The search to find a horror film as gratifying to me as Roman
Polanski’s Rosemary’s Baby has largely proved
a futile one, but through my efforts, I've discovered several
reasonable and unreasonable contenders for the crown which I've nevertheless enjoyed a great
deal.
What am I saying? I was stoked! I got the book from the
library and positively raced through it, the cliché “I couldn't put it down!” a
most apt description of how engrossing I found it. A novel so influenced by Rosemary’s Baby that it bordered on plagiarism,
yet taking its overlay of then-trendy Catholic-based horror to effectively creepy
and unexpected twists.
WHAT I LOVE ABOUT THIS FILM
The Sentinel never quite comes together as a great horror film (the script is too weak and performances all over the map), but as your better-than-average, big-budget B-movie, it’s very much like one of those amusement park haunted house rides. You get scared, you jump, sometimes you have to cover your eyes, other times you laugh - but through it all there's a great great time to be had, provided you don't take any of it too seriously.
Here's a tip for budding screenwriters: if you really want the audience to like and feel sorry for a character, don't make her a fashion model. We don't take models seriously. For starters, nobody considers what they do to be real work, secondly, deep down we're all slightly envious or resentful of their genetics-based charmed lives and therefore tend to harbor secret hopes that terrible fates befall them. However, I must add that scenes of beautiful, heavily made-up women suffering in high-fashion attire awfully entertaining, even if the pleasure derived from it leans a bit towards camp and unintentional laughs.
PERFORMANCES
THE STUFF OF FANTASY
Even more than I love seeing all those bell-bottomed jeans and '70s fashions; more than I love the New York locations; more than I love Gil Melle's ghoulishly symphonic score—I really get a kick out of the roster of talent assembled for this movie.
Of all the films released in the post-Rosemary’s Baby Modern Gothic vein, the real standouts for me have
been: The Mephisto Waltz (1971), Don’t Look Now (1973), The Exorcist (1973), The Stepford Wives (1975), The Omen (1976), Burnt Offerings (1976), and Polanski’s The Tenant (1976). All are films for which I held high hopes before
release, all are excellent-to-exceptional movies in their own right; yet none come
close to capturing Rosemary’s
Baby’s distinctive way of drawing the viewer into an empathetic identification with its protagonist through the skilled manipulation of the medium of film and an understanding of the central, elemental vulnerabilities of fear.
When a book critic in 1974 described Jeffrey Konvitz’s new novel The Sentinel as a cross between Rosemary’s Baby and The Exorcist,
I was instantly intrigued. When sometime later I read in the movie magazine Rona Barrett’s Hollywood that Universal Studios had acquired the motion
picture rights and that Kate Jackson of The
Rookies (Charlie’s Angels was
just taking off) was being considered for the lead, I was interested. Later still,
when I heard that Jackson had passed on the role and Nashville’s relatively unknown Cristina
Raines was to head an all-star cast opposite Dog Day Afternoon Oscar/Golden Globes nominee Chris Sarandon (whose
rising star was not yet tarnished by the still-to-be-released Lipstick), I was completely sold.
Cristina Raines as Alison Parker |
Chris Sarandon as Michael Lerman |
Deborah Raffin as Jennifer |
Eli Wallach as Detective Gatz |
Burgess Meredith as Charles Chazen |
Meanwhile, the Hollywood trade papers ran items on an almost
daily basis announcing which new star (Eli Wallach, Ava Gardner, Martin Balsam…)
had just been signed to the film. A good book, a good cast, a high-profile director
(Michael Winner of Death Wish, who,
had I been familiar with his work at the time, would have given me pause)…I had
the feeling that The Sentinel could
be the post-Rosemary’s Baby Satanic thriller I’d been waiting for.
Like Rosemary’s Baby,
The Sentinel is a story of a lapsed Catholic who comes to pay dearly for her loss of faith. The godless infidel
in this case being beautiful New York model Alison Parker, a fragile, two-time
suicide attempt with father issues and a sleazy, albeit caring, lawyer boyfriend
with a shady past (Sarandon). Afraid of duplicating her mother’s unhappy life
of emotional and financial dependence, Alison seeks to live on her own for a time
before committing to marriage, her search leading to a picturesque riverfront
Brooklyn Heights brownstone that is to die for...literally.
