Skip to content

REMEMBER ME

Written By:

Paul Mount
rememberme

DVD REVIEW: REMEMBER ME / CERT: 15 / DIRECTOR: ASHLEY PEARCE / SCREENPLAY: GWYNETH HUGHES / STARRING: MICHAEL PALIN, MARK ADDY, JODIE COMER, JULIA SAWALHA, SHEILA HANCOCK, MINA ANWAR / RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

The BBC appear to be establishing a tradition for spooky three-part Sunday night supernatural dramas, with 2012’s Secret of Crickley Hall, adapted from the novel by the late James Herbert, followed by this year’s brooding and oppressive Remember Me, an original story from Gwyneth Hughes. Cold winter nights are made for shows like these and Remember Me is a much darker and less predictable affair than Crickley Hall; it’s an out-and-out unashamed ghost story which flirts with themes and images reminiscent of the likes of The Ring and The Woman nn Black.

Michael Palin, in his first starring dramatic role in over two decades, plays frail-but-cheery eighty-something Tom Parfitt, who willingly surrenders his independence and moves into a care home. But before he can settle into his new home – Tom’s travelling light with nothing but an empty suitcase to show for his life and times – the spooky stuff starts happening. A social worker plunges to a grisly death from the window of Tom’s room, and troubled young care assistant Hannah (Cromer) finds herself fascinated by Tom and intrigued by the mystery of his long and tragic life. Crumpled, disillusioned police detective Rob Fairholme (Addy) is also drawn into Tom’s world of lost love and betrayal – and the unearthly spectral figure from Tom’s past who just won’t or can’t let him go.

Filmed in and around Huddersfield and Scarborough (the song ‘Scarborough Fair’ is integral to the storyline), the grim North has rarely looked grimmer than in Remember Me. The skies are constantly gloomy and thundery, the towns and villages are cold and grey, the countryside is barren and windswept; there‘s a discomfiting touch of the apocalyptic about the show‘s visual aesthetic. Yet it’s a perfect and unsettling backdrop to a story which unfolds at a measured and stately pace, a story which sets out its stall almost immediately and without pretension. This is an out-and-out ghost story and there’s no attempt made to rationalise what’s happening as anything other than supernatural. Tom himself, as we discover in the third and final episode, is trapped in and by his own past, and the eerie, ethereal figure which we first see, hair-raisingly, washed up on a beach in the first episode and which crops up to spook us throughout the series, is inexorably tied to the old man down through the ages.

Ultimately Remember Me wears its influences proudly and shamelessly on its sleeve. Its carefully-staged scares – running water, banging doors, creaking floors, ghostly figures in photographs – will be familiar friends to the horror literate but they’re largely new and untested territory for a sleepy Sunday night prime time BBC TV audience. If nothing else, Remember Me might itself be remembered as one of the shows which helped to reintroduce good old-fashioned shiver-me-timbers horror to mainstream British telly. And that, surely, can only be a very good thing indeed…

Special Features: None
 

SHARE YOUR COMMENTS BELOW OR ON TWITTER @STARBURST_MAG

Find your local STARBURST stockist HERE, or buy direct from us HERE. For our digital edition (available to read on your iOS, Android, Amazon, Windows 8, Samsung and/or Huawei device – all for just £1.99), visit MAGZTER DIGITAL NEWSSTAND.

CLICK TO BUY!

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

Paul Mount

You May Also Like...

still from titane film by julia ducournau, who has set her third film, titled alpha

TITANE And RAW Filmmaker Sets Her Third Film

French filmmaker Julia Ducournau should be a name well-known to any self-respecting horror fan, the mind behind the cannibal film Raw and the wild, genre-defying Titane. And in some good
Read More
godzilla x kong filmmaker adam wingard has upcoming film onslaught scooped up by A24. Still from The New Empire

A24 Scores Adam Wingard’s Action-Horror ONSLAUGHT

A24 has come out on top of an auction to pick up Onslaught, an action thriller directed by Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire filmmaker Adam Wingard, which he’s co-writing
Read More
louis leterrier to direct and produce sci-fi horror feature 11817

FAST X Filmmaker To Direct Sci-Fi Horror Film 11817

Fast X and Transporter filmmaker Louis Leterrier has been tapped to direct and produce the sci-fi horror film 11817, based on a script by Matthew Robinson (The Invention of Lying,
Read More

Emily Booth Teams Up with NYX at HorrorConUK

Genre legend and all-round icon Emily Booth will be joining forces with free-to-air TV channel NYX UK at this year’s HorrorConUK, which takes place at Magna, Sheffield on May 11th
Read More
kristen stewart to star in vampire thriller flesh of the gods. still from twilight franchise

Kristen Stewart, Oscar Isaac To Star In Vamp Thriller FLESH OF THE GODS

Kristen Stewart and Oscar Isaac will star in vampire thriller Flesh of the Gods, the next project from Mandy filmmaker (and STARBURST favourite) Panos Cosmatos. Adam McKay is aboard to produce the feature with
Read More

Get Ready for Take-Off With the SUPER WINGS: MAXIMUM SPEED Trailer

Animated TV spin-off Super Wings: Maximum Speed is heading to cinemas! Check out the trailer below… Synopsis: Young airplane Jet is proud to be the fastest in the world, but
Read More