When ancient Native American sorcery meets the 20th century, it's time for some '70's-style psychedelia!
Semi-fraudulent psychic Harry Erskine (Tony Curtis) makes a good living
by using his gifts to serve as a paid living horoscope for a clientele
of dowagers in San Francisco, but his world is turned upside down when a
dear old flame named Karen Tandy (Susan Strasberg) turns up on his
doorstep and requests his aid. Understandably concerned, Karen has found
that a tumor is swiftly growing on the back of her neck and all medical
testing concludes that the growth is actually a fetus. Accompanying
that startling revelation are instances of Karen repeatedly uttering a
strange phrase in her sleep, the same phrase being spoken by one of
Harry's aged clients who appears to be possessed (she does a ritualistic
dance and floats two feet off the floor and down the hallway before she
throws herself to her death down the apartment building's stairs), and
the tumor actively defending itself from removal by controlling the
scalpel-wielding hand of the attending surgeon and lethally manipulating
a surgical laser in an operating theater full of physicians.
Realizing that the issue of metaphysical rather than mundane illness,
Harry enlists the aid of fellow spiritualists who point him toward
Native American shaman John Singing Rock (Michael Ansara, aka Kang from
STAR TREK and former husband of I DREAM OF JEANNIE's Barbara Eden), who
informs Harry that the tumor is in actuality the spirit — or "manitou" —
of Misquamacas (Joe Gleb), a 400-year-old shaman who seeks to once more
become corporeal so he can visit righteous vengeance upon the white man
for the long list of atrocities committed against the red man. This
Misquamacas is a spirit commanding vast maleficent power and he's extra
pissed-off because the X-rays used to examine him have warped his
regenerating form, rendering him stunted and hideous, so Harry and
Singing Rock have their hands seriously full in a race against time to
both stop the ancient horror and save Karen before Misquamacas's
regeneration kills her. (Plus, not to mention the fact that the fate of
the nation hangs also hangs in the balance.)
Misquamacas reborn.
Even five years after all the hoopla, THE EXORCIST remained a viable
go-to film to attempt ripping of in hope of cashing in on the "devil
junk" zeitgeist that swept the country at the time, and THE MANITOU,
though not the flagrant knockoff that many of its contemporaries were,
definitely fit the bill. It also added a little extra spiritual spice by
throwing Native American mysticism into the mix. The acceptance of and
interest in non-Judeo-Christian spiritual/mystical thinking and
practices that flourished with the counter-culture movement of the
1960's carried over into the 1970's, which also coincided with all
manner of paranormal freakiness, cryptozoological mania, and even the
martial arts boom — which engendered curious embracing of Asian "mumbo
jumbo" — as well as the re-discovery of the works of pulp horror writer
H.P Lovecraft and his concepts of shapeless horrors so vast and
terrifying that the mere thought of them would drive mere mortals stark
raving mad. Thus, THE MANITOU and its Mulligan stew of those elements
and influences would have been perhaps the perfect distillation of
post-EXORCIST 1970's horror...had it not been the baby of hack director
William Girdler, the man who gave us DAY OF THE ANIMALS, ABBY — the
infamously awful blaxploitation clone of THE EXORCIST — and the cheesy
JAWS ripoff that was GRIZZLY (1976). Working from a novel by U.K. horror
novelist Graham Masterton, Girdler crafts a film that looks, feels. and
plays out like a '70's-era made-for-TV movie, which is unfortunate
because the ideas it presents are simply too grand for a film of its
meager means. Though its setup is rife with potential, the film takes a
very long time to get going and has such a made-for-TV flavor that its
scene transitions seem ready to flow right into commercial breaks. (In
fact, I dare say the film got more attention after its initial
theatrical run in perpetual rotation on local TV stations than it ever
did in theaters, so that aspect is somewhat ironic.)
However, it's not a total loss. Slow-moving though it is, and possessing
a climax that almost seems like a tossed-off afterthought, the
narrative does have a sweet love story between Harry and Karen that
reveals the psychic to be a man of deep feeling and concern for his
lover, so we do care about him and his quest. Michael Ansara's also fun
as a late-20th century shaman, and the script has the decency not to
make him just another rote "noble savage" stereotype. But to me the most
interesting thing about THE MANITOU is its Lovecraftian aspect,
including the concept of a formless and very evil "great old one" that
backs Misquamacas, and the moment when the disappointingly brief
showdown between good and evil manitous goes cosmic, causing Karen's
hospital room to become a doorway to some sort of infinite void that
exists in a dimension apart from our world. The imagery of her bed
floating in a limitless star-field while within a hospital room is quite
trippy, and the idea of the the manitous found in machinery being
channeled through the body of Karen, thus also evoking primal female
magic, is both intriguing and right in line with some of the areas of
mysticism being popularly explored at the time of the film's release.
Karen goes cosmic (and topless).
But no amount of good ideas can fully win out when trapped in a film
that is otherwise governed by mediocrity. THE MANITOU is worth sitting
through as an acceptable time-waster and is fondly remembered, and
perhaps even beloved, by many who saw it during their childhoods, but it
comes up rather lacking when seen from an adult perspective in 2013.
See it for the sake of completism if you must, but you won't really miss
much if you opt to skip it.



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