008 Horror – Old
Plenty of good material in this category (as per
usual).
I was majorly creeped out early in January by Weird Tales: Night Terrors by Lizzie Nunnery, originally
from 2011. Katie Angelou acted her little heart out here in a very unsettling
play. Laura (Georgia Groom) and Vicky
(Angelou) are two girls whose father has died.
Their mother (Sally Orrock) has raised them for the past few years, and
Vicky is under a lot of pressure as she was moved up a year because of her
strong maths talents. Like Herbie
Stemple in Quiz Show, Vicky may not
be a complete genius—Laura, ever jealous and spiteful, says she knows that her
sister got the answers at least once.
However, Vicky’s migraines and sleepwalking are real, and seem to be
related to the ghost of her dad (Eddie Marsan), whom only she can see, who
eventually puts her in hospital. Angelou’s
tears and sobs were almost unbearable, especially as the play escalated and no
one believed Vicky, not even her previously sympathetic mother. I was disturbed when I realized the violent
father was played by Marsan, whom I have always enjoyed in semi-comic roles.
The play was directed by Helen Perry.
Even freakier was Spine Chillers: Figures from 1984 by Colin Haydn
Evans. It was beautifully written; you
seldom come across such natural-sounding, exquisite dialogue. It was also incredibly well-structured. Anna Massey was fantastic as Anne, a wife and
mother who is locked into a hateful marriage with her odious Canadian
husband. She has had a recurring dream
ever since her father was killed in a pony and trap accident about a certain
house with a certain room. She finds the
house and buys it after making the estate agent admit that it’s haunted—only by
sounds coming from a certain locked room.
Incredibly creepy and spoiled only by the grown-up actress trying to
play the daughter Becky, the odd, unexplained resolution reminded me of Dark Fantasy or “The House in Cypress Canyon,” and the claustrophobic tone reminded
me of Dark. It co-starred Blain Fairman, Jill Lidstone,
and Jon Strickland, and was directed by Ian Cotterell. Brrrr!
However, both of these dramas are outdone by The Events at Black Tor—I feel very privileged
at having had the opportunity to listen to this serial from 1968 (!!), written
by Roy Clarke and directed by . . . Alan Ayckbourn!! This thriller was incredible and stood the
test of time. I’m not really one for the
“Black Magic” storylines of Doctor Who
or anything else. However, I really
liked the characters, the immersive and cinematic setting, the clever writing,
and the real sense of menace conveyed in this story. PC Amos James “Jamie” (Brian Peck) and his
wife Pam (Juliet Cooke) are stationed in deepest darkest north Yorkshire (and
sound a lot like Ben and Polly from Doctor
Who!). They are a great team, and it
would have been nice for Pam to have been more involved throughout the story;
in the first episode, they walked to an old cottage in the dark, and while Pam
managed to worry about tearing her nylons (why would you go hiking in nylons?),
she remained stoic throughout the rest of the strange happenings. Jamie was alerted to strange-goings on first
by reopened cut-and-dried murder cases of local poachers, then by the striking
appearance of Father Probert, a local Catholic priest (“about nine foot tall”)
voiced by the suitably baritone Bob Grant (and sounding rather like the Second
Doctor from time to time). From this
wonderful opening, we learned that the village was home to a Satanist cult who
was getting ready to sacrifice a victim in a midsummer black Sabbath. This is normally rather boring to me, but the
steady pace of the story and other well-drawn characters (Brian’s clever
sergeant for one) made this a cut above.
There were some good cliffhangers, and atmosphere was maintained through
good soundscapes of cawing birds and darkness you could almost hear. Finally, I should most certainly mention the
theme music by Trevor Holdroyd, a combination of the most disturbing sounds the
BBC Radiophonic Workshop could come up with and some wonderfully trippy
Doors-esque electric organ music.
Finally, another entry in the Spine Chillers series—“Witch
Water Green” by Don Webb, starring Pam Perris, Jenny Lee, Brian Southwood,
and Kate Lee (also from 1984). This
story convinces me that long before I first heard him as timid scientist Sokolov
in Life and Fate (2011), Nigel
Anthony had made a career out of being creepy on radio. In this story, a woman with a young baby and
a constantly traveling husband moves out to a rural area where her house is
called Witch Water Green. She interacts
with a possibly hysterical neighbor, the local (female) doctor, and a clergyman
(Anthony), but has to decide whom to trust.
To say more would be to spoil it!
It was directed by Tony Cliff.