Business World

Gore Verbinski: born to be a horror director

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LOS ANGELES — A conversati­on starter for bored dinner party guests, “nominative determinis­m” is the theory that someone’s name destined them for whatever they ended up doing with their lives.

Think Bulgarian hurdler Vania Stambolova, BBC weather forecaster Sara Blizzard, singer Bill Medley or lavatory impresario Thomas Crapper.

So there was a certain inevitabil­ity in Oscar-winning American filmmaker Gore Verbinski becoming a horror director — although the big mystery is why he seemed to give it up when he’d only just got started.

The 52-year-old made his name in 2002 with The Ring, a remake of Japanese classic Ringu, scaring the wits out of a generation of fans with his spooky tale of a cursed videotape that kills anyone who sees it after a week.

It became one of the highest-grossing supernatur­al horror movies of all time, recouping more than five times its $48-million budget and spawning a sub-genre of American remakes of “JHorror” classics such as The Grudge and Dark Water.

Yet Verbinski stepped quietly away, letting other directors take over two poorly received sequels and turning with varying degrees of success to straight drama, a western, an animated film and three Pirates of the Caribbean installmen­ts.

A Cure for Wellness sees the director reaffirm his horror chops with an elusive genre-bender that might best be described as a cross between Martin Scorsese’s Shutter Island and Milos Forman’s One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.

“I’m always developing four or five things. They all go on the back burner and I go ‘ I have to tell this story now.’ There’s no kind of career path,” he told AFP, attempting to explain the 15-year hiatus between horror films.

‘NIGHTMARE’

Shot over seven months mostly in Germany, Wellness stars Dane DeHaan ( The Amazing Spider-Man 2) as an ambitious stockbroke­r sent by his firm to a remote Alpine medical spa where the patients are supposedly receiving a “miracle” cure but seem to be getting sicker.

Verbinski transforme­d the derelict Beelitz- Heilstaett­en military hospital outside Berlin into a sterile yet Gothic spa in which you might find oligarchs and captains of industry receiving quack cures side by side.

He wanted it to be the kind of place where “you would, maybe deep in the steam room, bump into Dick Cheney with a towel wrapped around him,” the director said.

Wellness can be read as a metaphor for humanity’s unrelentin­g and ultimately unfulfilli­ng quest for perfection — a bulging bank account, a perfect family and job, well being, health and happiness.

“I think we live in an increasing­ly irrational world. We know history. We’re driving a car into the wall and we can’t turn the wheel and that’s the horror, the nightmare,” Verbinski said.

It’s not clear what the wall represents, or why we can’t just slow the car down, but it is an image Verbinski has invoked on previous occasions to explain his sense that society is both in denial about being sick and susceptibl­e to snake oil cures.

“Why are we vulnerable to the pharmaceut­ical industry? Why are we vulnerable to the seaweed wrap and the kale milkshake or whatever it is? There must be something inside us where we know we’re not well,” he said.

With his films achieving a collective global box-office of $3.7 billion, Verbinski just about squeezes into the top 10 highest-grossing directors of all time.

“A Cure For Wellness is his tenth feature — only his fifth without longtime collaborat­or Johnny Depp — in a resume so eclectic that it defies analysis.”

A punk guitarist as a teenager growing up in LA, Verbinski appeared in several rock bands and made music videos before making an inauspicio­us start in filmmaking with unloved comedies Mouse Hunt and The Mexican.

OPTIMIST

The Ring and the first, critically acclaimed Pirates of the Caribbean movie represente­d a purple patch but were followed by box-office flop The Weatherman, and two poorly reviewed if financiall­y successful Pirates sequels.

Computer-animated Rango, a critical and commercial hit, won Verbinski an Oscar, his best ever reviews and an opportunit­y to blot his copy book again with high-concept Western The Lone Ranger.

Starring Depp in a role that made his Pirates of the Caribbean performanc­es look positively restrained, the lavish, over- long $ 225- million production was an infamous flop that frustrated fans who could see Verbinski’s obvious talent.

It is a body of work that raises more questions than answers about the enigmatic filmmaker’s worldview, although he reveals an optimistic spirit apparently at odds with the dread that suffocates Wellness.

“I think there’s something about the youth today that is maybe questionin­g the treadmill a little bit,” he said, suddenly appearing quite chipper.

“I have faith that maybe they realize there’s no more headroom in this algorithm we have created.”

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