Monday, October 9, 2023

The Sentinel

 

The Sentinel Poster

(1977) Directed by Michael Winner; Written by Michael Winner and Jeffrey Konvitz; Based on the novel by Jeffrey Konvitz; Starring: Christina Raines, Chris Sarandon, Burgess Meredith, Ava Gardner, Martin Balsam, Arthur Kennedy, Sylvia Miles, John Carradine, José Ferrer, Eli Wallach, Christopher Walken, Beverly D'Angelo and Jeff Goldblum; Available on Blu-ray and DVD

Rating: ***½  

Party Guests

“The angel Uriel was stationed at the entrance to Eden to guard it from the devil. Since that time a long line of guardians... sentinels, have guarded the world against evil. Right now, it's Father Halliran upstairs. But tonight, you become the next sentinel. All the people you saw here, the old man, the lesbians... all of them are reincarnations. Devils. The only way they can stop the new sentinel is to make you commit suicide. That's what they were trying to do.” – Michael Lerman (Chris Sarandon)

Upstairs Horror

We’ve all visited someplace we’re convinced is the portal to hell. For me, it’s any discount Mecca flocked by hundreds of bargain-seekers, such as Costco or Walmart. But in the case of Michael Winner’s The Sentinel (based on the novel by Jeffrey Konvitz),* an unassuming Brooklyn, New York brownstone is the literal entrance to the nether realm. As our protagonist, Alison Parker (Christina Raines)** eventually discovers, her apartment building is ground zero for an eternal tug-o-war between good and evil (and you thought your next-door neighbors’ lives were filled with drama). Instead of filming on Hollywood sets, Winner*** chose real-life locations to depict his uncanny horror film. 

* Fun Fact #1: Konvitz cited Dante’s Inferno and Paradise Lost as two literary works that influenced his novel. 

** Fun Fact #2: According to Konvitz, the studio originally considered Diana Ross for the role. 

*** Fun Fact #3: Other directors considered for the film were Don Siegel (who also wrote a previous draft of the script), Gil Cates, and Fred Zinnemann.

Alison and Michael

On the surface, Alison Parker seems to have it all: a lucrative career as a model, good friends, and an affectionate (and well-to-do) attorney boyfriend, Michael Lerman (Chris Sarandon).* As we soon see, all is not rosy in Alison’s life. Besides grappling with unresolved teenage trauma (including a suicide attempt) and ambivalence about her father’s death, she begins to experience sudden lapses, resulting in fainting spells. She gently rebukes Lerman’s offer of marriage, citing a need to live on her own and assert her independence. Thus begins her quest to find affordable housing in New York, employing the services of Miss Logan (Ava Gardner), a plucky real estate agent. She finds an apartment in a none-the-worse-for-wear Brooklyn Heights brownstone,** populated by a bunch of eccentric tenants. But strange things are afoot in her new digs, starting with her enthusiastic neighbor Charles (Burgess Meredith, in one of the film’s best performances), who wastes no time ingratiating himself to her, introducing his cat and canary, and leaving a portrait of himself in her apartment. And something seems more than a little off about Alison’s downstairs neighbors Gerde (Sylvia Miles) and Sandra (Beverly D’Angelo, in her first feature film), who seem to enjoy toying with her. On the top floor resides a blind shut-in priest (John Carradine), who sits at the window for hours on end, staring blankly at presumably nothing. Things get (to borrow a phrase from Lewis Carroll) curiouser and curiouser, when she learns, much to her dismay, that aside from the priest, she’s the building’s only tenant. Who are these people, and are they merely figments of an overactive imagination? The answer will change Alison’s life forever. 

* Fun Fact #4: According to separate commentaries by Winner and Konvitz, they originally wanted Martin Sheen to play Michael Lerman, but the studio nixed their choice because he was considered a television actor, and not cinematic material. 

** Fun Fact #5: While $500 (which she talks down to $400) wasn’t unrealistic for a roomy apartment in Brooklyn Heights during the ‘70s, consider that the average monthly rental price now hovers around $4160. How times have changed. 

Charles with Cat

The Sentinel boasts an impressive cast of veteran and novice actors. Aside from Gardner, Meredith and Carradine, look for Arthur Kennedy as a monsignor, José Ferrer as his Vatican-based superior, Martin Balsam as a professor, Eli Wallach as an tenacious police detective, Jerry Orbach as a gruff commercial director, and William Hickey as a wily lockpicker.* Besides the voluminous list of well-known performers, the film featured an equally formidable roster of up-and-coming actors, including Beverly D’Angelo (in her first feature film appearance), Jeff Goldblum as a fashion photographer, Christopher Walken as an assistant police detective, and Tom Berenger and Nana Visitor as prospective tenants. 

