Stonehearst Asylum
Stonehearst Asylum | |
---|---|
Teaser poster | |
Directed by | Brad Anderson |
Produced by | |
Screenplay by | Joseph Gangemi |
Based on |
"The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" by Edgar Allan Poe |
Starring | |
Music by | John Debney |
Cinematography | Thomas Yatsko |
Edited by | Brian Gates |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Millennium Films |
Release dates |
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Running time | 113 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Stonehearst Asylum, previously known as Eliza Graves, is an American thriller film directed by Brad Anderson and written by Joseph Gangemi, loosely based on the short story "The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether"[2] by Edgar Allan Poe. The film, starring Kate Beckinsale, Jim Sturgess, Michael Caine, Ben Kingsley, and David Thewlis, was released on October 24, 2014.
Plot
In 1899, an Oxford University professor demonstrates a case of female hysteria, Lady (Eliza) Graves (Kate Beckinsale), before his class. The patient is drugged and protesting that she is sane, but the professor points out that all mental patients claim to be sane, much as all criminals claim to be innocent. He ignores her demands that he not touch her to induce a fit for the students to observe. The professor advises his students to believe nothing they hear and only half of what they see.
Later, a young man, the newly-minted Dr. Edward Newgate, (Jim Sturgess), arrives at Stonehearst Asylum on Christmas, where he desires to take up residency. A group of armed men led by Mickey Finn (David Thewlis) allow him entry. Finn escorts him to the office of the superintendent, Dr. Silas Lamb (Ben Kingsley). Although Lamb was not expecting him, despite Newgate having sent letters preceding his arrival, he welcomes the help of an Oxford-educated doctor and grants him the residency.
Newgate is surprised by Lamb's unorthodox methods and uncustomarily humane asylum. Lamb explains that he does not believe in drugging or incarcerating his patients, and he encourages their delusions when he feels it will bring them greater happiness, thus creating a kind and dignified environment at the asylum.
Lady Graves, now a resident at Stonehearst, is introduced to Newgate, who appears immediately smitten. Lamb explains that the Lady Graves has an abusive and painful past. She developed hysteria from enduring her husband's "unnatural appetites" and can no longer bear emotional or physical contact without seizing in hysterical fits. She stabbed her husband in the right eye with a comb and bit off his left ear trying to protect herself, which led to her father committing her into the asylum to escape her marriage to her "monster" of a husband. Her husband has since been trying to free her back into his care. Dr. Lamb is currently prescribing musical therapy for her and refuses to declare her sane, for her own safety.
Though she brushes aside Newgate's attempts at flirtation, she is struck by his empathy and respectful demeanor. An elaborate Christmas feast follows, during which the staff and patients mingle and a small fight between Newgate and Finn occurs, cementing their dislike for one another. After the dinner, Lady Graves delivers ominous warnings to Newgate, and quietly insists that he flee the asylum, but Newgate refuses to leave without her.
The reason for Lady Graves' warning soon reveals itself. Newgate discovers dozens of prisoners being kept in basement cells. The prisoners reveal that they are the true staff of Stonehearst, and the doctors and nurses Newgate has met upstairs are actually patients.
The real superintendent, Dr. Benjamin Salt (Michael Caine), explains that Lamb and Finn drugged their drinks and led a revolt. Dr. Salt and Mrs. Pike (Sinéad Cusack), the matron, warn Newgate that Lamb is a dangerous madman – a surgeon who murdered his patients during wartime. Isolated and with limited options of regaining control over the asylum even should they be freed, the staff must remain in their cells to await outside assistance. They request that Dr. Newgate locate the keys in Finn's possession to release them, or else escape to London and seek help.
Lamb begins his unorthodox training for Newgate's residency through an enlightening, if hands-on, lesson in patient dignity. Newgate attempts to recruit Lady Graves to his cause of freeing the true staff, but she declines to become involved and tells him of Salt's and his staff's inhuman abuses. Newgate reveals the scars of his own abusive past and tells her he understands.
