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To everyone on here... what was your reaction when you first saw "From Hell"...

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  • Harry D
    replied
    Terrible movie. Nevermind Abberline being a drug-addled pretty boy and the Masonic piffle, if you're not going to get so much as the basic details of the murders right (Tabram was raped? Nichols was eviscerated? ), then don't even bother. As already stated, the Whitechapel Murders are already a gripping tale without resorting to that kind of sensationalism, but that's Hollyweird for ya!

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  • Steadmund Brand
    replied
    I remember being really excited about the film, having been a huge fan of the Graphic novel...I knew the Graphic novel was lets just say, not really historically accurate , so I had no doubt the film would be way off as well, but hoped it would be fun, like the book...I went to see it opening night (with a friend who is a big Alan Moore fan but knew next to nothing of the history of the case).. We both left the theater disgusted with what we saw....neither of us felt it did the book justice at all (not to mention the history.. but as I said... I didn't think it would anyway.. so i wasn't upset about that, that part was expected)...

    I ended up buying the 2 disk DVD version (just for the hidden features (in case you don't know 'Jack The Ripper: The Final Solution' (complete) is a hidden Easter egg on the DVD... I got it used for next to nothing so was worth it)..anyway, thinking I would never watch the movie itself again...then a friend of mine saw it on my shelf and said.. Oh I wanted to see that... can we watch it? And I did... this time, I just watched it as a film... not as a film based on the novel...or as a historian.. but just as fluff entertainment... and I was actually surprised.. I kind of enjoyed it (Depp, whom I usually really like is still just phoning in his role... and Graham.. well she is nice to look at anyway) but some of the performances were quite good, Ian Holm was amazing ( even though Nigel Hawthorne.. who was supposed to play the role, but sadly died before may have even made the film better)....and the sets are quite nice.. and there is a decent atmosphere, and a few stunning shots.... overall... as a film.. it wasn’t bad at all...but as piece of history.. garbage.

    Steadmund Brand

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  • Jon Guy
    replied
    I thought it was good fun. I love the way the film begins with the camera panning across London and then drops down into Dorset Street, and the Ripper`s theme music is excellent, probably the best to date.
    But Depp and Graham are woefully cast

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  • pinkmoon
    replied
    I thought it was very similar to "murder by decree" enjoyable rubbish.

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  • Rosella
    replied
    It's a good job that Abberline isn't still alive. Depp's performance of him as an opium-smoking psychic would finish him off for a second time.

    I've always been amused too by the very attractive East End prostitutes in colourful low cut outfits in JTR films, with their hair flowing down, and perfect teeth. Of course it's understandable from the point of view of a potential audience, but every now and then I think of Polly or Annie in one of those gowns...

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  • Defective Detective
    replied
    I loved it, actually, for all the bad accents and costumes in the place of clothing and the tired and stale Royal/Masonic Conspiracy hybrid.

    It's important to remember two things about the film From Hell: it isn't a Jack The Ripper movie, and it's not really an adaptation of the Alan Moore comic book. A screen version of that would be practically impossible, or it would take a ten or twelve hour miniseries to go through every nook and cranny in the story.

    What it is is basically a period-piece giallo, or American version of a giallo. The story is all in the sets and the cinematography; and I'm a sucker for stylization in film (one of the reasons I like the Tim Burton Batman movies better than the more recent Nolan ones, for instance). And From Hell is an absolutely gorgeous picture.

    Depp would be a terrible choice if the character he was playing were Abberline, but he isn't really playing Abberline; he's actually playing the psychic Lees with Abberline's name and occupation superimposed on him - and of course in the graphic novel the psychic character is secretly a self-conscious fraud, where Abberline isn't.

    "Altogether a different breed of killer."
    Last edited by Defective Detective; 10-15-2014, 06:45 PM.

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  • elleryqueen74
    replied
    It had potential in the first half hour or so but for me went downhill after that. Casting Depp as Abberline was one of the worst castings in history in my opinion.

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  • BillyE
    replied
    I've made my feelings on the movie "From Hell" abundantly clear on these boards, so I'll not get into that any further. One aspect I want to point out, though, is the scene as Gull is killing who he thinks is Mary Kelly, and there's a flash of light, and he appears in a medical theater being aplauded by medical students. The film never adequatly explains why this occurs. It makes sense if you've read the graphic novel, but the overwhelming majority will have only seen the movie. It's just one more confusing thing the Hughes brothers do because they assume everyone's read the graphic novel.

