In "Funhouse," Varian, Scott, Fred, Willaway, Sil-El and Lianna -- now boasting a new fluffy hair-do -- cross into a new "time zone."
Instead of finding another divided culture in the Bermuda Triangle, the group discovers a very ominous, abandoned carnival fairground.
Although Willaway has trepidations about the mysterious carnival, noting that it "doesn't belong there," Scott and others insist they check it out, and the group takes an impromptu tour. Before long, the amusement park rides come to mysterious life, and the interlopers are greeted by a bearded man who claims to be the descendant of Marcus Apollonius, a famous magician of antiquity. "I am an entertainer. I belong to the ages," he notes. He also reveals that his expansive carnival was "salvaged from a shipwreck."
Along with two cohorts -- the Barker (Richard Lawson) and Roxanne (Mary Frann) -- Apollonius (Mel Ferrer) hints to the visitors that if they defeat the surprises of his carnival fun house, he will share with them the secret of Evoland. Again, Willaway is wary of the endeavor, but he goes along anyway.
Instead of finding another divided culture in the Bermuda Triangle, the group discovers a very ominous, abandoned carnival fairground.
Although Willaway has trepidations about the mysterious carnival, noting that it "doesn't belong there," Scott and others insist they check it out, and the group takes an impromptu tour. Before long, the amusement park rides come to mysterious life, and the interlopers are greeted by a bearded man who claims to be the descendant of Marcus Apollonius, a famous magician of antiquity. "I am an entertainer. I belong to the ages," he notes. He also reveals that his expansive carnival was "salvaged from a shipwreck."
Along with two cohorts -- the Barker (Richard Lawson) and Roxanne (Mary Frann) -- Apollonius (Mel Ferrer) hints to the visitors that if they defeat the surprises of his carnival fun house, he will share with them the secret of Evoland. Again, Willaway is wary of the endeavor, but he goes along anyway.
Inside the creepy fun house, the travelers are quickly separated in a Hall of Mirrors, and the real plan becomes plain. Apollonious is actually, Marcus himself -- the ancient magician -- and we wishes to possess the physical body of Willaway so as to challenge the Gods themselves, after departing the Bermuda Triangle from Evoland.
Meanwhile, Roxanne desires Lianna's body for her own use because she's tired of being treated as ugly. Both Apollonious and the woman have been cursed by the Gods with hideous countenances, ones carefully cloaked under masks of normality.
Meanwhile, Roxanne desires Lianna's body for her own use because she's tired of being treated as ugly. Both Apollonious and the woman have been cursed by the Gods with hideous countenances, ones carefully cloaked under masks of normality.
After Willaway's body is possessed, Varian and Scott attempt to restore their friend's life, while Fred crawls through a fun house vent shaft to rescue the imperiled Lianna.
As Varian attempts to drive the villainous Apollonious from Willaway's body, Apollonius conjures images of Varian's lost love, Gwenith (from "An Act of Love.") With herculean effort, Varian rescues Willaway, and the travelers leave the fun house and carnival behind.
As Varian attempts to drive the villainous Apollonious from Willaway's body, Apollonius conjures images of Varian's lost love, Gwenith (from "An Act of Love.") With herculean effort, Varian rescues Willaway, and the travelers leave the fun house and carnival behind.
Later, as they depart the time zone, the group wonders if Marcus Apollonius has been cursed by the Gods to play the same role again and again, always luring visitors to their doom...and always failing to achieve his goal of escape.
Perhaps the most surprising aspect of "Funhouse" is that the story's antagonist, Marcus Apollonius, is a real historical figure. He was a wandering philosopher in the first century, one who was believed to have taken his miracles and magic to distant kingdoms including India, Spain and Mesopotamia.
Apollonius was also believed to have performed human sacrifices (!) and some sources suggest that, like Chris, he was assumed into Heaven.
