Equinox
Four Stars (out of five)
1970. Released by The Criterion Collection. Running time 82 minutes. Unrated. Closed captions, English supbtitles. Has two sets of commentaries for both versions of the film. Also includes a video introduction with Forest J. Ackerman, interviews with people who've worked on the film, outtakes, and much more.

It's the Brady Bunch, the Brady Bunch, and we're all...GOING STRAIGHT TO HELL!!!! When I was a kid in the 1970s, I saw a movie on TV that scared the living daylights out of me. It was called Equinox, and it began with a young man named David Fielding running out of the woods, terrified for his life. He calls his girlfriend’s name, only to see her lying prone and bloodied on the ground. In a panic, David makes a run for it, reaching the road--but when he waves down an approaching car, we see that it has no driver! The driver-less vehicle runs into David, but before it can turn around and finish the job, David is picked up by another car--this one filled with a regular driver and a passenger--which takes him to safety. A year later, a reporter named Sloan, who covered David’s strange story when he was first discovered, goes to visit Dave at the mental institution, where he has remained since becoming stark raving mad. All David keeps raving about is how the forces of evil are on the move, and the only thing in the world that he cares for is his crucifix.

When Ranger Jones doesn't want you camping in a particular area, he sure gets testy about it! I recalled the sheer terror I felt at the end of the film, at the moment when David realizes he has lost his cross--which turns out to be his only protection from the malevolent forces that prey on him. And he kept shouting over and over for his cross. I still had chills just thinking about that final scene, and when I heard that Equinox had been released on DVD, I was very happy because I was eager to see it again after all these years. But when I heard who had released it, I was stunned. No less than the Criterion Collection, the purveyors of all that is sacred in the cinema, has given Equinox--the little film that could--the deluxe two-disc release on DVD. And why not? I mean, granted, watching Equinox again after all these years, I’ve got to admit that it’s just not as scary as it used to be for me. In fact, I now see that my childhood memory of it apparently was far more potent than the film actually is.

You want to get to I-95? Yeah, just hang at left at the Dairy Queen down there.... Equinox is basically a collection of stilted scenes with actors giving a desert-dry delivery of their lines. They do all the stupid things you’re not supposed to do in horror movies, and then some, and the sequence where Susan is assaulted by the park ranger from hell--a scene that horrified me as a kid--now comes across as being very lame and somewhat funny (I am in no way implying that a woman being assaulted is funny; it's just that this particular scene, with the goofy looks on the park ranger, is just laughable). This is definitely fodder for the gang at Mystery Science Theater 3000 to make fun of. Yet the special effects that populate Equinox are still fun to watch: the stop-motion work, which is the same style as that was done by Ray Harryhausen, is incredible, and several effects scenes--such as the one used to depict a portal into another dimension, and a castle--are still impressively done.

This week on This Old House, they try a much different approach to remodeling a home.... In fact, it was these special effects, and the men who created them, which spurred the Criterion Collection into releasing a special edition of Equinox. Dennis Muren, Jim Danforth, and many others behind the scenes would go onto great careers in the film special effects industry--Muren himself would become a major force at Industrial Light & Magic, the special effects company originally created by George Lucas to handle the effects for the Star Wars films, but which has become recognized on its own as a leader in cutting-edge special effects. Starting off with a video introduction by Forrest J. Ackerman, the editor of the legendary Monsters Of Filmland, the first disc of the DVD contains two versions of Equinox: the original student film produced by Muren and friends, and the longer version that was released by producer Jack H. Harris, who created new scenes to pad out the film’s running time (including the infamous Park Ranger molestation scene, with director Jack Woods playing the frisky ranger). Both films have commentaries from their makers, and the second disc is filled with more behind the scenes goodies such as interviews and outtakes. While the film itself may not be considered very good, the DVD package is superbly done--the film print used is marvelously clean and clear--and Equinox's fascinating behind the scenes history makes this one worth owning for both film and horror buffs. --SF

Back To The Halloween Page

Main Review Page | Horror Reviews |Buy This DVD Right Here!