* Fun Fact #6: If Sarandon and Hickey sound oddly familiar together, no, your ears aren’t deceiving you. Both lent their voices, years later, in The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) as Jack Skellington and Dr. Finkelstein, respectively.

Alison with Photographer

The production was not without its share of behind-the scenes conflicts, many between Winner and Konvitz. While Konvitz wasn’t impressed with Winner’s script, Winner contended that the studio wasn’t happy with Konvitz’s adaptation. Konvitz wrote a 15-page memorandum to Universal executives, cataloguing the problems he had with the film, but his suggestions* went unheeded by studio and director (In his commentary, Konvitz described Winner as “difficult” and an “egomaniac.”). Christina Raines, by her account, found working with Winner to be a miserable experience. In his commentary, Winner also claimed to have had a one-night stand with one of the models in the film, and had propositioned at least one other actress. 

* Fun Fact #7: Konvitz wanted all unknowns in the roles, but Universal (in a move that Konvitz equated with their approach to the Airport movies) insisted on an all-star supporting cast). 

Monsignor Franchino and Father Halliran

Many elements of the film hold up (especially the scene where Alison confronts her dead father), but one that doesn’t pass muster is the unfortunate exploitation of people with real deformities* as the denizens of hell (some of whom worked the sideshow circuit), reminiscent of the final scene in Tod Browning’s Freaks (1932). To add insult to injury, none of the disabled performers were credited, but among them were Bob Melvin (“The Man with Two Faces”) and Esther Blackmon (“The Alligator Girl”). On a different note, the lesbian couple played by Miles and D’Angelo are depicted in a less than flattering light. (Minor Spoiler Ahead). In its defense, the film’s intention wasn’t that they were condemned to hell because of their orientation, but because they were murderers. It would be easy, however, for viewers to get the wrong impression. 

* Not-So-Fun-Fact: Mirroring the behind-the-scenes events of more than four decades ago in Freaks, Winner recalled the film crew refusing to have lunch with the disabled actors.

A Strange Discovery

Despite the behind-the-scenes friction and shaky ethics, The Sentinel remains a genuinely creepy experience, with its pervasive atmosphere of unease and slow build to an explosive climax. Not unlike Rosemary’s Baby, it utilizes the theme of friendly faces harboring a terrible secret, amidst the backdrop of a New York tenement house. Aside from a few unsettling Dick Smith makeup sequences, The Sentinel achieves its chills without elaborate special effects or an over-reliance on gore. There have been murmurs of a remake in recent years (which considering the aforementioned issues might be a way to right some wrongs), but any prospective filmmaker would be wise to adopt the same less-is-more approach. 

 

Sources for this article: Shout Factory Blu-ray commentary by Michael Winner; Shout Factory Blu-ray commentary by Jeffrey Konvitz; https://www.rentcafe.com/; https://www.phreeque.com/ 

 

10 comments:

  1. Fantastic review, Barry with lots of interesting fun facts!

    I've heard of the novel and the film of the sentinel but I've never experienced either! It definitely sounds right up my alley and wow, who isn't in this movie?! Lol

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    1. Thanks so much, John! What a cast, indeed. After listening to the commentary by the writer, I think I can safely conclude that no one liked the director. Apparently, he berated and fired an assistant because he didn't hand him a cigar fast enough!

      Speaking of the novel, I just ordered a copy. ;)

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  2. Love your offerings. This one sounds interesting. One of those movies they had back in the day where everyone was in it! Thanks for being here .

    `Master Crypt Keeper, Michelle

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    1. Thank you! :) They don't make 'em like that anymore, do they? Thanks for stopping by.

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  3. Very good write-up of an ultra-creepy film. This is a good example of a film that succeeded (at least artistically) despite the tumult behind the scenes. I had forgotten all the big names that were in it, and wondered for a moment why the studio insisted on the all-star cast for a horror movie. Then it dawned on me that horror was big office by this point, thanks to Rosemary's Baby and the Exorcist.

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    1. Thanks, Brian! There's more stars than you can shake a stick at! As you mentioned, the behind-the-scenes mayhem thankfully didn't transfer to the finished project. It hasn't lost its power after all these years.

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  4. This is a never ending cast and so great to see a review on it.. thanks for reminding me of this. Seems I missed some you mentioned so definitely a rewatch is in order. Really enjoyed reading this.

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    1. Thanks a bunch, Gill. It's definitely worth rewatching. I'm ashamed to admit that I have yet to the read the book, but I just ordered a copy!

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  5. Another great post! I always learn something new from your reviews. Anyhow, even though I loved it, I've always wondered how the producers manged to convince so many good actors to appear in this rather nasty chiller! :)

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    1. Thank you! That's a very good question. Perhaps everyone they approached was informed who else was going to be in it, and they let peer pressure do the work?

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