The first time I watched HELLRAISER (1987), I actually blurted, โLooking forward to whatever happens to that fucker.โ Julia Cottonโs pool of loathsome deeds ran deepโa strained relationship with her daughter-in-law, unfaithful to Kirstyโs (Ashley Laurence) father with her uncle Frank (Sean Chapman), luring numerous men to their deathโall so that she could help said uncle return to form after his dance with the Lament Configuration. To say nothing of plotting to murder her husband so that his brother could inhabit his skin and they could live happily ever after.
In short, Julia was deplorable. And played to poisonous perfection by Clare Higgins.
When summoned back to Earth in HELLBOUND: HELLRAISER II (1988), Julia quickly proved that old habits die hard, leaning on murder and mayhem as means to an end. This time, she led Dr. Phillip Channard (Kenneth Cranham) and his morbid curiosity around by the nose, to say nothing of his psychiatric patient who possessed an aptitude for solving puzzles. The good doctor simply felt compelled to understand the secrets and power of the box, and the hidden world it housed.
Nearly two feature films in, Julia had a moment of redemption.
Not that she had an epiphany or did the right thing. No, no, no, Julia finally embarked on a mission so deliciously sinister that I couldnโt help but smile at the similarities between her endeavors and the story I hold most dear, Edgar Allan Poeโs โThe Cask of Amontillado.โ
Dr. Channardโs thirst for knowledge and power were the elusive barrel to Juliaโs impunity; and much like poor Fortunato, by the time the physician realized that what he desired wasnโt worth the asking price, it was too late.
โBut this is what you wanted! This is what you wanted to see. This is what you wanted to know. And here it is.โ
Julia, in full, smirking Montresor could not help but point out that what her lord required was souls, and she had brought him one to celebrate the symbolic retribution of hellโa doctor to impale with needles and probe with disgusting tentacles.
Backing the doctor into a box where immediate invasion was met with screams, Julia smiled โAnd you wanted to know.โ Moments before razor-sharp wires wrapped themselves around Channardโs skull, digging deep into his skin, again Julia delighted โNow you now.โ
Though she stopped short of imploring the doctor to touch the damp nitre, Julia couldnโt help but taunt the fettered Channard with the painful reminder that he had found exactly what heโd been seeking.
With a grin, Julia offered โGoodbye, doctorโ as the box began its descent, hauling the doctor away for eternity.
Not unlike my reaction to Melisandre (Carice van Houten) resurrecting Jon Snow (Kit Harrington) in Game of Thrones, all was forgiven.
For as despicable as Julia was, I couldnโt help but smile at the parallels between Poe and Pinhead, and revel in the powerful arrogance of Higginsโ performance.
If youโre going to be evil, at least do it with a little flair. For one delectable moment in HELLBOUND, Clare Higgins was downright flamboyant.
And I kind of loved it.
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