Newgate sneaks into Lamb's office and successfully retrieves Salt's notes, but not the keys. While hiding, he overhears Lamb and Finn discussing him. Finn is deeply suspicious of Newgate, but Lamb believes Newgate shows promise and could be a great asylum doctor one day. Both acknowledge the prisoners in the basement, and Lamb promises that the loose ends will be tied up by the New Year.
Salt's notes detail his barbaric medical treatments used against Lamb, who had been under his care for 9 years without cracking before the uprising. Newgate is conflicted when, after two of the prisoners in the basement escape to seek help, both die under suspicious circumstances after being caught by Finn.
While the patients are happy and thriving, there are some definite failings to Lamb's method of running the asylum. They are quickly running out of provisions and having difficulties keeping up with the every-day demands of the large institution, such as heating the building in winter. Some of the more violent patients, such as Finn, are also difficult to control, and he eventually murders a female patient.
By New Years, the patients are burning the furnishings for warmth and Lamb has destroyed Salt's mind via cranial electroshock, turning him into a patient in his own institution. Newgate is convinced the situation must come to and end and that he and Lady Graves should escape.
Newgate's attempt to drug the patients and gain control of the asylum is thwarted and Lamb prepares Newgate for electric shock therapy to turn him into a mental patient to live among them. It is revealed that Newgate had come to the asylum specifically to rescue the Lady Graves, whom he had seen at the Oxford medical demonstration and become fixated with. Before the treatment, Lamb grants Newgate a final request: to see a picture of Lady Graves that he keeps in his pocket. The true object in his pocket, a picture of one of the young soldiers Lamb shot (which Newgate discovered in the padded cell Salt kept Lamb in), causes Lamb to stagger out of the room in a fugue. Finn goes to pick up the electric prods to finish the job, but Newgate is rescued by Lady Graves who overcomes her hysterical fits to kill Finn via electrocution. A fire starts and spreads as Lady Graves rescues the staff from their cells and leads the patients out of the building.
Lamb has now become near-comatose from the crushing flashbacks of his past actions when, under extreme pressure during his time as a field doctor, Lamb had snapped and executed his battlefield patients as a form of mercy killing before attempting to kill himself.
After all are rescued, as daylight breaks, Newgate again asks Lady Graves to leave with him, but she says that she cannot be with him because he is sane and she is not. Newgate says that he is not sane, as he is madly in love with her, and he intimates that he has a secret to tell her.
Later, Lady Graves' husband and the earlier Oxford professor arrive at the asylum. The asylum has been restored to a gentler order under the kind hand of Mrs. Pike, who is now in charge and has incorporated many of Lamb's methods of treatment. The professor demands Lady Graves' release, but Mrs. Pike says that Dr. Newgate already released her weeks ago. The professor reveals that he is the true Dr. Newgate and the one they knew is an imposter. The Dr. Newgate they met was never a medical student, nor a doctor at all, but an escaped mental patient who had also been part of the exhibition. Dr. Lamb, playing chess with the reduced Dr. Salt, hears this and shows a spark of his previous self as he gleefully remarks "Checkmate."
Lady Graves and the impostor Newgate end the film at the Santa Cristina Asylum in Tuscany, Italy, where they are known as Dr. and Mrs. Lamb, treating mental patients with the original Lamb's methods. The two dance happily and embrace in a beautiful garden.
Cast
- Kate Beckinsale as Lady (Eliza) Graves[3]
- Jim Sturgess as Edward Newgate[4]
- Michael Caine as Dr. Benjamin Salt[5]
- Ben Kingsley as Dr. Silas Lamb[5]
- David Thewlis as Mickey Finn[6]
- Brendan Gleeson as The Alienist[6]
- Sinéad Cusack as Mrs. Pike[7]
- Sophie Kennedy Clark as Millie[7]
- Christopher Fulford as Paxton[7]
- Jason Flemyng as Swanwick
- Edmund Kingsley as Sir Charles Graves, Bt.
