Do not rent creepy ass English manor houses, especially if you are an
American family with kids. This is a simple rule that the Curtis family
fails to abide by in Disney’s
The Watcher in the Woods.
Based on the book by Florence Engel Randall this easily is one of the
better Disney live action movies of the time. Genuinely scary and
well-crafted by director
John Hough this movie will send shivers down the spine of any lover of ghost stories.
Helen (
Carroll Baker) and Paul Curtis (
David McCallum) and their two daughters Jan (
Lynn-Holly Johnson) and Ellie (
Kyle Richards)
are looking for a nice place to stay while in England and when shown a
wonderfully charming English manor that seems to be perfect, and at an
astounding low rent, they decide to take it. Before taking possession
they have to meet with approval by the owner Mrs. Alywood (
Bette Davis)
and they get it after Jan has a creepy interrogation with Mrs. Aylwood.
It seems Mrs. Alywood had a daughter that went missing under tragic
circumstances and Jan may remind the old woman of her.
Creepy foreboding manor. *Check*
Creepy and eccentric old lady. *Check*
Neither of these two factors can deter Helen and Paul from such a
good deal, but unlike Jan they didn’t see a strange glow in the woods or
feel its dark presence. Also when Jan placed her hand on a bedroom
window it cracked into triangle fracture cutting her finger. The first
clue to the mystery of the woods.
The house draws first blood.
Later while unpacking Jan puts up a god-awful tacky mirror, but it’s
not the golden cherubs that are the most frightening element, no it’s
the fact that Jan doesn’t seem to have a reflection in the mirror.
“So that mean I’m a vampire, right?”
The mirror cracks into another triangle fracture but within the
fracture is the image of a girl in a blindfold, her arms reaching out
for help. Then the mirror completely shatters and topples to the floor.
Okay, that is just a little hair-raising.
Unfortunately for Jan she is just a young girl in a horror story so
nobody believes her. Her family aren’t dicks about it they just brushed
it off as overactive imagination. Which honestly is what most people
would do and the Curtis family do come off as one of the better ones
found in horror films.
Really it’s just best to avoid mirrors all together.
More and more disturbing events pile up; the girls hear whispering in
their bedrooms, Ellie names her new puppy Narek after a voice told her
to (she writes it on a dirty window so from the other side we see it as
Karen, the name of the missing girl), Jan almost drowns when a flash of
blue light in the water spills her into its depths where she is trapped
by submerged branches, but she is saved by the timely intervention of
Mrs. Aylwood.
Creepy forest of horror *check*
It’s from Mrs. Aylwood that we find out about the night many years
ago when her 17 year daughter Karen snuck out of the house to play with
three friends; Mary, Tom Colley, and John Keller at the ruins of an old
chapel during an eclipse. When Mrs. Aylwood arrived at the chapel
lightning struck the old ruins setting everything ablaze. All the kids
escaped, all but Karen. They searched and searched but her body was
never found.
Did they look in the coffin?
More and more mysterious events plague poor Jan and her sister;
strange voices and humming in the woods, premonitions warning of danger,
wild winds kicking up out of nowhere, all hinging on the disappearance
of Karen thirty years ago. Jan goes into Nancy Drew mode and begins to
investigate in earnest. She tracks down the three survivors of that
night at the chapel but only hermit Tom Colley gives up the details;
apparently Karen had been brought blindfolded to the chapel to undergo
an initiation to join their “Secret Society”
Who knew playing weird games during an eclipse at an old chapel could end badly.
But during the ritual a storm blew up during the eclipse, lightning
hit the chapel, the three other kids fled in terror as the chapel was
engulfed in flames and leaving poor blindfolded Karen behind. Later Tom
told how he had looked back just as the chapel bell collapsed where
Karen had been standing, but she was no longer there. No one believed
Tom as there was no other way out of the chapel.
When Helen Curtis witnesses Ellie in some fugue state, as forces unknown channel demands that they find “
the door”
before its to late; she grabs both her daughters, packs their things,
and flees the house. This is a completely reasonable response to seeing
your daughter possessed and not one seen enough in horror films today.
Unfortunately for dear Helen it is too late as the force in the woods
will not let them leave. Their car dies on a rickety bridge and it’s
only Jan’s premonition of danger that gets them out of the car and off
the bridge before lightning strikes it.
The Watcher does not fuck around.
The next morning back at the manor dominoes begin to fall when Ellie
reminds Jan that today is the day of the eclipse and that “They hardly
ever happen” with that tidbit added to all the other mysterious events
that have occurred it leads Jan to believe that they must re-enact the
ritual bring back Karen. Jan is able to convince Mary (
Frances Cuka) Tom Colley (
Richard Pasco) and John Keller (
Ian Bannen) to come back to the chapel and maybe, just maybe find out what happened to Karen.
Things get a bit dodgy now as there are three different cuts to the
ending of this movie. Originally when they perform the ritual the “
Watcher in the Woods”
manifests in the chapel and it is strange alien creature that then
grabs Jan and takes her to another dimension to where we find poor Karen
who has been trapped there, suspended in time for thirty years.
Apparently Jan found the Tardis.
Jan walks over to Karen, who is in some
kind of light field, grabs her hands and they are whisked through time
and space back to the chapel. We learn that when these four kids did the
ritual it caused and accidental exchange resulting in Karen being stuck
aboard a strange otherworldly dimensional space craft and the alien
trapped in the woods on Earth. Sadly critics and audiences alike laughed
at the puppeteered monstrosity so the ending was greatly trimmed and
released a year later with major alterations.
Where’s Jim Henson and the gang when you need them?
Actually the stuff aboard the alien craft never even got released as
it looked even goofier than the alien puppet, all audiences originally
saw was the alien appear, embrace Jan and vanish and then Jan reappeared
with Karen and everyone is reunited for a happy ending.
“I am not a happy ending.”
The cut that got released a year later, and is the only one currently
part of the movie today on video, has Ellie showing up during the
ritual and once again possessed by The Watcher. She/It explains clearly
what happened thirty years ago, going on about a magnetic pull of the
eclipse caused the dimensional door to open and Karen and The Watcher to
change places, and with but a flash of light Karen is returned. Mrs.
Aylwood shows up out of nowhere and hugs her daughter.
Fade to black. It’s a bit of an abrupt ending to say the least and doesn’t give much closure.
Possessing little girls since 1980.
None of the endings work completely on their own, but all of them are
really fascinating to watch. This is really when Disney started to make
films for a wider audience and was released through Buena Vista
Distribution which became their main arm of adult films. You also have
to give them credit for being one of the first movies to start in one
genre and then end up with, “It was aliens.”
The Watcher in the Woods has had a few DVD releases with the one from
Anchor Bay being the best, but there is a good chance your local
library may have some version on hand and it is certainly well worth
checking out.
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