This week on the horror anthology
Ghost
Story/Circle of Fear, our host Winston Essex (Sebastian Cabot) muses
about the wonders of…the telephone.
Not the cell phone mind you, the
land-line.
The jocular Essex does so in
words that read suspiciously like a transcription of his introduction from “The
Dead We Leave Behind,” the show’s second (and so far, best episode)
Only there, the subject was the
hidden dangers of the television, not the phone. What if it had a mind of its own and could make you watch what it
wanted you to watch?
Here, Winston worries about what
would happen if the telephone could, literally, reach out and touch someone.
The story on that very subject, “Bad
Connection” fits into a weird horror TV subgenre in which the telephone is a diabolical
vehicle for terror. In the original Twilight
Zone, the telephone brought terror in both “Long Distance Call” and “Night
Call.” In the 1980s, well after this
episode of Ghost Story, an evil telephone terrorized Jean Marsh in “Answer
Me,” a first season installment of Tales from the Darkside.
Here, Karen Black plays Barbara
Sanders, a pleasant secretary who is about to be re-married. Her first husband died at sea, and she is
finally putting the terrible event behind her.
But on the eve of her wedding, the widowed Barbara begins to receive
frightening phone calls from a voice she assumes to be that of her dead
husband. He warns her that “death” is
coming for her soon. And that she must “remember
the promise” they shared: to always love one another.
Barbara grows increasingly – and dynamically -- hysterical as the
phone calls continue and escalate in terror.
Soon, she begins to see a shadowy form stalking her every move. Is
it her dead husband? Or did she misinterpret
his telephone message? Is someone else
trying to drive her mad? If so, why?
In exploring the answer to such
questions, “Bad Connection” directed by Walter Doninger proves immensely
entertaining. The episode stumbles over the boundary of camp at times, thanks in
large part to Karen Black’s dedicated if dramatically overwrought
performance. Much of the hour involves
Black screaming madly at the phone, or tripping suddenly and inexplicably into
a catatonic trance state. The star of
such 1970s classics as Trilogy of Terror (1975), Black never
fails to invest her genre roles with gusto.
This hour is no exception, and “Bad Connection” is fun because Black
anchors it, and isn’t afraid to go full-bore bonkers when the scene requires a mental
breakdown. She really commits -- physically and mentally -- to this role.
Also, I submit that this episode
works because, at some level, it is utterly irrational, or surreal. A telephone continues to ring even when it isn’t
plugged in. A specter commits to
murdering another man’s wife for no real logical reason. That specter can not only appear in the flesh
as a kind of pasty zombie, but always knows when Barbara is near a phone, or
even which particular phone (in an
office sitting) she happens to be nearby.
There’s no logical explanation for any of this material, and yet, that’s
okay with me.
Some horror movies and TV
programs slip into this wonderful surreal, nightmare territory, and it’s a
valid choice. They make no real
conventional sense, and yet we recognize the nature of the terror in an emotional sense because we’ve all
experienced dreams wherein we’re being chased, or where strange, inexplicable
things occur. “Bad Connection” features
the weird dream-sense of a nightmare, and I can laud it on that level. Others might disagree with me, and note that
the writing here is silly or bad. I
suppose your mileage may vary, depending on how long a leash you’re willing to
give Ghost
Story.
Some of the visuals in “Bad
Connection,” -- of the villain appearing in the flesh, for instance, at a dock -- are
downright chilling. Also the episode
pulls out a nice, optimistic surprise at the conclusion, a re-parsing of the “promise”
Barbara made, and how it is actually applied in the narrative. Fear gives way to catharsis, as it should.
I certainly wouldn’t rank “Bad
Connection” was among the best Ghost Story episodes produced. That honor goes to “The Dead We Leave Behind,”
the absolutely bizarre “House of Evil” (featuring Jodie Foster, a doll house,
and raisin-eyed cookie voodoo dolls…) and the brilliantly malevolent “Alter-Ego.” But “Bad Connection” is far better than the
real stinkers.
And, unfortunately, next week
brings us to just such another stinker: the interminable “The Summer House”
starring Carolyn Jones.
John another interesting review of this sadly forgotten anthology that I am glad I watched as a boy in the 1972-73 with my family. I read each one that you review.
ReplyDeleteSGB
Hi SGB,
DeleteI am so appreciative, SGB, that you read these reviews of Ghost Story and Ark II and offer your thoughts on them. Thank you for taking the time to read what I wrote, and especially for responding.
Best,
John
Hi John -
ReplyDeleteI am presently making my way through the Ghost Story series too and caught this episode last night. I also pulled out your Terror Television book and am re-reading some of its entries, especially the Ghost Story write ups. I'm really happy to see that you are expanding on your commentary via your A+ blog. I've watched the first 8 episodes so far and I wholeheartedly agree with your assessments thus far. As something that is not mentioned on the closing credits of this particular episode, I thought it was worth mentioning that the ghostly voice on the phone is none other than Casey Kasem. I grew up with Casey, first hearing him as the voice of Shaggy from 1969 - 1979, and then listening to him him count down the Top 40 from 1979 - 1985. (I was off to college in Sept '85 and pretty much moved away from Top 40 stuff.) It was a thrill to hear him on Ghost Story. My best to you and your family...
Congratulations for your review.
ReplyDelete