Showing posts with label Lois Duncan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lois Duncan. Show all posts

Friday, July 15, 2022

I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER (1997)

 

(Director: Jim Gillespie. Screenwriter: Kevin Williamson.)

Plot: A year after a Fourth of July hit-and-run accident, those responsible for or witness to the death reunite, and are terrorized by a mysterious murderer bent on revenge.

 

Review

Loosely based on Lois Duncan’s 1973 bloodless suspense YA novel of the same name, this violent, R-rated film is considerably more violent when compared to Duncan’s book.

Kevin Williamson’s script (penned before he wrote SCREAM, 1996) is sometimes-clever, genre-knowledgeable and, for the most part, tight. Williamson fans may appreciate KNOW’s brief dialogue nod to one of his other creative gigs, DAWSON’S CREEK (1998-2003). Make no mistake—KNOW is nowhere near as good as SCREAM, but, judged on its own dumb-character merits and intended audience (horror-lite fans), KNOW mostly works.

The acting, often melodramatic (especially Jennifer Love Hewitt’s), suits KNOW and its late-adolescent audience, as does its now-dated 1990s soundtrack, settings (primarily Southport, North Carolina) and its overall look. Its stalk-and-slay scenes are effectively tracked and relatively bloodless, and while there are too many jump scares, the twists, for the most part, work, making KNOW a solid soft entry into the mainstream thriller genre for those who aren’t hardcore about their terror films—and, just as importantly, can forgive its young characters who do massively stupid things. (Thematically, Duncan’s relatively low-key KNOW was about young adults struggling to transition from high school to adulthood, something that gets less play in the noise of its cinematic counterpart.)

KNOW has a solid-to-good cast. Jennifer Love Hewitt played Julie James, the oft-hysterical embodiment of the hit-and-run group’s conscience. Sarah Michelle Gellar (BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER, 1997-2003) played Helen, the blond, uncertain opposite number of Julie. Freddie Prinze Jr., Gellar’s now-husband and co-star in the SCOOBY-DOO films, played Ray Bronson. Ryan Phillipe (Gellar’s co-star in CRUEL INTENTIONS, 1999) played an angry, alcoholic Barry Cox.

KNOW’s support players include: Anne Heche as Melissa “Missy” Egan, grief-haunted sister of David Egan─Anne Heche, in a later interview, said she was hired “to be scary,” and she is; Johnny Galecki (RINGS, 2017) as Max; Muse Watson as Ben Willis/Fisherman. An uncredited Patti D’Arbanville, seen briefly in one shot while Helen is on the phone, played Mrs. Shivers, Helen and Elsa’s mother.

The ending doesn’t ruin the movie, but it comes close. On a story level, it’s forced and perhaps studio-mandated, an unnecessary finish that demands an unnecessary sequel. Despite its unfortunate wrap-up and its melodrama, KNOW is a mostly solid entry in the barely-an-R-rated thriller genre, made for viewers who aren’t big horror fans and are fans of pretty actors.

Two sequels, I STILL KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER (1998) and I’LL ALWAYS KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER (2006), followed, as did an Amazon Prime/streaming show. A remake of the original is said to be in the works.

Friday, June 25, 2021

SUMMER OF FEAR (1978)

 

(a.k.a. STRANGER IN OUR HOUSE; director: Wes Craven. Teleplay by Glenn M. Benest and Max A. Keller, based on Lois Duncan’s 1976 YA novel Summer of Fear.)

Review

When a California family, the Bryants, take in a tragedy-struck, teenage relative (Julia Trent) from the Ozarks they have no idea who they’re harboring. Strange things happen, often to Julia’s cousin, adolescent daughter Rachel Bryant, prompting her to suspect something is off with Julia: why is every male within Julia’s range obsessed with the young new arrival’s every whim? Why does Rachel’s horse, Sundance, act spooked, skittish, around Julia, who quickly evolves from wallflower to beauty in record time?

Rachel’s jealousy and suspicions become alarm when she─suddenly sick and nightmare-stalked─finds odd, crudely made objects and marked up photos of herself hidden amongst Julia’s things. Then those who displease Julia begin dying in rapid succession. Is it too late to stop Julia, who is most assuredly a malefic witch?

Based on Lois Duncan’s 1976 young adult novel, Summer of Fear, this made-for-television movie─then titled STRANGER IN OUR HOUSE in the US─originally aired on NBC on October 31, 1978. (In Europe, it was released theatrically under the title SUMMER OF FEAR.)

As television works go, this is a mostly solid, predictable PG-13 flick (back then it would’ve warranted a PG rating). Wes Craven (THE HILLS HAVE EYES, 1977) helmed this bloodless, often brightly lit movie, with the rest of his cast and crew matching Craven in their competence. I write “mostly solid” because of occasionally clunky dialogue and Plot Convenient Stupidity (PCS) that makes up some of the dialogue and actions of certain characters (e.g., Rachel bluntly confronts Julia, broadcasting how she intends to stop Julia’s dark magick, further endangering Rachel and those she loves).

Fortunately, these are minor nits, given the talent involved in the project, contributors like John D’Andrea and Michael Lloyd (DEVIL’S DEN, 2006), whose spooky soundtrack is impressive for its medium.

Just as impressive is SUMMER’s cast. Linda Blair (THE EXORCIST, 1973) is her usual excellent self as Rachel Bryant. Jeff East (PUMPKINHEAD, 1988) played her brother, Peter, and Jeremy Slate (THE DEAD PIT, 1989) played Tom, her father. Fran Drescher (HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA, 2012) played Carolyn Baker, Rachel’s best friend.

Lee Purcell (NECROMANCY, 1972) played Julia Trent. John Steadman (THE HILLS HAVE EYES, 1977) played a “Veterinarian.”

SUMMER is an entertaining work if you don’t expect much and can overlook its sometimes-clunky writing and PCS-character moments.