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William Wilberforce by Derick Bingham
William Wilberforce by Derick Bingham





William Wilberforce by Derick Bingham

Stanley took that to heart, as the Color feels oppressive and dangerous thanks to the fact that we never end up learning too much about it. As a genre, cosmic horror (Lovecraft’s jam) generally calls for a lack of comprehension of the antagonists’ origins and motives. Sure, it starts with standard horror red flags, like phone calls from no one and youngest kid Jack (Julian Hilliard) ominously drawing scary monsters, but the Color proves to be much more adept at taking over its new home, warping time and enticing the Gardners to make increasingly dangerous choices in service of its purpose. The bounds of the Color’s power and influence are intentionally left vague, so the only real gauge of what it’s capable of is the deterioration of the Gardners. The Color, the disembodied force that escapes this meteorite and plagues the Gardners, proves to be an effective and malleable threat, and director Richard Stanley never runs out of new ways of using it to disturb and shock. Before long, a purplish alien meteorite crashes into their yard, and the psychic shockwaves it sends through the house are just the beginning of a slow descent into madness for the Gardner family.

William Wilberforce by Derick Bingham William Wilberforce by Derick Bingham

Nathan (Nicolas Cage) has moved the family there to focus on his wife Theresa’s (Joely Richardson) recovery from breast cancer. The film brings Lovecraft’s short story into the modern-day and follows the Gardner family, living on a secluded farm in the fictional Arkham County, Massachusetts.







William Wilberforce by Derick Bingham