Are you in the mood to sit on your couch and watch a
supernatural detective story starring Scott Bakula? If the answer to that
question is yes, you’re in luck, as Clive Barker’s Lord of
Illusions just got a special edition Blu-ray release, including an
extended director’s cut, courtesy of the fine folks at Scream Factory. If
you’re familiar with their work, you know that means you get an awesome movie
and a fantastic package of extra goodies.
Awesomely ‘90s Day-Glo noir, Lord of
Illusions has everything you want. There’s a hardboiled private eye, a
sprawling mystery, and a femme fatale, and it just also so happens to be horror
themed. This particular dick, Harry D’Amour (Bakula), always finds himself
embroiled in the occult. As is said, he “Walks the line between heaven and
hell.” That’s how the story begins. The New York gumshoe is drinking off
memories of his last case, a child possessed by a demon. He’s broken and
haggard, and did I mention drunk. But maybe this new case that will take him to
Los Angeles is just what he needs, and he trades the gloom and rain of NYC for
the California sun. Tasked with a simple insurance fraud case, it isn’t long before
D’Amour stumbles into the shadowy world of magic, illusions, and a cult trying
to raise their leader from the dead.
Not that anyone has been watching it, but you can find
definite shades of Lord on Constantine,
at least for a while longer until it’s cancelled. Not the Hellblazer
comics, but you feel Barker’s influence on NBC’s troubled series. The lead is
more deeply entwined in the dark arts, but he’s very much a detective in this
vein, and the mood and feel are similar. For a filmmaker with only three proper
features to his name as a director (though he is a prolific writer of books and
movies), Barker has a long and reaching influence on horror.
D’Amour isn’t the only one here who walks between two
worlds, and that duality, that sense of appearance versus reality, is an
important piece of the Lord of Illusions puzzle. Swann
(Kevin J. O’Connor) is a celebrated illusionist, like David Blaine style
illusions, but the kicker is, he uses real magic, deceiving his audience even
more than they realize. Married to the sultry Dorothea (Famke Janssen), their
marriage is not what it looks like from the outside. A cult of outwardly normal
people—some of them, anyway, hide in plain sight, others not so much—seeks to
recall their fallen master Nix (Daniel Von Bargen), who is not quite living,
but not exactly dead. Even the primary antagonist for much of the movie,
Butterfield (Barry Del Sherman), exudes a kind of androgyny, straddling strict
lines of gender.
Even nearly 20 years later, Lord of
Illusions holds up relatively well, at least for horror heads.
Non-genre fans are likely to dismiss this as hokey and outmoded. But Barker
fills his film with stark, startling imagery, especially early on, and he’s not
afraid to get grim, doing things like killing a child from time to time. Many
of the special effects are, admittedly, super dated, and this is certainly an
artifact of the 1990s, but if you can get past that, they add an external layer
of camp and cheese to solid horror-infused, hard-boiled noir, one with
surprisingly goofy undertones. An occasional Loony Tunes style
auditory cue, maybe a wobbly sproing, wouldn’t be out of place from time to
time. No one is ever going to accuse Bakula of being a total badass, but he has
the haggard, world-weary investigator bit down.
There are some flat notes in the middle that take place at a
kind of magic roundtable discussion as D’Amour tries to penetrate the inner
circles of the illusionist world. Outside of this, however, as he pokes around,
trying to discern the actual magic from the trickery, Barker creates a rhythmic
tension. Lord is best when it builds like this, when it
stays a mystery with supernatural elements and doesn’t veer too far to one side
or another.
If you’re familiar with Scream Factory, the genre arm of
Shout Factory, you know this two-disc set is going to be full to bursting with
bonus features. Disc one is the 109-minute theatrical version of Lord
of Illusions, while disc two is home to a new HD transfer of the
director’s cut, with an additional 12 minutes of material originally left on
the cutting room floor. In addition to that, there’s an extensive collection of
deleted scenes that fill out the story even more.
You get a featurette called “A Gathering of Magic,” as well
as a compilation of behind-the-scenes footage from the set that gives you a
glimpse of what went on beyond the frame. A new interview with Martin Mercer,
the storyboard artist, is a nice bonus, but as usual in these cases, it’s the
commentary track with Barker that is the real selling point for this package.
Writer, director, and general author of this entire world, he’s in a unique
position to offer insight into his work and choices, and he’s never been shy
about offering up information.
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