Eerie rather than scary, all signs point to the predictable -- but it does manage a U-turn into the provocative.
The Skeleton Key (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:143
Fresh:55
Rotten:88
Average Rating:5.3/10
Consensus: Thanks to its creaky and formulaic script, The Skeleton Key is more mumbo-jumbo than hoodoo and more dull than scary.
Runtime: 1 hr 44 mins
Genre: Thriller
Synopsis: After New Orleans hospice worker Caroline (Kate Hudson) answers a help wanted ad, she finds herself working as the live-in caretaker of Ben Devereaux (John Hurt), a stroke victim who has lost his... After New Orleans hospice worker Caroline (Kate Hudson) answers a help wanted ad, she finds herself working as the live-in caretaker of Ben Devereaux (John Hurt), a stroke victim who has lost his ability to speak. Ben's wife, Violet (Gena Rowlands), presents Caroline with a skeleton key to open any door in the house--with the exception of one, which she claims she has never been able to open. But curiosity gets the best of her, and Caroline opens the door to find a wealth of materials representing the old house's history of hoodoo, an ancient form of folk magic. She soon discovers that the house harbors a dark secret--one that Violet knows more about than she first admits. Breaking her string of lighthearted romantic comedies, Kate Hudson gives a performance that proves she's more than capable of playing a feisty damsel in distress. Ehren Kruger's (THE RING) script gives her some physically demanding scenes, while providing the audience with a steady string of effective jolts culminating in a SIXTH SENSE-style twist that few are likely to see coming. Louisiana's swampy, heavy atmosphere is literally a character in the film, while Gena Rowlands, at age 75, astounds once again with one of her most surprising roles. [More]
Starring: Kate Hudson, Gena Rowlands, John Hurt, Peter Sarsgaard
Starring: Kate Hudson, Gena Rowlands, John Hurt, Peter Sarsgaard, Joy Bryant
Director: Iain Softley
Director: Iain Softley
Screenwriter: Ehren Kruger
Producer: Michael Shamberg, Iain Softley, Stacey Sher
Studio: Universal Pictures
Reviews for The Skeleton Key
Atmospheric thriller that has its daft moments but redeems itself with a genuinely shocking climax.
Only die-hard Hudson fans or desperate horror junkies will find The Skeleton Key worth unlocking.
A diverting, stylish thriller that, despite pivoting on that and other whoppers, deserves credit for creating an authentic, original vibe.
For a widescreen studio creeper, Skeleton Key may not be The Others, but it at least invites comparison.
In a rare moment for the genre, it does get better as it rolls along, and that’s good enough for me.
The Skeleton Key is an old-fashioned movie -- more spooky than scary, more hinted at than spelled out, more Henry James than Stephen King.
The Skeleton Key is one hoodoo of a movie--literally. It's a movie about hoodoo, voodoo and cheap thrills set in a Louisiana backwater.
...the cinematic equivalent of a campfire story, a spooky tale with a few twists in store, sending you off to bed with a delicious shudder.
Full props for story and acting, even if the slow pace and predictable racial profiling of this thriller half-mires it into the Louisiana swamps it celebrates.
Lushly atmospheric and sporadically scary, this supernatural horror relies on characters and actors rather than effects but is defeated by cliches and illogical confrontations
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