Last
week while discussing the Circle of Fear episode “Dark
Vengeance,” I described a kind of anti-sense or nightmare logic that canny
horror productions sometimes marshal and deploy to good effect. One of the absolute champions of this
approach may well be this week’s Circle of Fear episode, “Earth, Air,
Fire and Water,” written by Dorothy Fontana and Harlan Ellison.
I
shouldn’t beat around the bush about this episode. When I wrote about it for my
horror television survey, Terror Television (1999), I gave it
a pretty negative rating and review. But
today, a decade and beyond later, I find my own commentary on the episode
poorly-supported and flat-out wrong.
After a recent viewing of “Earth, Air, Fire and Water,” I feel like I
can see it better for what it is: a
genuinely upsetting and highly unnerving hour.
Perhaps what I was reacting against
originally were my own feelings of discomfort. Who can say for sure? But now, today, I count “Earth, Air, Fire and Water’s” capacity to
unsettle as a very real strength, not a weakness. This episode is deeply scary in a cerebral way. It manages to vet some terrifying moments with precious little in terms of resources.
“Earth,
Air, Fire and Water” concerns a group of starving artists -- a 1970s commune of sorts -- that rents
a dilapidated shop in a quaint downtown area and begins to sell their creative wares
there. While cleaning up the place, the
artists come across an old chest. Inside
are several transparent jars filled
with strangely-colored fluids.
In a
short amount of time, exposure to these jars begins to turn the artists’ work…sour.
A landscape painter now creates creepy paintings worthy of Rod Serling’s Night Gallery,
for instance, instead of views of scenic shores and light houses. The group's esprit-de-corps shatters like glass, and something sinister seems to hang in the very air itself.
We
learn -- though only obliquely -- that the former residents of this building
practiced black magic. But beyond that
blanket explanation, we’re given no real cause for the artists’ strange change,
or any real origin for the bizarre jars.
From the episode’s first frames -- a
low traveling shot through the interior of a wrecked shop -- “Earth, Air,
Fire and Water” develops a strong, almost overwhelming sense of amorphous dread. We hear individuals (souls trapped in the jars?)
talking to one another, but we don’t know where they are or what, precisely, they are. The effect is unsettling. We know we should feel alarmed and
frightened, but there is no focal point for those feelings. Instead, we just feel...uncomfortable.
There’s
an interesting metaphor at work here as well, and yes, it escaped my radar when
I wrote Terror Television. In short,
this episode concerns the transformation and decay of the hippie dream from the
1960s into the 1970s. It concerns people
-- hippie artists -- who optimistically build a collectivist world of art,
intellect, and commerce but then become separated from one another, trapped and
demented inside their tiny individual worlds, ones represented by the unusual and devilish jars.
This
could be a comment on how deeply ingrained individualism and capitalism -- or selfishness -- are ingrained into the American culture. Or this could be an allegory for the terror and perversion that infected the hippie dream as manifested by
Charles Manson. Love became hate. Belonging became an opportunity for group delusion and madness.
However
you choose to read it, “Earth, Air, Fire and Water” is very, very 1973. It’s about the death of a social movement, and that death, make no mistake, is one of a spiritual nature. Corruption turns the artists into isolated self-consumed monsters.
The
episode’s terrifying final moment -- in which this spiritual decay unexpectedly takes over a
human being -- seems to represent well the Manson phase of the hippie dream. Ugliness is now manifested not just inside, but outside...as flesh. It’s a shocking and terrifying image that
lingers in the memory, for certain.
I
didn’t really understand everything that was going on with “Earth, Air, Fire and Water,” when
I wrote about it in 1998, but I sure hope I’ve now rectified my initial
error in judgment by posting this review. This episode is light
on dialogue and characterization, but extremely powerful in tenor and atmosphere. It’s one of the very best and most
challenging of all Circle of Fear episodes, and a good one to watch with the lights out.
Next
week: “Doorway to Death.”
John I think that your GS/Circle Of Fear “Earth, Air, Fire and Water” episode analysis is honest. Your change in opinion from 1998 to 2012 is understandable. I think that you are correct about this being a 1973 commentary on the downfall of the '60s hippie movement, i.e. Manson, and sadly the dark side of human nature.
ReplyDeleteSGB
Great (revised) review, John. I've watched this episode several times and found something new in it each time. It's also interesting how the artists are "consumed" by their work (individualism, I guess, that you mentioned), that they no longer have time (e. g., meals, discussions) with each other. There's more than a hint of this going on in our time today!
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