This may seem like just another trashy potboiler of the type you see
dozens of each year, and in many respects that’s just what it is. THE
WARD’S sole importance lies in the fact that it’s the iconic John
Carpenter’s first feature film in nearly a decade.
The Package
This 2010 low budgeter follows John Carpenter’s
disappointing sci fi/action/horror pastiche GHOSTS OF MARS (2001). THE
WARD would seem to be more in line with Carpenter’s sensibilities, yet,
despite nostalgic critics who proclaimed it the great man’s “comeback,”
it’s another disappointment. The film had a fairly strong publicity push
in the horror community but was given a thoroughly perfunctory release
theatrically and on DVD.
The Story
Kristen is a severely disturbed blond who’s shut up in
a mental ward after burning down a farm house. Having forgotten the
reason for her actions, Kristen focuses on surviving in this hostile
environment. It doesn’t help that she’s constantly assailed by horrific
flashbacks involving torture and confinement!
While incarcerated Kristen gets to know her fellow
inmates. Among them is the mousey Iris, a compulsive sketcher who’s
about to be let free--or so it seems. On her way out of the ward Iris is
overpowered by an unseen someone, who straps her to a chair and stabs
her through the eyeball with a deadly syringe.
Kristen becomes convinced that the ghost of a murdered
inmate named Alice is haunting the ward. Kristen attempts to track down
Alice, and break out of the ward while she’s at it, but fails in both
endeavors. In the meantime another fellow inmate, the pretty brunette
Sara, is strapped to a table and electrocuted--and another, the blonde
Emily, has her throat slashed.
Kristen and her pal Zoey, the only other remaining
inmate, attempt a second escape but are thwarted when Zoey is killed by
the shadowy psychopath who did in her companions. This leaves Kristen,
who’s about to discover something rather important about herself and the
ward.
The Direction
Looking for glimpses of John Carpenter’s (former)
genius for horror and suspense? You won’t find too many in THE WARD, an
obvious and uninspired programmer through and through. The film has a
slick and good-looking veneer, but beyond that it’s hard to discern any
trace of the John Carpenter of
HALLOWEEN or
THE THING
herein.
Unlike nearly all of Carpenter’s other films, this one
was not lensed in Panavision, and has thoroughly generic music by
Mark Kilian in place of the striking minimalist scores of Carpenter’s
other films. Shopworn genre clichés--flashing lightning, noisy music
cues, etc--are utilized throughout, and the performers appear to have
been encouraged to overact shamelessly. If this film resembles anything
it’s the Rick Rosenthal directed
HALLOWEEN II in its hospital setting
and emphasis on splatter, and that’s not a good thing (HALLOWEEN II
being a film Carpenter admittedly hates).
The screenplay by Michael and Shawn Rasmussen is
confusing, with too many disparate narrative strands (the heroine’s
mental problems and those of her fellow inmates, the possibility of a
ghost and/or psycho on the loose, the story of the murdered girl, etc).
The script is also plain lazy in its inattention to detail: would the
overseers of a mental ward really leave a sharp paper cutter
lying around for the heroine to steal, or forget to lock the door to the
ward pharmacy? Those things, by the way, aren’t justified by the twist
ending, which resembles those of IDENTITY (2003) and SHUTTER ISLAND
(2010) in the way it transforms a seemingly straightforward and
realistic account into a psychological reverie. Again, though, that
doesn’t excuse the script’s many inconsistencies, or the film’s overall
blandness.
Vital Statistics
THE WARD
Chamberlain Films/A Bigger Boat
Director: John Carpenter
Producers: Peter Block, Doug Mankoff, Mike Marcus, Andrew Spaulding
Screenplay: Michael Rasmussen, Shawn Rasmussen
Cinematography: Yaron Orbach
Editing: Patrick McMahon
Cast: Amber Heard, Mamie Gummer, Danielle Panabaker, Laura-Leigh, Lyndsy
Fonesca, Jared Harris, Sali Sayler, Susanna Burney, D.R. Anderson, Sean
Cook, Jillian Kramer