Directed by:
Herk Harvey
In my opinion, Carnival of Souls is one of the best low-budget horror films ever made.
Actually, scratch that budget part: It's one of the finest horror films
ever made. Period. But just what makes it so special? How
did this small, independent production manage to amass its devoted cult
following? Why is it that this film continues to pick up more and more
fans year after year after year? Why does it appeal not only to classic
horror film buffs, but also many younger genre fans; even ones weaned on
rapidly-edited, action-oriented flicks who don't even typically like older films? It's
all pretty simple. Deceptively simple, really. The stunning
black-and-white photography, supremely creepy organ score and the empty,
desolate locations creating a feeling of complete isolation are part of
the reason, for sure, but I really think what's key to its longevity is
how it exploits our primal fears of the unknown and uncertainty about death and the afterlife.
Just what waits for us in the beyond? What would happen if we somehow managed
to
escape our fate? What happens to those who hang on the threshold
between life and death? There are few things as frightening in concept as being
in this world while not actually being a part of this world. That
simple, basic concept works
brilliantly here, on both a literal and metaphoric level.
Candace Hilligoss, in one of her only known film roles, stars as
Mary Henry. While out drag racing with some friends, the car she's in
crashes over the side of the bridge. Miraculously, Mary emerges from the
water; shaken, confused, wet, but seemingly unharmed. Wanting to leave
this scary incident behind her, she decides to flee town to take up a job
as a church organist in another city. It's just a job to her; a way to
make money, but her soul isn't really in it. Mary gets a room in a
boarding house run by the kooky, nosy Mrs. Thomas (Frances Feist)
and has to keep rejecting the continual advances of sleazy fellow boarder
John Linden (Sidney Berger) from a few rooms down. John turns out
to be the least of her problems though, when she realizes someone else has been
trailing her. Whoever this pale, sunken-eyed, grinning mystery man
is, no one else seems to be able to see him, he doesn't appear to be human... and he even has some similar
other-worldly pasty-faced f(r)iends. They all seem to congregate at a abandoned
carnival pavilion, and they'd like Mary to join them for one final dance.
Director Harvey (whose only other directorial credits were industrial and educational films) wonderfully exploits the idea of what it
truly means to be alienated from this world. It's pretty much established that
Mary's beauty is about all she really has going for her. Otherwise, she's
rudely blunt, closed-off, somewhat awkward and terrible at social interaction.
While it's always risky to center your film around a character who is cold
and aloof, and thus not very personable to the audience, in this case it
works by giving a grounded, realistic parallel to enhance the supernatural content.
In other words, not feeling like you belong here is disheartening and
scary enough to begin with. Now compound that with the concept of you actually
not being wanted here by a higher, darker, mysterious power that has the
final say in the matter regardless of how fast you try to run away from it. The pretty, wide-eyed, sharp-featured Hilligoss
turned out to be an ideal casting choice for her ability to simultaneously
keep us at arm's length and pull us in. We don't want to like her, and
probably wouldn't bother with her in real life (not that she'd bother with
us, anyway), but you still can't help but feel compelled by her
vulnerability and her grim, hopeless
plight all the same.
Aided immeasurably by composer Gene Moore's gloomy organ
score and cinematographer Maurice Prather's atmospheric and sometimes expressionistic images,
Harvey has managed to create more effectively spooky moments here
than in just about any other film I can think of. Excellent use is made of
the abandoned Saltair Pavilion (which burned down in the 1970s); a
dead former amusement attraction situated in the barren salt flats. There
are numerous unforgettable sequences in here; many enhanced with novel use of sound and all done with nary a special
effect. Some of the creepy highlights are a ghost-like man peering in
through a car window as Mary drives down a desolate stretch of deserted highway,
creepy white-faced fiends filling up a bus or slowly emerging up from lake
waters, Mary's visit to a department store and public park where the sound fades and she suddenly
realizes that no one can see or hear her and the climactic, sped-up dance
of the dead.
You will sometimes read complaints from those who have issues with some
amateurish acting, the ultimate predictability of the story line or the
fact it may have borrowed its central premise from an episode of "The
Twilight Zone" called "The Hitch-Hiker." While some of that may be true,
this is not a film for to pick apart over technicalities; it's a film to
feel and experience for those capable of that. If you're the type of viewer who can
escape into a film and be absorbed into its mood and ambiance, some
rough-around-the-edges moments aren't going to blunt this film's impact
one bit. Try watching it all alone late at night in a dark room and see if
it doesn't have some kind of hypnotic effect on you.
It took awhile for Carnival to finally catch on and it didn't make
so much as a ripple for decades. In 1989, that all changed when the film
was re-released and reevaluated by critics, who saw how this film had
actually bled over into many later popular films; influencing a wide range
of directors, everyone from David Lynch to Martin Scorsese to George
Romero, in the process. Echoes of Carnival can be seen in such hit films
as The Sixth Sense, the Final Destination series and many other genre
offerings. Perhaps the second most widely-watched public domain horror
title of all-time (behind only NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD; yet another film it
heavily influenced), Carnival was horribly "remade" in 1998 for
executive producer Wes Craven. You'd be best off forgetting that one even exists.
★★★★
I'm with you all the way. I wrote about the film after watching it right before October last year. Then I watched it again in October. This is great stuff, plain and simple.
ReplyDeleteThis is one of those rare instances where everything = including the "bad" stuff due to the microscopic budget - comes together in a really brilliant way. I've probably seen it ten times and it holds up extremely well with each viewing.
ReplyDeleteI have to agree! One of my all time favorites!
ReplyDelete