Movie: Pet Sematary
Release date: April 5 2019
Reviewed by: Chris Hewitt
Louis Creed (Jason Clarke) moves his family to a house in rural Maine, adjacent to a pet cemetery. When his daughterโs cat dies, Louis soon finds the ancient burial ground beyond the cemetery can bring the dead back to life. And itโs only a matter of time before tragedy strikes and its powers are required to resurrect a humanโฆ
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Stephen King and Hollywood have never exactly been strange bedfellows, but thereโs no question that the master of horror is flavour of the month right now.
And while there are still plenty of King works that remain unadapted (The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon, Revival, and From A Buick 8, to name but three), itโs perhaps inevitable that weโve already reached the full-blown remake stage of the Kingnaissance.

Paramount Pictures
Pet Sematary is, without question, Kingโs darkest, bleakest, most sobering novel โ so much so that the author has confessed that he once thought of not publishing it. A pitch-black examination of grief and madness, with the most heartrending thing any parent can go through โ the death of a child โ at its core, itโs already been made once before for the big screen, in the guise of Mary Lambertโs lurid 1989 version.

Amy Seimetz stars as Rachel Creed. (Paramount Pictures)
But thirty years have passed, and so here come co-directors Kevin Kรถlsch and Dennis Widmyer to tell the tale again.
โAgainโ being the operative word. For this is, by and large, exactly the same tale. There are some twists in the tale โ including one fairly major change, which we wonโt spoil here, that increases the physical threat posed by the recently deceased, but is much less horrifying than the original version of events โ but otherwise this is fairly faithful to the King novel.
Itโs a more serious-minded take on the source material than Lambertโs film, with Laurie Roseโs tastefully composed framing, the muted colour pallet, and the sinister, unyielding stare of the creepy undead cat, Church (played here by four feline thesps), conjuring up a deadly serious, dread-filled atmosphere.
Lambert was able to throw in a goofy King cameo. Thereโs no such levity here.

John Lithgow stars as Jud Crandall (Image: Paramount Pictures)
The performances reflect that. John Lithgow twinkles as Jud Crandall, the Creedsโ kindly neighbour, while Jetรฉ Laurence shines as their daughter, Ellie, who is given more time in the spotlight than her young brother, Gage, this time around.
Itโs Clarke โ a huge upgrade on the wooden Dale Midkiff โ whoโs the anchor, his blue eyes becoming increasingly distant and haunted as he gives into madness and grief.
Heโs excellent, but it seems sometimes that the directors are so keen to get to the bits everybody remembers (yes, thereโs a bit with a huge lorry.
Yes, thereโs a bit of business with a straight razor) that they skip over some key stages in Louisโ breakdown.
Excising a crucial bit of backstory from the narrative also makes Judโs offer to bury Church in an ancient Native American burial ground, knowing all the chaos it might unleash, fairly inexplicable.

Promotional poster for Kolsch and Widmyerโs reboot of Pet Sematary. (Paramount Pictures)
Still, if the carefully calibrated atmosphere doesnโt get you, the jump scares will.
And there are plenty of those by the time the third act rolls around, when the movie turns into a fairly straightforward slasher, complete with logic holes you could drive an 18-wheeler truck through.
A decent, if inessential, take on one of Stephen Kingโs best novels. Sometimes original is better.
Watch cast member Jetรฉ Laurence discuss her character in Pet Sematary