If you remember any episode at all from the 1972, NBC horror anthology, Ghost Story, it is likely this strange and compelling installment, “House of Evil.”
Written
by Robert Bloch, this tale stars a very young Jodie Foster as a deaf-mute named
Judy, and Melvyn Douglas as her diabolical grandfather. That description doesn’t convey enough
information, however.
The
real star of the episode is a large dollhouse and its unique inhabitants: cookie “voodoo dolls” with raisins for eyes
and noses, and tooth-picks for arms and legs.
Our
host, Winston Essex (Sebastian Cabot), begins “House of Evil” by discussing
dolls and the “little girls” who “cherish” them. This thought leads him into a discussion of
voodoo dolls, which can be used to control “the
life or death of a person the doll represents.”
Then,
the narrative proper commences and we meet Grandpa: a man filled with hatred
and bile. His beloved adult daughter
died in childbirth, you see, and he boasts the telepathic capacity to speak
with her spirit even now, in death.
Although she is at peace, Grandpa nonetheless blames her husband, Tom (Richard
Muligan) for her untimely demise. Tom
has now remarried and has adopted a sibling for Judy, named Kevin (Brad
Savage).
Grandpa
pays the family visit, ostensibly a friendly one. But in fact he has brought along a dollhouse replica
of their home. It’s a gift for Judy,
whom he can also communicate with telepathically. Then, when the maid, Mrs. Rule (Mildred
Dunnock), bakes a batch of cookies, Grandpa sits with Judy and transforms the
treats into bizarre little voodoo dolls – representative
of the family – to inhabit the house.
Then,
Grandpa teaches Judy how to move the dolls through the house, and at the same
time, unknowingly control her family members.
Unaware she is being manipulated by an evil, vengeful adult, Judy learns dutifully from Grandpa’s instructions. She unknowingly traps her families in their bedrooms one night. And then, Grandpa instructs her to start a fire in the dollhouse (by lighting candles…) and lock all the dolls inside it.
Finally,
only her mother’s spirit can save Judy and the family from Grandpa’s wrath. In the end, Grandpa’s plan backfires, and his
own voodoo doll falls prey to a fire in the dollhouse…
“House of Evil” covers a great deal of
territory, from the manipulation of the innocent to communication with the
dead. But at the center of it all is a
character that thrives on hate and doesn’t know the meaning of the word “forgiveness.”
Unable
to see that Tom loved his daughter, Grandpa arranges this byzantine revenge for
his son-in-law, Tom’s innocent wife and even an adopted child as well. It’s a particularly cruel form of revenge,
and Douglas is hypnotic in the role of an evil man who hides under a guise of
affability.
The
episode’s strange imagery – of cookie
voodoo dolls living in a dollhouse – is especially noteworthy, especially
since the story ends with one of the cookies being “cooked” in a fire. The visuals are just so unusual -- and kind of
freaky – that the story lingers in the imagination.
But
today it is “House of Evil’s” meditation on revenge that I find the most
interesting on repeat viewing. Grandpa
ostensibly mounts this campaign of terror for her daughter. But from beyond the
grave she repeatedly tells him not to proceed with his strategy. He refuses to listen and doubles down on his
hatred instead.
Thus,
Grandpa is exposed as a selfish man focusing not his daughter, but his own
needs. That he would exploit children
(Judy) and even try to a kill a child (Kevin) makes him one of Ghost
Story’s most thoroughly evil characters. There’s a sense of justice when
he falls victim to his own plans.
Jodie
Foster does a great job portraying Judy too. She’s an interesting character because
although she has learned to read lips Judy has never before actually heard a
human voice. The first one she does hear
belongs to her Grandpa, a fact which explains why they quickly develop a bond…a
bond that he exploits.
But one can
easily understand why the isolated Judy would find it hard to defy Grandpa at
first. It’s difficult enough for
children to question authority figures and adults, but even more so when an
adult becomes the center of the child’s universe. Lose him, and Judy loses her
closest “human” connection, or so she believes.
For
its weird and memorable imagery and welcome commentary on hatred and vengeance,
“House of Evil” ascends to the top tier of Ghost Story tales.
Next
week: “Cry of the Cat.”
John, nice review, this Ghost Story "House Of Evil" episode still resonates since I first saw it as a young boy in 1972. It made me have a new respect for my own sister's dollhouse, i.e., never touch it. Excellent cast and script makes this anthology shine. The other anthology series in production at this time Night Gallery needed episodes like this. Voodoo dolls have always been a scary storytelling tool, e.g., Kolchak:The Night Stalker "The Zombie".
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Great remember! I had the same age than Jodie when i see on TV woooow! Thanks for share
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