• News
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Articles and Long Reads
    • Interviews
    • Exclusives
  • Pop Culture
    • Movies
    • Television
    • Comic Books
    • Video Games
    • Toys & Collectibles
  • Flickering Myth Films
  • About
    • About Flickering Myth
    • Advertise on FlickeringMyth.com
    • Write for Flickering Myth

Flickering Myth

Film & TV News, Reviews and Features

  • Movies
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Long Reads
  • Trending

DVD Review – The Ward (2010)

October 17, 2011 by admin

The Ward, 2010.

Directed by John Carpenter.
Starring Amber Heard, Jared Harris, Danielle Panabaker, Mika Boorem and Lyndsy Fonseca.

SYNOPSIS:

After burning down a farmhouse, Kristen (Amber Heard) is institutionalised, but she is far from safe, as a ghost appears to be hunting down her ward-mates and brutally murdering them.

[WARNING, THIS REVIEW CONTAINS MORE SPOILERS THAN USUAL]

After a string of disappointments (his last decent film being the gleefully-schlocky Sam Neill starrer In The Mouth of Madness), horror genius John Carpenter went back to the drawing board. Or rather, to TV, to Mick Garris’ Masters of Horror series, where he proved he can still scare the crap out of us with his best work in ten years, particularly the superb Cigarette Burns episode. So it’s only right that he should return to the silver screen where he made his name with low-budget, nerve-racking thrillers and trail-blazing horror.

The Ward does feel a bit like an episode of Masters of Horror, but that’s no criticism, with Carpenter utilising his tiny budget with a small cast (Amber Heard is excellent as the bold but confused Kristen) and an isolated location which is as much a character as the actors themselves. The ward where the film is set is a looming, breathing entity, all dark, moody corridors at night and cold, off-kilter sparseness during the day. The sense of dread is looming, like some hulking, unknown mass long before the ghost even shows up.

Carpenter’s wise decision to set the film in the 1960s allows him to mine some of the savage and archaic medical treatments, such as electro-shock therapy for some quality scares. The genuine belief by Dr. Stringer (Jared Harris) that this barbaric procedure is beneficial is horrific enough, and the portrayal of it in the film is brutally graceful, as the camera pans down to Kristen’s writhing feet as electricity shoots through her. The electro-shock murder of one of the girls by the ghost is even more harshly realised – as the voltage is whacked up to full the girl’s body convulses and smokes, her flesh sizzling and burning.

Another of the ghost’s murder set-pieces definitely not for the squeamish is the medical instrument torture scene, which ends in a spiked instrument being driven through the victims eyeball, the camera cutting away just after the gruesome full penetration of the spike. Thirty-five years experience in practical effects and the skills of special effects supremos Gregory Nicotero and Howard Berger serve Carpenter well, the set-pieces being extremely effective in their gory glory. But they’d be nothing without the tension, which Carpenter delivers in buckets. It’d be unthinkable if the man who brought us the nerve-racking The Thing and Halloween couldn’t rack up the dread because simply put, he knows whats he’s doing. The winding, foreboding corridors, the creepy score and tight camerawork imbue the film with a sense of morbid anticipation that is completely tangible.

So it’s amazing right? Well, no, I’m afraid not. Masterful as the first and the second acts of The Ward are, it’s in the third act when the film simply falls on its face. The ghost’s corporeal presence begins to get silly (I can accept that she can pick things up, but Kristen being able to drive an axe into her body doesn’t seem very, well, ‘ghost-like’). As the girls get picked off, you find yourself largely unconcerned due to how underdeveloped their characters are. Also, the plot-development that the girls of the ward murdered the girl who became the ghost, their justification rather lightweight, seems distinctly unbelievable and over-the-top.

But all this could be forgivable, mere inadequacies were it not for the downright awful reveal that Kristen is schizophrenic. I really, really dislike the use of this horror cliché, so frequently the resort of lazy writers and genre hacks, surpassable in sheer unoriginality only by the ‘it was all a dream’ ending. Although I will admit I didn’t see it coming (I expected better from my beloved Carpenter), this twist was so tediously disappointing. Carpenter can do so much better, and he really doesn’t need to do the ‘mirror-shock’ cliché at the end either.

While it starts strong, The Ward eventually gets lost in it’s own genre pitfalls, while Carpenter seems to almost be parodying himself and the genre he helped revolutionise. It’s easy to blame the writers, but Carpenter wouldn’t have chose to make the film if he didn’t want to. Which begs the question, why didn’t he write his own feature, like in ‘the good old days’? Has the man who made horror what it is today ran out of ideas? Or is it back to TV for another ten years? Incidentally, that wasn’t meant to rhyme.

Roger Holland

Originally published October 17, 2011. Updated April 10, 2018.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

FMTV – Watch Our Latest Video Here

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:

Essential Gothic Horror Movies To Scare You Senseless

In a Violent Nature and Other Slasher Movies That Subvert the Genre

Ranking Horror Movies Based On Video Games

They Don’t Make ‘Em like Grosse Pointe Blank Anymore

The Craziest Takashi Miike Movies

The Worst Movies From The Best Horror Franchises

The Most Overhated Modern Superhero Movies

The Best Retro 2000 AD Video Games

The Most Obscure and Underrated Slasher Movies of the 1980s

The 10 Best Villains in Sylvester Stallone Movies

FEATURED POSTS:

Hasbro’s latest Marvel Legends Series reveals include Deadpool and Wolverine, Thunderbolts*, Spider-Man: Brand New Day, Secret Wars and more

Movie Review – O Horizon (2025)

Olivia Wilde is a dominatrix in I Want Your Sex trailer

Movie Review – The Furious (2025)

Robert the Doll returns with horror franchise reboot from Flickering Myth and Shepka Productions

Movie Review – I Am Frankelda (2026)

Movie Review – Disclosure Day (2026)

Movie Review – Diabolic (2026)

10 Essential Thrillers from 2016

Apple TV Review – Cape Fear

FLICKERING MYTH FILMS

 

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE:

The Must-See Movies of 2015

10 Great Val Kilmer Performances

The Essential Joe Dante Movies

13 Great Obscure Horror Movie Gems You Need to See

  • News
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Articles and Long Reads
    • Interviews
    • Exclusives
  • Pop Culture
    • Movies
    • Television
    • Comic Books
    • Video Games
    • Toys & Collectibles
  • Flickering Myth Films
  • About
    • About Flickering Myth
    • Advertise on FlickeringMyth.com
    • Write for Flickering Myth

© Flickering Myth Limited. All rights reserved. The reproduction, modification, distribution, or republication of the content without permission is strictly prohibited. Movie titles, images, etc. are registered trademarks / copyright their respective rights holders. Read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. If you can read this, you don't need glasses.


 

Flickering MythLogo Header Menu
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Movies
  • Features and Long Reads
  • Trending
  • Flickering Myth Films
  • About Flickering Myth
    • About Flickering Myth
    • Advertise on Flickering Myth
    • Write for Flickering Myth