Editor’s Note: This was originally published for FANGORIA on July 13, 2009, and we’re proud to share it as part of The Gingold Files.
Examining the ritualistically mutilated corpse of a murder victim in Horsemen (not to be confused with the Australian revenge shocker The Horseman, and out on Lionsgate DVD), a coroner makes a point of saying this wasnโt a torture killing. The m.o. involved actually seems pretty agonizing, so perhaps the line is there in an attempt to separate Horsemen from the โtorture pornโ subgenre. If thatโs the case, itโs surprising that when the theological inspiration for the filmโs slayings is explained, along with the forthcoming number of murders the cops can expect, nobody pipes up with, โBut this isnโt another Se7en knockoff.โ
At least director Jonas Akerlund (like Se7enโs David Fincher, a music-video/commercials graduate) doesnโt imitate the monochrome/bleach-bypass look of so many serial thrillers from the past decade. His approach is more naturalistic in both the colors (sharply replicated in the discโs 1.78:1 transfer) and visual storytelling, though there are the expected moments of kinetic editing. Similarly, Dave Callahamโs script makes an earnest attempt to concern itself as much with the people whose lives are affected by/tied into the slayings as with the crimes themselves. Yet their good intentions lie on this particular road to hell alongside awkward performances and an overwhelming sense of been there, seen that.
Dennis Quaid goes through the movie with a permanent scowl (except for a couple of scenes where he gets all agitated and twitchy) as Aidan Breslin, a detective specializing in โforensic odontologyโ whoโs brought in on a case where a bunch of forcibly removed teeth have literally been left on a silver platter for the cops to find. As he investigates what becomes a series of similarly showy homicides, he also deals with the sort of troubled personal life that no screen cop is complete without. In this case, the recently widowed Aidan has been so consumed with work that he has little time for his two sons, resentful high-schooler Alex (Lou Taylor Pucci) and younger Sean (Liam James). Horsemen is the type of movie where the father and boys are seen getting all excited about attending a hockey game, and you count the seconds until his cell phone rings and he gets called away, disappointing his kids once again.
Aidan winds up spending at least as much time with Kristen (Ziyi Zhang), the adopted daughter of one of the victims. Thatโs becauseโand itโs not giving away too much to reveal this, since the movie does too fairly early on and so has some of the promo materialโsheโs the murderer, or at least one of them. The lawman and villain wind up having the kind of one-on-one, completely unsupervised discussions that probably only exist in the cinema, in which Kristen speaks portentously about the methods and meanings of what she and her cohorts, whose actions are informed by the biblical Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, are up to. Zhang, so striking in the likes of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and House of Flying Daggers, is seriously miscast here; even wearing the pigtails she sports in her first scenes, the actress, who was in her late 20s during filming, doesnโt make for a convincing teenager, and her heavy accent isnโt believable either coming from a girl whoโs supposedly been living with an American family since age 8. (For that matter, thereโs no discernible narrative reason why this character has to be an adopteeโas she was in the script before Zhangโs casting, the DVD commentary revealsโin the first place.)
Aidan and Kristenโs tรชte-ร -tรชtes alternate with the strife between Aidan and Alex, Aidanโs consultations with a priest (Paul Dooley) and the discovery of another body or twoโuntil the movie takes an out-of-nowhere left turn to spend time with a couple of brothers who couldnโt look less alike. (Perhaps one of them was adopted too?) The movie stumbles through a few glaring lapses in logic on the way to its climactic revelationโwhich involves the biggest plot hole of all, one that the filmmakers try unsuccessfully to paper over.
Horsemen has the feel of a movie in which material that could have made its more befuddling plot turns go down easier has been shorn out, but the deleted scenes included on the disc donโt offer much relief. Running just over 11 minutes, they mostly retread ground and restate ideas already covered in the feature, though one does help justify the prominent opening-credits billing of Peter Stormare, who appears for only a few minutes in the movie proper asโhereโs a surpriseโa sleazy pervert.
The commentary, by Akerlund and director of photography Eric Broms, reveals that the postproduction tinkering went beyond scissoring this stuff outโseveral key moments, including a couple of the major crime-scene setpieces and the finale, underwent reshoots a year after principal photography was completed. The duoโs discussion goes silent too often, and despite Bromsโ presence, the art of Horsemenโs cinematography is barely addressed. Instead, they inform us several times about how cold the shoot was, and thereโs quite a bit of talk about the body-suspension techniques (involving large hooks through the skin) employed by the killers, and which Akerlund almost tried out himself. Too bad he didnโtโthat would have made for an interesting photo gallery, and the ultimate example of a filmmaker suffering for his art.