Afraid of the Dark (film)
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Template:Infobox film
Afraid of the Dark is a 1991 French-British drama horror film directed by Mark Peploe and starring James Fox, Fanny Ardant and Paul McGann.[1]
Afraid of the Dark had its world premiere at the Tokyo International Fantastic Film Festival in October 1991. It screened at the BFI London Film Festival on 21 November 1991 and went into general theatrical release in the UK on 21 February 1992.
Plot
Lucas is an introverted 11-year-old boy who lives with his policeman father Frank and blind mother Miriam. He spends most of his time at a school for the blind where his mother teaches knitting. He also has a habit of spying on others. A recent spate of attacks on blind women has kept the community on edge. One day, Lucas goes to spy on Rose, his mother's blind friend, as she takes some photos for the local photographer. Lucas sees the photographer ominously take out a razor blade and touch Rose with it. Thinking he is the wanted slasher, Lucas runs in to save Rose and wounds the photographer in the eye.
He awakes and realizes he was having a nightmare. Lucas overhears his parents whispering about the eye operation he needs. He continues to have strange visions of the killer as his mind begins to confuse reality and delusion.
Cast
Critical reception
Afraid of the Dark received mixed critical reviews. TV Guide praised the film, though it admitted the film "does not succeed in linking its themes of voyeurism, oedipal complexes and fear of physical harm and then those in Lucas's overly mature imagination. The perversions he dreams up are far too sophisticated for a little boy. Nonetheless, Afraid of the Dark does its job as a horror film and makes one consider some difficult and ugly issues as well."[2]
In a positive review, Michael Wilmington of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "'Afraid of the Dark' isn't an intellectually shallow terrorize-the-yuppies shocker. In many ways, it's a critique of the new contemporary family thrillers, of the ways movies like 'Fatal Attraction' or 'The Hand That Rocks the Cradle' push our buttons and feed our paranoia."[3] Empire wrote, "Deftly avoiding self conscious experimentation and artsy intellectuality, writer/director Peploe constructs a mesmerising world of harsh contrasts and alarming juxtapositions."[4]
Marjorie Baumgarten of The Austin Chronicle said "Afraid of the Dark gets so wrapped up in its psychological dimensions that it forgets the rudiments of suspense."[5] Variety commented the film is "a tricky mix of slasher movie and psychodrama that's strong on tease but weak on final delivery".[6]
References
External links
This article incorporates text from the Wikipedia article "Afraid of the Dark (film)", available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
- 1991 British films
- 1991 French films
- 1990s horror drama films
- 1991 films
- 1991 horror films
- French drama films
- French fantasy drama films
- French horror drama films
- French fantasy films
- British fantasy drama films
- British horror drama films
- British fantasy films
- 1991 English-language films
- English-language French films
- 1991 psychological thriller films
- Films about blind people
- Films about disability in the United Kingdom
- English-language fantasy drama films
- Films with screenplays by Mark Peploe
- Films directed by Mark Peploe
- Films scored by Richard Hartley (composer)
- English-language horror drama films
- English-language thriller films