Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe's The Woman in Black sets British horror record

 

Haunted Harry ... Daniel Radcliffe in The Woman in Black,
which has become the most successful British horror film at the UK box office


Daniel Radcliffe's The Woman in Black sets British horror record

This article is more than 8 years old
Potter's powers help ghost story become most successful British horror at UK box office, with haul of £14m in just three weeks
Ben Child
Wed 29 February 2012


The Woman in Black, starring Daniel Radcliffe, has become the most successful British horror at the UK box office with a haul of more than £14m in just three weeks of release.

The supernatural tale, from director James Watkins and the revived Hammer Films unit, has overtaken homegrown rivals including Danny Boyle's 28 Days Later and Edgar Wright's Shaun of the Dead. It has also outpaced similarly-themed US productions shot in the UK with British casts, such as Tim Burton's Sleepy Hollow, Alejandro Amenábar's The Others and Francis Ford Coppola's Dracula. Its success has been partly credited to it appealing to as broad a church as possible in being a horror film with a 12A certificate.

Written by British screenwriter Jane Goldman and based on Susan Hill's novel about a widower who travels to a remote mansion said to be haunted by spirits in Edwardian England, The Woman in Black has received mostly positive reviews. The Guardian's Xan Brooks noted (via a three-star review) that Radcliffe, the erstwhile star of the Harry Potter series, "had taken a shrewd baby-step in the right direction with this busy, bustling ghost story that at times appears less indebted to the Susan Hill bestseller than the Haunted Mansion ride at Disneyland".







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