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Review

Series review: Locke & Key focuses on fantasy rather than horror

Luca Fontana
6.2.2020
Translation: machine translated

"Locke & Key" is a mix of fantasy and horror, at least in the famous comic book series. Netflix's adaptation suffers from a dull start and a lack of cold sweat, but makes up for it with a suspenseful second half.

First of all: this article contains no spoilers. So you won't learn anything more than what the trailers have already revealed.


On the other hand, I can tell you the effect this series has on someone who has never heard of these strange tales of magic keys in a haunted house. These keys threaten the fate of the world. No matter how much you think you know about them, you'll find you don't actually know anything.

An air of "The Haunting of Hill House"

Rendell Locke (Bill Heck) has been brutally murdered. His wife and three children are trying to make a fresh start. Keyhouse, the Locke family's ancestral home, must help them overcome this tragic death. Indeed, staying where the tragedy took place is out of the question for them.

When they arrive at Keyhouse, ten-year-old Bode (Jackson Robert Scott), the youngest of the siblings, is the first to hear the whisper of keys, all of which are well hidden in the house. Of course, these are not normal keys, but keys with magical powers. One turns its wearer into an invisible ghost. Another can open doors that lead anywhere you want. Still others give powers of possession, transformation and repair.

Bode, his sister Kinsey (Emilia Jones) and brother Tyler (Connor Jessup) are forced to realise, however, that the keys are not Keyhouse's only secret. Soon, an evil creature (Laysla De Oliveira) is hunting the children and trying to get hold of the keys.

A difficult gestation

Joe Hill, Stephen King's son, and illustrator Gabriel Rodriguez, the two authors of the "Locke & Key" comics, are far from old. The first issue appeared in 2008. Attempts at adaptations, though numerous, have all failed.

Netflix then entered the picture.

The first half precisely goes off in all directions, without really knowing what to prioritise. Not to mention a questionable casting choice.

The first half of the season: not as scary as hoped

The first four or five episodes - the season has 10, each 50 minutes long - follow the same pattern: oh, a new key. What's it for? This! Great, this new power! Now let's turn our attention to the subplot about school bullying. No more.

It feels disjointed and lacking in originality.

And to top it all off, Jackson Robert Scott as Bode Locke is a casting error.

For that matter, where's the creepiness that made the comics famous?

The series hardly dwells on this. While the comic book imagery is sometimes disturbing and brutal as in "That", "Hellraiser" or "Braindead", the characters in the series get away with a few scratches here and there. The Haunting of Hill House-style atmosphere promised by the comics, the trailer and the summary is barely perceptible in the series. We're closer to the Harry Potter style.

My expectations were disappointed on this point.

The second half of the season: crescendo to the end

The early episodes are flaky, boring, even annoying, but the later ones are much better.

The writers pepper the series with moments like this. As a result, the story takes on a depth that makes "Locke & Key" more than just an unpretentious fantasy series, the first half of which would have forgotten to be interesting.

Then comes the suspense. We gradually realise that the death of Father Rendell leaves many secrets and questions unanswered, waiting, lurking in the shadows, to fall upon the children. The various plots, which seem to be independent of each other, end up coming together. The twists and turns give a new twist to past events. The teenage squabbles are relegated to the background, as is Bode, who is more or less sidelined. He belongs there and it makes for a holiday.

This brings the first season to a close after a build-up that I no longer dared hope for, such was the lack of pace at the start.

Conclusion: an uneven series that eventually pulls itself together

At heart, "Locke & Key" belongs more to fantasy than horror. The trailer and what little I'd read of the comics had left me hoping for something a little different. Despite a very nice display of magic, the first half of the season proves too timid, uninspired and often just plain boring.

Thankfully, the second half saves the day. The suspense is there: one secret after another is revealed and the underlying logic finally emerges. If the series continues on this path with a possible second season, perhaps much scarier than the first, I'll keep watching.


"Locke & Key" is available on Netflix from 7 February 2020.

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I write about technology as if it were cinema, and about films as if they were real life. Between bits and blockbusters, I’m after stories that move people, not just generate clicks. And yes – sometimes I listen to film scores louder than I probably should.


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