Contemporary audiences are apt to find The Sentinel’s most startling, gasp-inducing scene to be the one in which real estate agent Ava Gardner informs Raines that the outlandishly spacious,
fully furnished apartment is available to her for only $400 a month! A detail so outlandish in relation to today's housing crunch that even after the story begins dropping hints that the building is built over the very entrance to
Hell itself, I doubt if any modern viewer would find that bit of info to be a deal-breaker for such a bargain. More than likely it would only serve as a reason to take on more renters insurance.
Predictably, it's the renting of the too-good-to-be-true apartment that seems to trigger all manner of maladies and calamities for Alison. The strange neighbors, the noises coming from the empty
apartment above, the piercing migraines, the blackouts, the hallucinations. And just what is it with the blind priest on
the top floor who sits all day at the window, seemingly watching all the events
unfold? What does it all mean?
Finding out the answers to these questions makes for devilishly
good, often unpleasantly gross-out, entertainment. The Sentinel is nowhere near as accomplished as Rosemary’s Baby (indeed at times it’s
downright amateurish) but it’s a nicely constructed, slightly old-fashioned
thriller of considerable suspense and scares that veers agreeably back and
forth between chilling and campy, depending on which scene and whose
performance you’re watching.
WHAT I LOVE ABOUT THIS FILM
It’s clear from the start that the makers of The Sentinel are shooting for an unholy union
of Rosemary’s Baby's brand of sophisticated urban horror crossed with the graphic gross-outs of The Exorcist and The Omen.
There’s the emotionally fragile heroine plagued with guilt over abandoning her
faith; the ominous-looking apartment-house filled with elderly eccentrics; a disturbing,
cryptic nightmare; the suggestion of a plot against our heroine that her shady
boyfriend may or may not be involved in; and the heroine’s deteriorating mental
and physical health. It’s all there…cloaked in a solemn portentousness worthy of
a religious parable on sin and redemption.
The Sentinel never quite comes together as a great horror film (the script is too weak and performances all over the map), but as your better-than-average, big-budget B-movie, it’s very much like one of those amusement park haunted house rides. You get scared, you jump, sometimes you have to cover your eyes, other times you laugh - but through it all there's a great great time to be had, provided you don't take any of it too seriously.
Photographer Jeff Goldblum offers assistance to a headache-plagued Cristina Raines while concerned friend and fellow model Deborah Raffin looks on. |
Here's a tip for budding screenwriters: if you really want the audience to like and feel sorry for a character, don't make her a fashion model. We don't take models seriously. For starters, nobody considers what they do to be real work, secondly, deep down we're all slightly envious or resentful of their genetics-based charmed lives and therefore tend to harbor secret hopes that terrible fates befall them. However, I must add that scenes of beautiful, heavily made-up women suffering in high-fashion attire awfully entertaining, even if the pleasure derived from it leans a bit towards camp and unintentional laughs.
Top Model: Slightly slouching model Cristina Raines (who did indeed model in real-life) like looks like she could benefit from a Tyra Banks outburst about her posture. |
PERFORMANCES
In the I Love Lucy
episode titled “Ricky’s Screen Test,” it’s learned that the producers of Don Juan plan to cast a newcomer in the
lead and build him into a star by surrounding him with big-name performers. Pretty
much sounds like what they had in mind with the casting of the lovely but
largely unknown Cristina Raines in her first major screen role.
Raines possesses an overall impassive countenance, a somewhat
flat speaking voice, and a very un-model-like way of walking and standing, yet
in spite of all this, I found myself being totally won over by her in this movie. Aside from liking the whole preachy Catholic thing used as a basis for horror, Raines is the main reason I've seen The Sentinel so many times. I know that sounds strange given what I've just said, but in roles that require an actor to
be the one upon whom an audience must invest its sympathies and identification,
personal appeal and likability can often trump technique. Cristina Raines registers rather stronger in the scenes of her character's decline than she does in the film's earlier scenes, as such, she makes for an appealingly vulnerable protagonist in the war between good and evil.
