Essentially a rip-off of Carrie (1976), the hit film adaptation
of Stephen King’s novel about a tormented teen with telekinesis, this
made-for-TV thriller trudges along for about an hour of low-grade suspense
before exploding with an action-packed finale, complete with a twist ending. It
would be exaggerating to call The Spell
special, but it’s entertaining in a kitschy sort of way, and it benefits from a
respectable leading performance by Lee Grant, who tries mightily to retain her
dignity even during the most outlandish scenes. It’s also novel to see a very
young Helen Hunt, who made this picture during her first career as a ’70s child
actress, because even though she was only about 14 when The Spell first aired, she already possessed grown-up gravitas.
Anyway, the picture concerns Rita (Susan Myers), an overweight adolescent living
with her affluent family in a posh suburb. Constantly razzed by classmates
about her girth, Rita lashes out one day by telekinetically causing an accident
that kills another student. Thus begins a long downward spiral during which Rita
succumbs to dark impulses, eventually causing her mother, Marilyn (Grant), to
explore paranormal explanations for the crisis. (Hunt plays Rita’s younger
sister, a popular kid whose normalcy provides contrast to Rita’s weirdness.)
Keeping special-effects scenes to a minimum for budgetary reasons, the
producers of The Spell concentrate on
dramatic bits in which Marilyn and her husband, Glenn (James Olson), grapple
with the strangeness that’s taken root in their home. For instance, the picture
features a predictable but effective trope of Glenn compounding Rita’s problems
by showing favoritism to her sister. (There’s also a fleeting subplot involving
a paranormal investigator played by Jack Colvin, who played a similar character
on the long-running series The Incredible
Hulk.) As far as thrills and chills, The
Spell is fairly mild except for the gruesome death of a housewife about
midway through the story, and the only real special-effects scene involves a
telekinetic showdown during the finale. Still, there are worse ways to pass 86
minutes than watching what amounts to Carrie
Lite, although another made-for-TV Carrie
rip-off—1978’s The Initiation of Sarah,
with Kay Lenz—actually has more campy zing.
The Spell:
FUNKY
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