This
week’s episode of the 1972 horror anthology Ghost Story is called “Touch
of Madness” and it involves a very personal crisis for its protagonist, Janet
(Lynn Loring). Specifically, the young
woman comes to fear that she is just as insane as her mother (Jan Clayton), who
died in an insane asylum.
On
her death bed, her mother tells Janet: “you’re
just like me…”
But
before we get into the specifics of “Touch of Madness,” host Winston Essex
(Sebastian Cabot) introduces the idea of each of us possessing a “golden memory” of the past. When we are sentimental about something, we
see that object or person through the “eyes of the past,” not the “eyes of the
present.”
In
other words, we see that thing for what we
remember, not for what it truly is, in the actual moment. Essex applies this lesson to a lamp of
sentimental value he keeps on his desk, which he admires, but which his staff
dislikes.
This
idea gets some play in the episode, written by Halsted Welles and directed by
Robert Day because Janet inherits her mother’s house, and absolutely views it through
that “golden memory” of the past. If
she could see the estate as it really is, she would be terrified and repulsed.
The
house is actually dilapidated, wrecked, teeming with rats, and populated by
frightening ghosts. Yet Janet can only
discern this contemporary “reality” at times (mostly when she awakens from
slumber), and those brief visions make her fear that she is just like her
mother…losing her mind.
The
house that Janet inherits is populated not merely by ghosts, but a weird aunt
and uncle, Hattie (Geraldine Page) and Jonathan (Rip Torn). They are pretty clearly keeping secrets from
Janet, and the worst of it is what they did to Hattie’s abusive husband. When Janet heads down into the basement, she
discovers the truth for herself…
The
last few episodes of Ghost Story (“Cry of the Cat” and “Elegy
for a Vampire”) have been downright dreadful, and “Touch of Madness” is a mild
tick upwards in quality. While not a
great installment by any measure, the episode works for two reasons.
First,
I enjoyed the visual aspect of the
story, which features side-by-side jump-cuts to ping pong the audience back and
forth between the house in haunted form and the house in pristine form. These jarring and powerful moments made me
nostalgic for similar moments in Asylum of Satan (1972), a William
Girdler horror film I inexplicably cherish.
I got a kick out of the moment, in particular, in which Janet believes
she is stroking the family cat, but it’s actually a rat.
Secondly,
there’s a relatively straight character arc and through-line here in terms of
Janet and her emotional “crisis.” She
believes she is going mad, and the events inside the house with the ghosts
encourage that belief. She battles
against the idea that she is just like her mother, but the haunted nature of
the house only seems to confirm it, until the valedictory ending.
The
details of the ghost story are -- as
appears typical for the series at this point -- somewhat muddled. It’s never clear why exactly Janet is seeing
things, or who the individuals are that she is actually seeing.
Because of the show’s padded length (at an
hour), we are faced again and again with the idea that Janet just needs to
leave the premises and be done with the house.
I
have said it before, and I’ll no doubt say it again: Ghost Story could have
been substantially better if it had run a half-hour instead of an hour. Yet even with this reckoning, I can’t help
but admire the series’ ability to draw and make use of talented big-name stars
like Geraldine Page.
Although
objectively, “Touch of Madness” is probably pretty mediocre, it’s still better
than the last two shows, and that, at least, is good news.
Next
week: “Creature of the Canyon” with Angie Dickinson.
John insightful review of Ghost Story “Touch Of Madness” episode. I remember seeing this episode as a very young boy in 1972. It was very frightening. I do agree that Ghost Story/Circle Of Fear should have been a half-hour series like the original Twilight Zone was. Even the original Twilight Zone only tried hour episodes for one season before returning to their half-hour format.
ReplyDeleteSGB
SGB,
DeleteYou make an excellent point about the "Twilight Zone" only trying hour-long episodes for one season... and come to think of it, none in that season are among my favorites, but some are definitely among the most tedious! Thanks,
Mike
I totally agree.
ReplyDeleteI still do not get the ending.
ReplyDelete