Mary (Candace Hilligoss) emerges from the river after a drag racing accident...and enters an eerie waking nightmare.
Remember the 1960 episode of THE TWILIGHT ZONE, "The Hitchhiker?" Well,
director Herk Harvey's 1962 effort, CARNIVAL OF SOULS, tells much the
same story, only at greater length and with the atmosphere and queasy
creepiness cranked up to 11.
When church organist Mary (Candace Hilligoss) miraculously survives a
drag racing accident that plunges a car full of herself and her
girlfriends into a river, the spooky young woman moves to a job at a new
parish in Utah and finds herself in a constant state of terror as she's
haunted by a mysterious and silent chalk-faced man (Herk Harvey). This
creepy figure turns up everywhere she goes and is seen by no one but
Mary, and as if that's not bad enough, as the days progress, Mary begins
to see more and more figures of her mute stalker's ilk as she begins to
feel strangely drawn to an abandoned carnival pavilion on the shore of
the Great Salt Lake. As her paranoia increases and her grip on reality
erodes, Mary herself occasionally becomes imperceptible to those around
her, an aspect that threatens to send the poor woman straight over the
edge into shattered madness. The question is just what the hell is going
on? The answer to that is obvious to anyone who saw "The Hitchhiker" or
other not-dissimilar tales of driving-related hauntings.
The titular carnival in full swing.
I've never been a big fan of stories about hauntings and ghosts, but
CARNIVAL OF SOULS holds a strong and very special place in my heart
because it is genuinely eerie and possesses a positive surfeit of old
school black-and-white atmosphere (which is aided in no small part by
the film's all-organ score). The narrative progresses with a feel and
pacing that's downright dreamlike, and that oneiric aesthetic
lugubriously builds to a full-blown nightmare by the time all is said
and done. There are no visceral shocks or gory violence, and yet the
viewer is held in the film's thrall by Candace Hilligoss's nervous,
haunted turn as Mary. The film rests squarely on her performance, and
its what she so memorably delivers that has earned her and the film its
considerable, well-deserved cult rep. This is a thoughtful, quiet
tapestry of utter creepiness and it's suitable for all ages, with Yours
Truly strongly recommending that "horror parents" sit their
impressionable young ones through it as early as age five or six. Sure,
it may give them nightmares, but the grounding they'll receive will
serve them well as they find their way down the path of the horror movie
devotee, hopefully engendering a taste for the classy stuff early in
their development. If not, there's always THE TEXAS CHAIN SAW MASSACRE.
Poster from the film's original theatrical release.



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