Four teenagers head into the country for some fun and relaxation and end up at a cabin in the woods which comes under attack by the dark forces of Hell. The youngsters fall victim one by one to the various attacks which include intruding monsters and demons who invade the spirits of the kids themselves. The violence seems to be centered around a mysterious book filled with ancient lore. Eventually all the kids succumb save one who is left to tell the tale, though his ultimate fate has little doubt.
Generally speaking, that sounds a lot like Sam Raimi's Evil Dead movies. But it's not a description of those, rather it's a brief overview of the movie Equinox. This movie began as an amateur effort put together by Dennis Murren and other talented special effects "Monster Kids" and some aspiring young actors (including a future Rose Parade queen and Frank Bonner star of WKRP In Cincinnati).
The movie tells the story of penetrating a barrier to Hell. They even got Frtiz Leiber, the famous science fiction and fantasy author and creator of Fafhrd and Grey Mouser, to do some acting work in this one. Forry Ackerman shows up in a voice cameo.
The movie was completed on weekends with minimal equipment and rough stop-motion effects and then sold to a local producer named Jack Harris who got the cast together again and shot new material to make the film a bit longer for release. This resulted in two versions of the movie, the later one with more overt sexual content. The movie got released into the theaters and has since become a cult favorite.
Next time Harris returns to his roots with Beware! The Blob.
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"Oookay, fine."
ReplyDeleteTo each his (or her) own.
DeleteI didn't think anyone would get the reference--That's the catchphrase of one Herbert Ruggles Tarlek, Jr. mentioned in this column.
DeleteExcellent! I can hear his somber tones ringing in my ear now.
DeleteI remember this getting some pretty heavy promotion in 1971 when it hit the theaters in L.A. Of course, Forry promo'd it in Famous Monsters, too. A frequently wince-inducing film, it was saved by the animation of David Allen and Jim Danforth. Harris makes another one of his Hitchcockian cameos as the detective. I'll have to pull out my nicely-packaged Criterion 2-disc set and have another look.
ReplyDeleteIt was the stop-motion which first attracted me to this oddball little flicker. It has so many other charms, both because of what it does and what it can't do.
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