Top-billed Chris Sarandon followed his attention-getting supporting role in Dog Day Afternoon with two career-killing unsympathetic lead roles in two poorly-received motion pictures. He was a sweaty serial rapist in Lipstick, and in The Sentinel, he plays a corrupt lawyer with an unflattering '70s porn-stache that makes him look way too much like Paul Snider (of Dorothy Stratten/ Chippendales infamy). Sarandon has proven himself to be a wonderful character actor, but I'm afraid he makes for a stiff, blank, leading man.THE STUFF OF FANTASY
Even more than I love seeing all those bell-bottomed jeans and '70s fashions; more than I love the New York locations; more than I love Gil Melle's ghoulishly symphonic score—I really get a kick out of the roster of talent assembled for this movie.
Clockwise from top left: Arthur Kennedy, Ava Gardner, Martin Balsam, Christopher Walken, Jose Ferrer, and John Carradine. |
That's Richard Dreyfuss in this brief street scene and Tom Berenger makes an appearance in the film's epilogue |
THE STUFF OF DREAMS NIGHTMARES
Every horror film worth its salt in the 1970s had a big setpiece moment. The Exorcist had projectile pea soup, and The Omen had that spectacular beheading. The big moment in The Sentinel—not exactly a surprise, as it was prominently featured in the paperback cover art and on the movie poster for the film—is the rising of the demons and denizens of hell. The gates of hell spill open and all of Satan's minions come forth to terrorize and unleash (more) evil into the world. It is a peak horror moment and everyone involved with making The Sentinel knew it was going to have to top The Omen and The Exorcist if it had any hope of doing similar business.
What many people apparently knew but failed to let me in on at the time (there was some pre-release controversy that somehow got by me) was that director Michael Winner had decided to take a disturbing page from the harrowing conclusion of the 1932 cult horror film classic Freaks, and used people with genuine physical disabilities to portray the demons.
To say this sequence is unsettling is a major understatement. It's creepy, it's gory, it's so weirdly grotesque it borders on the distasteful. To this day I still can't bring myself to watch it except through extremely close-knit fingers over my eyes. But one critic at the time made the very good point that audiences are just as likely to view these individuals with empathy instead of fear, undercutting the effectiveness of Winner's questionable creative decision.
In 1979 I had an opportunity to speak briefly to Cristina Raines and asked her about this scene (I was working at a Honda dealership at the time and she came to pick up her car. My asking about The Sentinel must have struck her as totally random, but how could I let an opportunity like that go?). She relayed to me that the entire film was very difficult to shoot, but this sequence, in particular, was especially tough because Winner, intent on extracting genuine reactions from her, was prone to springing surprises on her.
It appears that many of Raines' screams and shocked reactions are the real deal, owing to the fact that much of what we're seeing is something she is seeing for the first time, as well. Raines also said that the individuals hired for the finale sequence (I think she said it took a week) appeared to be enjoying their time as movie stars. While not privy to whether or not any of them felt exploited or were disdainful of Winner's desire to present them as fearful grotesques, she did tell me that they all formed a kind of fraternal clique and seemed to enjoy the attention and special treatment that came with making the film.
With the horror genre currently in the hands of many filmmakers I'm not particularly fond of (Rob Zombie, Sam Raimi, Eli Roth...the inauspicious list goes on....all of whom make Michael Winner look like Alfred Hitchcock), and favorites like Roman Polanski, David Cronenberg, and Brian De Palma all in their 70s and beyond; I've more or less put an end to my search to find a horror film as flawless as Rosemary's Baby. And maybe that's how it should be. Perfect is great, and you're lucky when you find it...but The Sentinel is a terrific reminder of how imperfection can sometimes be a lot of scary fun, too.
"Blind? Well, then what does he look at?" |
Copyright © Ken Anderson 2009 - 2013