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  • spyglass
    replied
    Hi all !,
    Of course the Graphic Novel is far far superior to the film, however I still enjoyed it, I liked the look and feel of it.
    My favourite part was the CGI representation of the bottom of Fleet St and Ludgate circus, based on an photograph of that time.
    My other favourite part was when Gull ( JTR ) was sitting on the bed with MJK exactly like one of Walter Sickett's paintings...Brilliant !

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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by Bob Hinton View Post
    I think you have to watch the film with the absolutely certain knowledge that what you are about to see has absolutely nothing to do with Jack the Ripper. That said it does have a good, fast paced plot with good actors and actresses turning in good performances.

    The sets were brilliant (built just outside Prague) and the costuming well above standard. There were however two incidents that made it worth watching.

    One was the technique of shooting up through a glass tank of water as the murderer plunges his bloody hands in to it to wash them. Brilliant and I noticed copied on several films since.
    The other was the brilliantly atmospheric shot of the coach’s steps unfolding. All you could hear was the click clack as they released. Absolutely fantastic – so creepy!
    For those two things alone From Hell gets the patented Bob’s Seal of Approval.
    Agree.

    As a movie about Jack the Ripper its bunk, but as an entertaining(fantasy/thriller) movie its a masterpiece IMHO.

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  • Phil H
    replied
    Thanks, Stewart, very interesting and nice to see.

    Phil

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  • belinda
    replied
    Originally posted by claire View Post
    I'm not sure I thought too much of it at all--and I've only seen it once, despite buying it a couple of years ago to watch again. It's absolute junk, of course, but redeemed by JD (and about a litre of JD, too, actually).
    What was far, far, far worse was The Ripper--a bizarre, bizarre Aussie thing I came across on telly the other week, where people walked about a weird and clean set saying things like, ay guvnah, weeyah dya spose me stroids aaahh? The Reepah, ay? Fly-min Choina eef ee ain't troina ava gao wiff da woman ahm avin id off wiff.
    It was weird. It made From Hell look beautiful in its conception and execution.
    Do you remember any of the actors who were in the Australian film. I didn't know there had ever been an Australian version.

    Stewart you are so lucky to have met Nigel Hawthorne I love Yes Minister one of the best programmes ever made

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  • Zodiac
    replied
    It's like Deja Vu all over again!!!

    Didn't we go through all of this last year on the oh so cryptically named "From Hell" Thread? Hey Ho! No matter, last time we covered this ground Stewart sent me a lovely photo of Ms Graham, "Nise" Thanks again for that Stewart, I was going to say that since you send me her I have had her mounted but maybe that came out all wrong!!! Ohh no missus!!! etc. etc.

    Best wishes,

    Zodiac.
    Last edited by Zodiac; 07-09-2010, 01:43 AM.

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Nigel Hawthorne

    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
    ...
    Oh, and I thought Ian Holm (again an actor I have admired deeply from the mid-60s) coasted through the film. His final reaction to being caught used the same "trick" he had found for the scene in "Fellowship of the Ring" when he almost attacks Frodo. I believe he was a substitute for Nigel Hawthorne, who died, so perhaps that accounts for it.
    Phil
    Nigel Hawthorne was the original choice for Gull in the film. I met him at Greenford Studios when he was testing for the part. He was dressed in costume, top hat and red lined cloak and looked very impressive. I had a nice chat with him as he was very interested in the Ripper case. He seemed to prefer Druitt as a suspect. He was taken ill before filming commenced and Ian Holm stepped in. Nigel Hawthorne signed my copy of the script for me, see below.

    Click image for larger version

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  • Phil H
    replied
    As with the 1988 TV mini-series with Michael Caine - a HUGE amount of effort had gone into pre-production (sets especially).

    The weakness - as with so many JtR films - was the script and the approach.

    Part of me can understand why the "grandeur" of the royal conspiracy theory attracts film-makers, but having been covered by Murder By Decree and the Michael Caine series, it has surely been done to death (apologies for the poor taste of the pun).

    I came into first contact with the Ripper when I saw a trailer for the 1959 b&w movie when I was about 10 or 11. The idea of the top-hatted, caped figure walking over wet cobbles gave me nightmares for years. Trying to find out who he might have been led me to buy the McCormack paperback (Identity of JtR) and then years later to read more deeply.

    So films can have impact. But "From Hell? Nah!

    Oh, and I thought Ian Holm (again an actor I have admired deeply from the mid-60s) coasted through the film. His final reaction to being caught used the same "trick" he had found for the scene in "Fellowship of the Ring" when he almost attacks Frodo. I believe he was a substitute for Nigel Hawthorne, who died, so perhaps that accounts for it.

    Phil

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