Let’s get this straight: The Resurrected (also known as Shatterbrain or The Ancestor) is Dan O’Bannon’s foray into H.P. Lovecraft’s Case of Charles Dexter Ward. On paper, you have the Alien and Return of the Living Dead mastermind adapting Old Scratch himself. In practice? It’s an odd beast—half noir, half supernatural epic, and entirely unapologetic in being gloriously uneven. But if you embrace its flaws, there’s genuine power and oddball charm hidden among the corpses and crypts.
🎭 Sarandon’s Screamingly Classic Fright Night 2 Energy
Chris Sarandon stars as Charles Dexter Ward/Joseph Curwen, a performance so over-the-top he sometimes seems to think he’s auditioning for Fright Night Part 2—the cheesy B-movie sequel where every line is screamed, every eyebrow raises like it’s auditioning for a horror host gig, and every scene feels like pure adrenaline. Instead of suave vampiric menace à la Fright Night, Sarandon’s Curwen is closer to a wild-eyed madman who laughs into grimy portraits and lounges in revivalist splendor. It’s absurd, theatrical—and cult charisma incarnate . If you ever wanted to see Curwen play second banana to Jerry Dandrige, this is your ticket.
🕵️♂️ Noir Meets Necromancy
O’Bannon and writer Brent Friedman mix detective tropes with occult fever. We follow private eye John March (John Terry) summoned by Claire Ward (Jane Sibbett) to figure out what her husband is up to—because “garage alchemy and secret family portraits” apparently isn’t therapeutic Sunday work . This dual-genre structure—gumshoe meets necromancer—is audacious and occasionally brilliant. But tonal swings from post-it-note mystery to creature FX grindhouse can leave you seasick in a cinematic funhouse.
💀 Practical Effects That Still Chomp
The film’s strength lies in its old-school, tactile FX. Flesh distortions, animated corpses, stop-motion flourishes, supernatural necrosis—it’s all here and ugly in the best way . No CGI posterboard nonsense—just rubber prosthetics and real blood. Critics and Lovecraft fans alike praise how this looks and resonates with the macabre spirit of the source material
⏱ Pacing and Plot Twists That Trip Over Themselves
Where it falters is in its pacing. At 108 minutes, occasional scenes drag like a corpse across cobblestones. Genre switches pop up mid-chapter; detective threads end abruptly; character motivations jump left without warning . O’Bannon reportedly fell ill during editing, allowing studio interference that trimmed floors, reshuffled scenes, and left narrative residue in the script’s wake
🧪 The Charm of Chris Sarandon’s Stage-Apocalypse
But you can’t resist Sarandon when he’s on. Think vampire meets stage magician in a haunted opera. He dominates the screen, chewing scenery like a theatrical vampire munching on the furniture—unhinged, unfiltered, undeniably fun. He is the movie: a self-aware horror cabaret that asks… why be scary when you can mesmerize?
🔮 Lovecraftian Soul Underneath the Shambles
True Lovecraft fans will forgive the bloat for the stubborn atmosphere. Creepy visuals, brittle dread, and the creeping suggestion that ancient family curses are more than metaphors—these moments breathe under the clutter . While mainstream horror mysteries might skip the slow buildup, this one knows how to whisper cruelty into corners.
🧟 Characters That Don’t Ghost You
Beyond Sarandon’s Yowza-and-a-half performance, there are grounded turns by John Terry and Jane Sibbett. Terry’s PI feels world-weary in the face of supernatural weirdness; Sibbett’s Claire is more than a trophy—she’s conflicted, honest, and holding together her sanity with brittle bones.
🎯 Final Verdict
The Resurrected isn’t perfect. Its narrative structure bleeds from noir to zombie drama to body horror, then back again. It’s bumpy, at times absurd, occasionally self-indulgent—but always memorable. It builds weird, tangible chills through practical FX and that bizarre, Brechtian performance by Sarandon who, frankly, believes he’s in the most overcaffeinated horror sequel ever greenlit.
✅ Watch it if:
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You want a curdled blend of detective noir, Lovecraft’s existential dread, and 90s practical FX mayhem.
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Chris Sarandon screaming his way through necromancer delirium feels like dinner theater—and you’re hungry for theatrics.
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Practical, physical horror (prosthetics, stop-motion, makeup FX) still makes your skin crawl in satisfying ways❌ Skip it if:
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You prefer your vampire tales sleek, structured, and serious.
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Plot clarity and pacing are more important than a gloriously gory midnight feast.
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You’d rather read Charles Dexter Ward than witness it gasping across the screen.
🎭 Final Score: 3.5/5 Ectoplasm-Covered Feet
A warm recommendation for lovers of 90s gore, Lovecraft’s deliciously cryptic horror, and deliciously unhinged performances. It’s a train-wreck you can’t look away from—especially when Chris Sarandon’s in the cab, steering it straight into the uncanny.

