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Hudson plays a young hospice worker and aspiring nurse, recently moved to Louisiana, who's hired by a cantankerous woman (Gena Rowlands) to take care of her paralyzed husband (John Hurt) in their rundown mansion in some backwater parish of the bayou. Via a series of Nancy Drew adventures, she gradually discovers that nothing is as it first seemed, the old man is being held prisoner against his will, the house is possessed by voodoo spirits and she herself may be trapped by their evil spell. The script is by E hren Kruger ("Scream 3,"The Ring"), and much of it is conventional. But it relies more on atmosphere and character than the rest of this summer's crowded field of spooky movies, and it pays off nicely with a genuinely surprising twist ending. Director Iain Softly, a classy British filmmaker ("Wings of the Dove,"Backbeat") with no previous experience in the genre, tries hard to avoid the cliches and is clearly aiming more toward a "Rosemary's Baby" than an "Amityville Horror". Consequently, his movie gets its scariest moments less from its jarring effects, Southern Gothic ambience and frenzied conclusion than from Hudson's loaded dialogue exchanges and creepy encounters with Rowlands.
In its best moments, it's a character piece. As the imperiled heroine, Hudson does well enough. Hardly a riveting personality, she nonetheless exudes intelligence, resourcefulness and a likable vulnerability, and -- once again -- she's smart enough not to go anywhere near the mannerisms of her famous mother, Goldie Hawn.