The first big budget
Hollywood production by
THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE’S Tobe
Hooper, although POLTERGEIST’S actual director has long been in
question. It’s widely alleged that executive producer Steven Spielberg
was the true creative force behind the film, and it definitely has the
“Spielberg touch.” Maybe that’s why I’m not too high on it.
The Package
Few movies in the Spielberg cannon have been more
fraught than 1982’s POLTERGEIST. The legal issues surrounding it are so
grievous that a writer who attempted to write a book about the film was
halted by Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment.
To begin with, actor/writer Paul Clemens filed suit
against Spielberg, claiming he plagiarized a Clemens script called
HOUSEBOUND. The case was allegedly settled out of court. The legendary
horror scribe
Richard Matheson also raised a stink, about elements from his
TWILIGHT ZONE teleplay “Little Girl Lost” that turned up in POLTERGEIST.
It’s widely believed that Matheson was hired as a screenwriter on the
Spielberg-produced TWILIGHT ZONE: THE MOVIE to head off a possible
lawsuit.
Then there’s the issue of who “really” directed
POLTERGEIST. Tobe Hooper was the credited director, but Spielberg has
never made any secret of the fact that he always wanted to helm the
film. He was prevented from doing so because he was working on E.T. at
the time (Director’s Guild rules forbid directing two films
simultaneously), but Spielberg largely storyboarded POLTERGEIST himself
and reported to the set every day. The cast and crew have remained cagey
about the degree of his influence, but everyone seems to agree that Mr.
Spielberg made his presence felt. (See
www.poltergeist.poltergeistiii.com/really.html for detailed info on
this topic.)
As if all that weren’t enough, there seems to be a
“POLTERGEIST curse” at work on the cast. Two of the film’s actresses,
Heather O’Rourke and Dominique Dunne, have died (O’Rourke contracted
cancer and Dunne was beaten to death by her boyfriend), as have Will
Sampson and Julian Beck, both from POLTERGEIST II: THE OTHER SIDE (which
neither Spielberg nor Hooper were involved with).
The Story
The Freelings are a normal middle class family living
in a trendy (for the eighties) Southern California home. One night the
youngest daughter Carol-Ann is found out of bed and talking to a staticy
TV screen--she later claims she’s addressing the “TV People.” From there
weird things begin happening, including articles of furniture moving
around by themselves. Then comes the episode in which Carol-Ann’s
brother Robby is grabbed by a tree outside his room while Carol-Ann is
sucked into her closet--and apparently into another dimension.
Robbie is rescued from the evil tree by his father
Steve, but Carol-Ann is nowhere to be found. Her voice, however, can be
heard loud and clear. She reports there’s “somebody here” with her, a
duplicitous creature that Tangina, a diminutive psychic, dubs “The
Beast.” Tangina was called in to exorcise the house’s demons, and seems
to know a lot about the nature of this particular haunting--including
the fact that the entrance to the realm where Carol-Ann is being held is
her bedroom closet, while the exit is the living room ceiling.
Carol-Ann’s mom Diane proves this by walking into the closet and falling
out of the ceiling with Carol-Ann in her arms.
But the scariness isn’t over. Diane is manhandled by
invisible forces and Carol-Ann and Robbie are nearly sucked back into
the deadly closet, which turns into a giant throat. All manage to escape
as coffins burst up through the floor, unearthing a long-buried secret:
the house was constructed over a cemetery whose headstones were moved
elsewhere while the bodies stayed put.
The Direction
Recognizing who did what on POLTERGEIST isn’t
especially difficult. Parts of the film seem quite Tobe Hooper-like,
notably the superbly controlled craziness of the
Diane-entering-the-closet sequence (which will resonate with fans of THE
TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE). But Steven Spielberg’s fingerprints are
unmistakable, from the carefully storyboarded camerawork to the
overpowering Jerry Goldsmith score to the really horrible scripting.
Over the years Spielberg has told anyone who will
listen that he heavily rewrote the script of POLTERGEIST (it’s credited
to Spielberg, Michael Grais and Mark Victor). Anyone who’s seen CLOSE
ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND or A.I., Spielberg’s other attempts at
screenwriting, well knows his talents are not in the writing sphere. He
proves that with the inconsistent and incoherent narrative of
POLTERGEIST, in which lots of promising ideas are strung together with
little in the way of a unifying conception. Explanations are scant, as
is clarification (who/what are “The Beast” and the “TV People?” Why does
Tangina declare the house “clean” when it clearly isn’t?), and the
special effects are vastly overused in Spielberg’s patented
More-is-Better credo.
One area where the film excels is in casting.
POLTERGEIST hails from the days when Spielberg really took care with his
casting (unlike his more recent actor-of-the-moment picks). Jobeth
Williams and Craig T. Nelson are note-perfect in the lead roles, and so
are the supporting players. The suburban setting is also unique and
interesting, an effective reversal of the traditional old dark mansions
of most haunted house movies. So POLTERGEIST does have its good
points--just not enough of them!
Vital Statistics
POLTERGEIST
Metro Goldwyn Meyer
Director: Tobe Hooper (and/or Steven Spielberg)
Producers: Steven Spielberg, Frank Marshall
Screenplay: Steven Spielberg, Michael Grais, Mark Victor
Cinematography: Matthew F. Leonetti
Editing: Michael Kahn
Cast: Jobeth Williams, Craig T. Nelson, Heather O’Rourke, Oliver Robins,
Beatrice Straight, Dominique Dunne, Zelda Rubenstein, Michael McManus,
Virginia Kiser, Martin Casella, Richard Lawson, Lou Perryman