Count Magnus
- Episode aired Dec 23, 2022
- 30m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
500
YOUR RATING
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.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
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Featured review
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.
- southdavid
- Dec 29, 2022
- Permalink
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- Royal Standard of England, Forty Green, UK(Interior and exterior of pub)
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