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Not knowing what to expect, I was intrigued while watching The Crow. With a color palette so dark and monochromatic, it looks like the film was shot in black-and-white (actually director Alex Proyas’s intention before the studio quickly nixed the idea), and a grim opening, The Crow definitely flew into theaters before its time. With the titular hero being a musician (Brandon Lee) resurrected from the dead by a crow to seek vengeance on a group of psychotic criminals who raped his girlfriend and brutally murdered the both of them, this wasn’t exactly your typical superhero pic at the time. Darkly themed superhero movies are the rage nowadays, but in the ‘90s, a more adult-skewing comic book adaptation was a relatively new concept. The Crow’s rave response (it is 83% positive on Rotten Tomatoes) started motioning things in a new direction with more adult comic book adaptations taking place (ie. Spawn and Blade). Alex Proyas, one of the most stylistic directors around, does a fantastic job, bringing the world of The Crow to life. Enjoying his unlimited vision, as seen in Dark City, and his control of suspense with Knowing (love it or hate it, I am in the former camp), The Crow was Proyas’s first Hollywood feature film, which makes this effort all the more impressive. I was worried at first that the darkness and shadows in the film would lower my visibility of what is going on. However, Proyas expertly handles the lack of lighting with an assortment of angles for a unique look. Also, the intensely choreographed fighting sequences, shot in such a style, make the film certainly rank up there with us. The Crow reminds me of an ideal version of the abysmal franchise attempts for The Punisher.
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