From THR – Daniel Radcliffe, the actor who will forever be known as the face of Harry Potter, is set to star in James Watkins’s big screen adaptation of Susan Hill’s novel The Woman in Black. The movie will be produced and co-financed by Hammer Films and Alliance Films from a script penned by Jane Goldman (Kick Ass).
Book Jacket:
What real reader does not yearn, somewhere in the recesses of his or her heart, for a really literate, first-class thriller — one that chills the body, but warms the soul with plot, perception, and language at once astute and vivid? In other words, a ghost story written by Jane Austen?
Alas, we cannot give you Austen, but Susan Hill’s remarkable Woman in Black comes as close as our era can provide. Set on the obligatory English moor, on an isolated causeway, the story has as its hero Arthur Kipps, an up-and-coming young solicitor who has come north from London to attend the funeral and settle the affairs of Mrs. Alice Drabow of Eel Marsh House. The routine formalities he anticipates give way to a tumble of events and secrets more sinister and terrifying than any nightmare: the rocking chair in the deserted nursery, the eerie sound of a pony and trap, a child’ scream in the fog, and most dreadfully — and for Kipps most tragically — The Woman in Black.
The Woman in Black is both a brilliant exercise in atmosphere and controlled horror and a delicious spine-tingler — proof positive that this neglected genre, the ghost story, isn’t dead after all.
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