never forgive you.
Englishman Mr Wraxhall travels to Scandinavia, to the home of the widow Froken de la Gardie, who's home was formerly owned by the cruel Count Magnus.
It was a quite enjoyable thirty minutes, half an hour of atmosphere and folklore, slightly lacking in scares maybe, but for me, this was one of the better episodes, it's a good one.
I liked the story, it has a definite appeal, just like The Mezzotint did, I liked the idea of a bumbling Englishman inquisitively poking around in matters that didn't concern him, his quiet curiosity ultimately proving costly. There's something particularly appealing about Scandinavian horror stories.
Jason Watkins was excellent as Wraxhall, he's such a talent, he had the right balance of inquisitive and bumbling, MyAnna Buring was great as The pale Widow, I believed that she'd been living a secluded life.
Perfectly narrated by Krister Henriksson.
Visually pretty good, I particularly liked the scenes inside the house, and at the mausoleum, it was a nice production.
Overall, pretty good, 7/10.
It was a quite enjoyable thirty minutes, half an hour of atmosphere and folklore, slightly lacking in scares maybe, but for me, this was one of the better episodes, it's a good one.
I liked the story, it has a definite appeal, just like The Mezzotint did, I liked the idea of a bumbling Englishman inquisitively poking around in matters that didn't concern him, his quiet curiosity ultimately proving costly. There's something particularly appealing about Scandinavian horror stories.
Jason Watkins was excellent as Wraxhall, he's such a talent, he had the right balance of inquisitive and bumbling, MyAnna Buring was great as The pale Widow, I believed that she'd been living a secluded life.
Perfectly narrated by Krister Henriksson.
Visually pretty good, I particularly liked the scenes inside the house, and at the mausoleum, it was a nice production.
Overall, pretty good, 7/10.
This version of the classic M. R. James tale seems to have aroused the spleen of several commenters -- unduly, I think. Though I'm a lifelong James devotee with a particular affection for "Count Magnus," I don't think ANY film is going to do his stories justice. They are fragile confections, highly dependent, for their effect, on the dry, slightly droll tone of their narration; and whatever shudders they provoke are sometimes dependent on just a line or two of description, or even on a single phrase.
In order to properly fill up half an hour, Gatiss had to expand and augment the original tale. No, he isn't wholly successful -- this version isn't as sharp, wry, and subtle as the original -- but it's a worthy little horror film that I found sufficiently unsettling to keep me on edge, and it's certainly an improvement over the earlier James adaptations on TV. The dialogue Gattis has added seems fairly clever, and Jason Watkins is extremely well cast as the pompous, over-inquisitive protagonist.
P. S. I do think the film is a bit nasty and downbeat for Christmas (especially for kids), but the same can probably be said of most James tales -- and yet Christmas was apparently when he liked to tell them, as his contribution to the ghost-stories-at-Yuletide tradition.
In order to properly fill up half an hour, Gatiss had to expand and augment the original tale. No, he isn't wholly successful -- this version isn't as sharp, wry, and subtle as the original -- but it's a worthy little horror film that I found sufficiently unsettling to keep me on edge, and it's certainly an improvement over the earlier James adaptations on TV. The dialogue Gattis has added seems fairly clever, and Jason Watkins is extremely well cast as the pompous, over-inquisitive protagonist.
P. S. I do think the film is a bit nasty and downbeat for Christmas (especially for kids), but the same can probably be said of most James tales -- and yet Christmas was apparently when he liked to tell them, as his contribution to the ghost-stories-at-Yuletide tradition.
Gatiss's trek through the MR James back catalogue for fresh Christmas scares continues apace in Count Magnus. In essence the whole thing is built around the undoing of the pompous Herr Wraxhall, here played with glorious panache by the brilliant Jason Watkins. It's a role made for him really and his increasing consternation is a thing of serious wonder. There's a nicely Hammeresque vibe to the foreign "otherness" of the Swedish locale and the gothic atmosphere and local character feel spectacularly camp. As with all of these Gatiss seasonal spooks the big shocks feel a little underdone and the end a little flat, but the journey and the casting is more than half the fun here. Long may the format continue!
Over the past couple of years, I've caught up on a lot of these Christmas ghost stories that the BBC have been providing over the decades. Mark Gatiss has been the most recent custodian, and the last few years this has been his baby, but the MR James adaptations go all the way back to the 1970's. Unfortunately, whilst this one had lots of excellent build up, there was very little payoff.
Mr Wraxhall (Jason Watkins) heads to a Swedish estate to investigate the history of the de La Gardie family and meet their current Froken (MyAnna Buring). Conversations with the locals turn him on to Count Magnus de la Gardie, a cruel landowner, who is long dead and interred in a mausoleum on the estate. On investigation, he discovers that his sarcophagus is padlocked shut. Further enquiry leads him to learn that Count Magnus went on a 'dark pilgrimage' to Chorazin and a story about the unfortunate fate of two men who went poaching on his land at night.
Again, to a point it's all great. Jason Watkins is his usual brilliant self and the rest of the cast wonderfully aide building the tension. The visits to the mausoleum are scary with the padlocks either opening, or being open on each visit. But there's no real pay off to the decent build. There's one moment of genuine horror at the resolution of the flashback to the two men, but nothing to really pay off the actual story. I do believe in principle in things you don't see being scarier than the things you do, but I think there need to be hints leading you towards what something might look like. Here's I just feel like they didn't have the money to do anything, so it rather peters out to an underwhelming conclusion.
I didn't hate it, but last years "Mezzotint" was better realised.
Mr Wraxhall (Jason Watkins) heads to a Swedish estate to investigate the history of the de La Gardie family and meet their current Froken (MyAnna Buring). Conversations with the locals turn him on to Count Magnus de la Gardie, a cruel landowner, who is long dead and interred in a mausoleum on the estate. On investigation, he discovers that his sarcophagus is padlocked shut. Further enquiry leads him to learn that Count Magnus went on a 'dark pilgrimage' to Chorazin and a story about the unfortunate fate of two men who went poaching on his land at night.
Again, to a point it's all great. Jason Watkins is his usual brilliant self and the rest of the cast wonderfully aide building the tension. The visits to the mausoleum are scary with the padlocks either opening, or being open on each visit. But there's no real pay off to the decent build. There's one moment of genuine horror at the resolution of the flashback to the two men, but nothing to really pay off the actual story. I do believe in principle in things you don't see being scarier than the things you do, but I think there need to be hints leading you towards what something might look like. Here's I just feel like they didn't have the money to do anything, so it rather peters out to an underwhelming conclusion.
I didn't hate it, but last years "Mezzotint" was better realised.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idiomas
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Royal Standard of England, Forty Green, Reino Unido(Interior and exterior of pub)
- Empresas productoras
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