Dream House

A psychological thriller so bad, its director and stars disowned it

Dream House

© 2011 MORGAN CREEK ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Director: Jim Sheridan
Starring: Daniel Craig, Rachel Weisz, Naomi Watts
Time Out rating:

Disowned by director Jim Sheridan, then denied the oxygen of publicity by stars Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz, this bastardised psychological thriller bears the scars of its troubled history. The warmly observed opening scenes, in which downsizing book publisher Will Atenton (Craig), his wife Libby (Weisz) and their two daughters luxuriate in their New England home, are a testament to Sheridan’s improvisational methods. But production company Morgan Creek’s micro-managing executives felt that Sheridan’s loose-wristed approach was ill-suited to the more generic elements of the film’s mystery plot, so they put together their own edit. The idyllic house, it transpires, was the site of a grisly triple-murder, about which cagey neighbour Ann Patterson (Naomi Watts) is reluctant to speak. As Will investigates these killings, he learns some disturbing home truths. How much remains of David Loucka’s screenplay is hard to say, but this bowdlerised cut – by tipping its hand way too early and erasing the blurred line between two levels of reality – is a well-acted but ramshackle mess.

Dream House opens nationwide on November 23



By Nigel Floyd
Please note: All information is correct at the time of writing but is subject to change without notice.

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