‘The Crow’: Maybe it’s Nostalgia Talking, but the Film is Haunting and Memorable

Metal singer Eric (Brandon Lee) and his fiancée Shelly (Sofia Shinas) are brutally murdered in their home by a gang of thugs. But, as legend goes, “when someone dies a crow carries their soul to the land of the dead. But sometimes something so bad happens that a terrible sadness is carried with them and the soul can’t rest. Then sometimes—just sometimes—the crow can bring that soul back to put the wrong things right.” A year later one such crow brings Eric back from the grave, fresh as a daisy, to get revenge. But the dimwitted henchmen are only the start. Aided by police officer Albrecht (Ernie Hudson), he sets out to take down Top Dollar (Michael Wincott), the man who ordered the murders.

crow1

The Crow is famous for Brandon Lee dying while filming. Somehow the filmmakers seamlessly finished it without him (though there are some scenes when Eric stands in his old apartment and plays guitar that look suspiciously like filler material). More important to me in the film is the beautiful cinematography, great soundtrack, and solid writing (it was penned by David J. Schow and horror writer John Shirley).

crow4
“This took me hours, but it’s totally worth the limited time I have to be back from the dead, because the bad guys will totally know it’s a message from me even though they have no reason to associate me with crows!”

Pretty much my only gripe with the movie is that of the four minor-league thugs working for Top Dollar that Eric kills, the Black guy dies first—cliché! Of the four, he was also the most interesting–he was Knife-throwing Guy while the others were Likes Cars Guy, Junkie Guy, and Nothing to Distinguish Him Guy. I am a little puzzled by some of the language used in the movie; it’s rated R, but characters still say things like “ass-head” and “What the crap?” (A warning: no matter how many times G4 airs it, don’t watch this on T.V.; phrases like “I feel like a little worm on a big fucking hook” turn into “big fishing hook”).

You know, the super white face for a guy whose dad was Chinese is pretty disconcerting, too

On the whole, it’s accessible to different crowds. For action fans, it stars Bruce Lee’s son and has lots of fight scenes, one-liners (tolerable ones), and explosions. For horror fans, there’s a dark tone, gory murders, Tony Todd, and Ling Bai. I recommend it especially to newly hatched emo kids–start here, and learn much.

crow3

Published by GhoulieJoe

I'm a mom who loves horror movies, the '80s, and the library. I write about the above three topics more than is healthy. I've got reviews, listicles, lil nonfiction pieces, and random bits of whutnot. I also included some pretentious as hell microfiction (don't worry, it's at the bottom). Because horror is life and vice versa.

Leave a comment

Is this your new site? Log in to activate admin features and dismiss this message
Log In