Home SP Blog SP Forum Join Now Login

Switch Categories

SwitchPlanet

Switchbuc Calculator

FAQs

The Skulls (Collector's Edition)

Availability

Switchbucs Switcher Switches Switcher Rating  
11 Zahnarzt
Disc, Artwork, Case
48 37 [ Buy It ]
11 Zahnarzt
Disc, Artwork, Case
48 37 [ Buy It ]
15 cidthedid
840 279 [ Buy It ]
These members have it but are not switching it at this time Xavier Valdruidsk8rjason

Theatrical Release

March 31, 2000

DVD Release

March 31, 2000

Studio

Universal Studios

Rated

PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)

Directors

Actors

Derek Aasland, David Asman, Nigel Bennett, Leslie Bibb, David Christo, Noah Danby, Mak Fyfe, Scott Gibson, Hill Harper, Steve Harris, Joshua Jackson, Andrew Kraulis, Shaw Madson, Christopher McDonald, Jennifer Melino, Craig T. Nelson, Jesse Nilsson, William L. Petersen, Paul Walker

Switchers Rate This:

Currently selling for $2.11 NEW at Amazon.com

Formats

  • Anamorphic
  • Closed-captioned
  • Collector's Edition
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC

Additional Information

Think of the Skulls as a collegiate Freemason's society--an ultrasecret organization that opens the doors of power to a few lucky Ivy League students, including school rowing star Luke McNamara (Joshua Jackson), a poor kid with a misspent youth. "If it's secret and it's elite, it can't be good," cautions his journalist roommate, but the lure of lavish gifts and cabal-like ceremonies in torch-lit stone chambers is too much to resist--until his roomie is murdered and his own Skull "soulmate" Caleb Mandrake (Paul Walker) is the number one suspect.

There's a campy kick to the initiation ceremonies, ancient rituals in dungeonlike alcoves filled with haze and shadow, performed by enthralled frat boys, but as Jackson flounders at the center of a Skull conspiracy it spins into ludicrous melodrama. See the college president become a thug for the Skull godfather! See street punks become high-tech criminal masterminds! See the conspiracy collapse under its own absurdity!

Jackson is pretty much a dud as the well-meaning hero, but Walker, with flashing eyes under furrowed brow, is mesmerizing as a haunted rich kid torn between a ruthless, overbearing father (Craig T. Nelson) and his conscience. Director Rob Cohen drives the film at a galloping pace and fills it with foreboding images, but his humorless solemnity finally buries The Skulls in a heap of clichés. --Sean Axmaker - Amazon.com

_