Ghost
Story (1972)
once more slips into mediocrity this week with the installment “Half-a-Death”
starring Scream Queen Pamela Franklin (And Soon the Darkness [1970], The
Legend of Hell House [1974]).
As
is par for the course with this hit-or-miss 1970s horror anthology, this
particular episode falters due largely to pacing and general series format. There’s too little narrative development to fill
out a full hour, and so the running time is padded out unnecessarily with
repeat appearances by the “specter of the week.”
And
each time the ghost re-appears, it seems a little less frightening. By episode’s end, a feeling of dullness has
replaced any genuine sense of terror.
The
episode commences with our host, Winston Essex (Sebastian Cabot), walking the
grounds of Mansfield House. He begins to
muse about the difference between being “alone” and being “lonely.” The long and short of his epiphany is that
some people may wish to be alone occasionally, but few people actually wish to
actually be lonely. He then wonders if a
lonely soul can reach out from beyond the
grave…
In
“Half-a-Death” lovely Christine (Franklin) returns to her family home after
living away in Rome when she learns that her twin sister, Lisa, has passed away. Just days later, Christine’s father dies as well,
and Christina’s scheming mother, Paula (Eleanor Parker) begins to grow close to
a neighbor, Mr. Claiborne (Andrew Duggan).
Christine
soon finds herself haunted by the ghost of Lisa, a girl who spent her life in
an insane asylum and suffered from arrested emotional development as well. Christine recalls the old tale that twins
share “one soul,” and wonders if Lisa is trying to take her life, or even make
Christine experience “half a death.”
A
visit from a medium (and charlatan), Miss Eliscu (Signe Hasso) confirms
Christine’s worst fears. Twins
apparently are “single souls” indeed, sharing one spirit. Deprived of a locket which protects her
against the ghostly Lisa’s advances, Christine succumbs to her sister’s entreaties
for company in death… only to see her mother finally step up and replace her.
Last
week’s Ghost Story tale, “Alter-Ego” also involved a ghostly twin of sorts, and
the idea that only one of the two could thrive, while the other would die. It was a far superior meditation on the
concept of doppelgangers and evil duplicates.
“Half-a-Death” is a weak retread, and fails to make sense even on a
rudimentary level since Paula sacrifices her own life to her dead daughter,
thereby giving Lisa half-a-soul too many.
I mean, if twins share a soul, that Elissa already has half. And if she takes her mother’s soul, she has
one-and-a-half, right?
Basically
“Half a Life” consists of long spells featuring the lovely (and talented)
Franklin reiterating her feelings about Lisa, and her fear of the Corsican
Brothers Syndrome to a would-be suitor, Ethan (Stephen Brooks). Lisa’s ghost re-appears at least three times,
and then the episode suddenly veers off on a bizarre tangent involving the
medium’s delinquent son, and his attempts to rob Christine’s family because he
feels his mother wasn’t adequately compensated for a seance.
It’s
all a bad case of narrative meandering – call
it Half-a-Narrative -- and more than enough to make one miss the crisp
clarity of a Twilight Zone, a One Step Beyond, or even the Ghost
Story contemporary (from Australia), The Evil Touch (1973).
Next
week we finaly get to the bonkers (and delightful…) Ghost Story episode
featuring a young Jodie Foster, a dollhouse, and creepy voodoo dolls made out
of raisin muffins.
Yep,
it’s “House of Evil…”
Unfortunately "Half A Death" was probably little more than half a completed script that the remainder was improvised on the set while filming. We can classify this as when an anthology series episode goes bad.
ReplyDeleteSGB
Hi SGB:
ReplyDeleteYou said it! This episode is little more than "half-a-script." A really poor show, and not a good example of what Ghost Story was capable of.
I always appreciate you commenting on my cult-tv blogging reviews, my friend.
All my best,
John
The full episode is on YouTube now.
ReplyDelete