Having been hired to do specialized research, a historian rents a room in a local hotel. He does not know that the hotel is the successor building to an ill-famed dwelling associated with an equally ill-famed bishop. Could the centuries-old accusations of witchcraft and devil worship still be relevant ?
Since I don't remember having read the source story by M R James, I can't say anything about the fidelity of this adaptation. So I'll just try to evaluate it as a creative work on its own merits.
"Number 13" starts out slowly but gains pace and excitement as it goes along. The premise seems to have been inspired by that superstitious dislike of the number 13 to be found in much of Western culture. This dislike has led to strange phenomena such as buildings without a thirteenth floor, a thirteenth flat, a thirteenth elevator and so on. The plot deals with a richly dislikeable historian who discovers that there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of even after a dinner of pineapple pizza, chicken vindaloo and baked Alaska flambé.
On the whole "Number 13" is well-made and soigné, although it may lack something in the "existential horror" department. (I don't know about you, but I've always found this number 13-thing silly rather than scary. One might just as well start to worry about the color lilac or about the size of Roubaix.) Still, the movie does succeed in conjuring up an unsettling atmosphere. Much is owed to a good choice of locations. Just take a look at that old hotel with its dark woodwork and panelling. Who could remain there and thrive ? Surrounded by such gloom, most guests would feel their life energy waver and ebb, like guttering candles.
There's also a clever evocation of the hotel as a closed-off, self-contained entity standing in the middle of a city but ticking away according to its own rules. One would not be surprised to learn that, every Walpurgis night, the building travels through the air in order to land on a cursed mountaintop...
Since I don't remember having read the source story by M R James, I can't say anything about the fidelity of this adaptation. So I'll just try to evaluate it as a creative work on its own merits.
"Number 13" starts out slowly but gains pace and excitement as it goes along. The premise seems to have been inspired by that superstitious dislike of the number 13 to be found in much of Western culture. This dislike has led to strange phenomena such as buildings without a thirteenth floor, a thirteenth flat, a thirteenth elevator and so on. The plot deals with a richly dislikeable historian who discovers that there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of even after a dinner of pineapple pizza, chicken vindaloo and baked Alaska flambé.
On the whole "Number 13" is well-made and soigné, although it may lack something in the "existential horror" department. (I don't know about you, but I've always found this number 13-thing silly rather than scary. One might just as well start to worry about the color lilac or about the size of Roubaix.) Still, the movie does succeed in conjuring up an unsettling atmosphere. Much is owed to a good choice of locations. Just take a look at that old hotel with its dark woodwork and panelling. Who could remain there and thrive ? Surrounded by such gloom, most guests would feel their life energy waver and ebb, like guttering candles.
There's also a clever evocation of the hotel as a closed-off, self-contained entity standing in the middle of a city but ticking away according to its own rules. One would not be surprised to learn that, every Walpurgis night, the building travels through the air in order to land on a cursed mountaintop...
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