The Fantastic Journey's depiction of Apollonius is close to the historical article in only very general terms, but not specifics. Though Apollonius was known to have challenged at least one Emperor, Nero, here he was an arrogant magician who challenged the Gods of Mount Olympus, apparently real beings. And he didn't beam up to Heaven, he was "cursed to wander in the limbo of this land [the Bermuda Triangle] for all time."
In some ways, "Funhouse" copies the central idea from "Atlantium:" a life form who wants to steal the body of one of our heroic travelers in the Bermuda Triangle. However, in this case the trappings are so different from what came before in "Atlantium" that the repetition of the concept isn't that noticeable.
"Funhouse" also derives a lot of mileage out of the funhouse setting, featuring weird slides, dangling skeletons, "shrunken" rooms, a hall of mirrors, a rotating tunnel, pervasive mist and other creepy effects. The camera work is impressive too. The shots of the group entering and walking on the empty fair grounds do a good job of suggesting a faintly sinister isolation. Right from the first few compositions, you feel unnerved by the place.
It all adds up to a dynamic episode in terms of visuals. It also features a nasty villain -- one who reminded me of Space: 1999's Magus -- and a nice final chill: the thought that Apollonius will attempt his body thievery on the next wanderers who happen by...
The finest moment in "Funhouse," however, involves Varian (Jared Martin)...as it often does on the series. Here, his efforts to heal Willaway are stymied when Apollonius creates a vision of his beloved Gwenith, lost to Betticus in "An Act of Love."
This style of episode-to-episode continuity was very rare in 1970s science fiction television indeed, and it's great that the writer, Michael Michael included Gwenith in the action, and that Christine Hart returned to play her a second time. You can see how the series writers were really attempting to develop the characters, and build a consistent history for them.
Although it didn't air near Halloween, I always consider "Funhouse" to be The Fantastic Journey's Halloween episode. It features spiritual possession, ghoulish make-ups, a fun house, and even lightning and thunder flashes at one point.
The story is not particularly deep once you dissect it -- there's no social commentary this time out -- but "Funhouse" is a diverting roller-coaster, and a nice interregnum between those repetitive"civilizations of the week."
One of my personal favorites from the series as well. The sets are disastrously bad and I swear this series had the worst wigs ever used on television, but it's an unusual plot device for a show fairly mired in repeating old ideas. If watch the scene of them leaving the zone, it is clear that the woman playing Liana is not Katie Saylor, but a double....probably the reason for the differing hairstyle in this episode? As for the reason for her having to be doubled in this scene and at this time, who knows? She would be written out of the series after the next episode due to illness.
ReplyDeleteHi George,
ReplyDeleteYour comment made me laugh (the bit about the wigs and the sets...) and I can't disagree with what you wrote. But like you, I appreciated Funhouse as a breath of fresh air in a series "fairly mired in repeating old ideas," as you aptly describe it.
The Katie Saylor mystery remains. The upcoming episode "Turnabout" looks like it was shot before Funhouse, since Saylor has the old haircut in that show. I wonder if she found out she was (terminally) ill during the shooting of Funhouse, and then left the series, with two to go. Since I know the airdate but not the production order of the shows, this is just speculation...
I know this: when Lianna's gone, I miss her. But she's absent from shows she's in ("Turnabout") too. After "Beyond the Mountain," she never really had a great moment on TFJ.
All my best,
John
I ´m Spanish,I saw "The fantastic journey" in my language in TVE (Spanish televisión) in the summer of 1978 or 1979 and I liked very much it.Now I have the full serie (10 chapters) in English language but I don´t understand because the actors speek very fast (I have to think in Spanish and after traslate to English).Does anybody know if I can get The Fantastic journey in Spanish language?.
ReplyDeleteThe chapter that I remember better is "Atlantium" (2º chapter),I stood surprised when I saw the brain in a cristal box,the brain had belonged to a good scientific,but after the brain converted in a devil brain.
Thanks,Pedro
I know the last comment was 7 years ago, but does anyone know what amusement park was used for this episode?
ReplyDelete