In
“The Match Game,” four teenagers -- Jody (Ashley Laurence), Paul (Byron James),
Matthew (Sasha Jensen) and Bev (Tori Spelling) -- decide to spend the night in
the old Waverly Mansion, which stands on a thick swamp called Becker’s Pond.
As
night approaches, the group decides to play “the match game,” wherein each teen lights a match and tell a portion
of a horror story, until their match dims. Then, the next person lights a
match, and continues to tell the same story.
Little
do the teenagers realize, however, that one of their number boasts the power to
make the stories come true.
And
therefore, on this night, monstrous old Herbert Waverly (Tom Woodruff Jr.) will
rise from his watery grave in misty Becker’s Pond to take vengeance on anyone he
finds trespassing in his home...
“The
Match Game” is such a great capsule of the late 1980s, in part because of its cast,
in part because of its rubber-reality nature.
Regarding the cast, it is
headlined by Hellraiser’s (1987) Kirsty, Ashley Laurence, and by Halloween
IV’s Sasha Jensen.
Intriguingly,
Jensen’s character, Matthew, is killed the same way in “The Match Game” as his character, Brady, is in The Return of Michael Myers. There, his head is crushed by the Shape. Here it is crushed by Herbert
Waverly.
More
intriguingly, perhaps, “The Match Game” feels like a missing link between the
rubber-reality films of the late 1980s and the post-modern horrors of the
1990s, like Candyman (1992), In The
Mouth of Madness (1994) or Wes Craven’s New Nightmare
(1994).
Specifically,
the story involves a ghoul at the bottom of a swamp who comes to life because
he is “created” in a fictional campfire tale (or thereabouts) by four
teenagers.
Paul’s energy, specifically,
brings the rotting Herbert Waverly to horrid life, and the monster can only be
dispatched when Paul conceives and repeats aloud an ending to the story. “We made it up,” Jody notes “But you brought
it were. We have got to finish the story!”
In this case, finishing the story means limiting the corpse’s
life to one night, and suggesting that by light of dawn he must return to his
watery grave. That’s precisely what
happens, and “The Match Game” suggests that evil can’t be vanquished, at least
not fully, until its story is told to an appropriate conclusion.
Again, this idea would be treated (with greater depth) in Wes
Craven’s New Nightmare. That brilliant film acknowledges the fact that children, listening to bed time stories, need closure in their tales, or the story's monster can roam free in their psyche.
This
is also one episode of Monsters that eschews humor or irreverence and goes
right for the horror jugular. There’s a moment here when one of the match game participants, in the dark, discusses the rules of
dealing with Waverly. If he looks you in the eye, “Don’t look back. Don’t look into his eyes. One look will drain the
soul from your very body.”
Poor Tori
Spelling learns the hard way that this warning is not hyperbole.
But
the horror of the episode is carefully constructed from a filmmaking standpoint as well, not merely through chilling
dialogue. Specifically, long takes are deployed. At one
point, we move around the players of the match-game in a long, slow circle, as
the story continues, develops, and grows ever more menacing.
This is one episode of Monsters that I saw on its original broadcast in 1988,
and I remember, afterward, that “The Match Game” troubled my slumber. That's appropriate, because the episode reminds us that the greatest power in the world is that of imagination.
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