While the haunting 1976
telefilm Helter Skelter is probably
the best cinematic record to date of the circumstances surrounding the Manson
Family killings, this Oscar-nominated documentary contains unsettling elements
that add dimensions to the public’s perspective on horrific events that defy
normal comprehension. In addition to stock footage and remarks from Manson
prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi, the filmmakers employ extensive interviews with
at-large members of the Manson Family. Some of this material feels a bit
dubious, as if the Family members rehearsed their remarks, but the viewpoints
they express are so delusional, frightening, and outrageous that they
illustrate the scope of Manson’s influence. Is Manson essential viewing for anyone except those fascinated with
this particular subculture? Probably not. And has Manson aged well? Definitely not. But for viewers who can adjust
their expectations to watch Manson
the way it might have been received during the time of its original release,
the movie has some power.
During their opening salvo, filmmakers Robert
Hendrickson and Laurence Merrick run through the familiar sobering statistics.
One hundred and sixty-nine stab wounds inflicted during the Tate-LaBianca
muders. A nine-and-a-half-month trial costing the state of California over $1
million. Some of the trivia, however, is gruesome—such as the fact that Family
member Susan Atkins had a 10-month-old child at home while she murdered actress
Sharon Tate, who was eight and a half months pregnant at the time. And when the
filmmakers cut to extensive interviews with cellmates of convicted Family
members, some moments comprise pure shock value. According to these
questionable sources, Atkins relished sucking the blood from a man who slashed
his own throat while they had sex, and she wanted to repeat the macabre ritual
with Tom Jones. Another alleged Family plan involved killing Frank Sinatra,
skinning him, stitching the flesh into purses, and selling the keepsakes to
hippies. One wonders what the purpose was of including this material, other to
than to stoke public fears, seeing as how some members of the Family remained
free. (One such person, Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme, later made an attempt on
President Gerald Ford’s life, leading to court-ordered limits on the
distribution of this documentary lest it taint the opinions of potential
jurors.)
Yet the most unusual scenes in Manson
are more unsettling than out-and-out shocking. The filmmakers augment their
on-camera interviews by showing vignettes of the Family members hanging out at Spahn
Movie Ranch in Chatsworth, California, where the cultists live a dark version
of the hippie dream. One moment, they bathe and swim naked in a stream, and the
next, they describe their unyielding loyalty to convicted felon Manson. “When
Charlie gets out, it’s on—the revolution is on,” says Family member Sandy
Goode, referring to Manson’s twisted vision of a race war to upend the power
structure in America. Taking the rhetoric to a more philosophical level is the
Family member who says, “As long as any one of us is in jail, all of us are in
jail—we’re all one body, one spirit.” To a one, each Family member shown
onscreen is so detached from reality as to seem insane or warped by drug use,
if not both, which raises another question about the filmmakers’ intentions.
Was the goal to present the story of Manson and his followers objectively, or
to create the nonfiction equivalent of a horror movie? The sometimes
condescending and manipulative qualities of Manson’s
music and narration favor the latter interpretation.
Manson:
FUNKY
The appearance that the filmmakers' motivations seem muddled at best make this a perfect time capsule of a movie, I think. The intimate encounters with the "family at large" are haunting and unsettling particularly because of their temporal proximity to the events of Cielo Drive, etc. It all feels like dark hippie verite, Titicut Follies restaged in Death Valley, complete with somber guitar-and-flute accompaniment. Not sure if it's a work of staggering genius, but you can't take your eyes off it for a second. And the narration by Jesse Pearson is note/tone-perfect.
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