Production
Principal photography began in Bulgaria on June 21, 2013.[8] On July 31, 2014, the film's title Eliza Graves was changed to Stonehearst Asylum.[9]
Music
On November 25, 2013, John Debney was set to score the music for the film.[10] The soundtrack was released digitally on October 14, 2014, and was released physically on November 11.[11]
Reception
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 52% of 48 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating was 5.5/10. The site's consensus reads: "Stonehearst Asylum offers over-the-top fun for genre aficionados; for others, however, it's likely to prove a dull disappointment."[12] Metacritic rated it 52/100 based on fourteen reviews.[13]
Common criticism for the film centered upon what the reviewers felt was the film's failure to live up to its full potential, considering its atmosphere and all-A-list cast, except for the main character, Jim Sturgess, a relative unknown.[14][15] and the Los Angeles Times wrote, "On the surface, Anderson seems to have all the necessary pieces for a surreal psycho pop. But the fear factor eludes him, leaving "Stonehearst Asylum" more insipid than insane."[16]
Film Journal International and The A.V. Club both praised the film for its themes;[17] the reviewer for Film Journal International wrote, "While the film lacks the macabre humor of the original story, it does an excellent job of conveying the creeping horror of Victorian medicine."[18]
See also
- Shutter Island, a 2010 film, where Ben Kingsley plays a similar role.
References
- ↑ "STONEHEARST ASYLUM (15)". British Board of Film Classification. February 18, 2015. Retrieved February 26, 2015.
- ↑ Kate Beckinsale in Talks for Edgar Allan Poe Adaptation ‘Eliza Graves’
- ↑ "Kate Beckinsale in talks to lead psychological thriller 'Eliza Graves'". digitalspy.co.uk. 16 March 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
- ↑ "Jim Sturgess Joins Kate Beckinsale in Eliza Graves". movieweb.com. 2 April 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
- 1 2 "Michael Caine & Ben Kingsley Joining Brad Anderson's 'Eliza Graves'". firstshowing.net. 12 April 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
- 1 2 "David Thewlis And Brendan Gleeson Join Millennium’s ‘Eliza Graves’". deadline.com. 17 June 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
- 1 2 3 "‘Stonehearst Asylum’ Commits to Boredom For Eternity". deadline.com. 17 June 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
- ↑ "Eliza Graves is scheduled to begin shooting in Bulgaria on June 21st". screenrant.com. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
- ↑ Polowy, Kevin (July 31, 2014). "Ben Kingsley and Michael Caine Meet Again in ‘Stonehearst Asylum’ Trailer Premiere". yahoo.com. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
- ↑ "John Debney to Score Ivan Reitman’s ‘Draft Day’". filmmusicreporter.com. November 25, 2013. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
- ↑ "‘Stonehearst Asylum’ Soundtrack Details". filmmusicreporter.com. October 2, 2014. Retrieved October 31, 2014.
- ↑ "Stonehearst Asylum". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
- ↑ "Stonehearst Asylum". Metacritic. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
- ↑ CATSOULIS, JEANNETTE. times.com/2014/10/24/movies/stonehearst-asylum-stars-ben-kingsley-and-kate-beckinsale.html?partner=rss&emc=rss "Caution: This Institution Processes Nuts" Check
|url=
value (help). NY Times. Retrieved 8 November 2014. - ↑ Cooper, Patrick. "[Review] Atmospheric ‘Stonehearst Asylum’ Is a So-So Period Thriller". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
- ↑ Sharkey, Betsy. "'Stonehearst Asylum' has gothic air, can't lock in the terror". LA Times. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
- ↑ Vishnevetsky, Ignatiy. "Brad Anderson goes back to the madhouse with Stonehearst Asylum". AV Club. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
- ↑ McDonagh, Maitland. "Film Review: Stonehearst Asylum". Film Journal International. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
External links
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