Sunday, June 17, 2012

Cult TV Blogging: Ghost Story: "The Concrete Captain (September 22, 1972)




Considering the amazing level of talent involved -- actress Gena Rowlands, director Richard Donner (The Omen [1976], Superman: The Movie [1978]) and writer Jimmy Sangster (The Curse of Frankenstein [1957], The Horror of Dracula [1958], The Mummy [1959] -- it’s truly baffling that “The Concrete Captain” is Ghost Story/Circle of Fear’s (1972 – 1973) least satisfying entry thus far.

Part of the problem -- as we’ll see from time to time on Ghost Story -- is that the thinner supernatural tales have a difficult time filling out an hour time slot.  I’ve written it before and I’ll write it again, no doubt, but many of these same stories would work like gangbusters in a half-hour slot.  But at fifty minutes long, some entries (notably “Elegy for a Vampire,” “The Summer House” and this episode) prove long, hard slogs; repetitive and dull rather than spiky and scary.  The basic concepts explored – while sound – seem dull and predictable when stretched to hour length.

In “The Concrete Captain,” based on a story by Elizabeth Walter, Ed (Stuart Whitman) and Kate Lucas (Gena Rowlands) celebrate their tenth wedding anniversary near the coast, when Kate becomes unexpectedly obsessed (some might say possessed…) with the tragic tale of long-dead Captain Jonathan Harker (wink, wink, nudge, nudge), a sea captain who came to a tragic end, and who was thus never reunited with his beloved wife, Katherine (Eugenia Stewart). 

On a nearby beach, the captain’s body is encased -- unusually -- in concrete between sharp-edged rocks because his body was unrecoverable at the time of his demise.  Now, the doomed lovers attempt to reach out to one another, but can’t quite make the right connection.

Kate feels compelled to visit the captain’s tomb, and to stay at his house, now converted into a hotel.  Meanwhile, the Captain beckons from his tomb, and Kate makes excursions to the beach, possessed by Katherine, to reunite with him.  Finally, to save his wife, Ed must shatter the concrete tomb and free the Captain.

I try never to use the word “boring” when describing any production, because I believe strongly that boredom is the personal result of non-engagement.  A movie or TV isn’t intrinsically boring on its own, in other words.  Rather, how we choose to engage (or not engage…) with the material is our own responsibility. 

So let me just declare that “The Concrete Captain” is dull and repetitive and that such unfortunate qualities generate a sense of distance (hence, boredom…).  The episode again and again depicts Kate possessed by Katherine, walking to the picturesque beach, until her husband shows up and rescues her.

Worse than the tiresome repetition, we aren’t truly certain of the threat’s nature.  Is Kate in physical danger from the Captain?  From Katherine?  Is she being possessed?  If so, for what precise purpose?  Why and how, precisely, is Kate in jeopardy?

Dramatically, the ghosts don’t seem to obey any set of consistent rules in “The Concrete Captain,” a fact that contributes to the episode’s overall sense of lassitude.  Katherine seems to possess Kate, but then – at the episode’s finale – we see Katherine as an independent specter, acting perfectly capably outside Kate’s body.  Why bother to take-over Kate periodically when Katherine can already influence the world as a specter? 

The same question applies to the trapped Captain.  We see his spirit (a kind of negative image…) walking about from time-to-time, so what does he gain by seeing his corporeal form cast into the sea, freed from concrete?  If the Captain and Kate can both appear as spirits already, and both haunt the premises around the hotel, why can’t they connect?   If the Captain wants to escape his tomb, why does his ghost attempt to drown Ed in the ocean

Instead of addressing any such pressing questions, “The Concrete Captain” features interminable moments of Ed and Kate flirting, kissing, and questioning if anything is wrong in their marital relationship. 

With no real “evil” supernatural threat here, no purposeful sense of menace and such a meandering teleplay, “The Concrete Captain” is a time-waster extraordinaire.  Unlike the diabolical and dark “The New House” or the brutal and hair-raising “The Dead You Leave Behind,” this episode of “The Concrete Captain” seems to possess no pulse or heartbeat.   

All that established, Donner stages at least a few gorgeous shots of Gena Rowlands at the beach. In a  flowing nightgown, ensconced over the ocean on a high peak, she cuts a fine Gothic figure, to be certain.  


I had the distinct honor of interviewing Ms. Rowlands about six years ago, and she's a great actress and a remarkable human being.  The camera absolutely loves her in "The Concrete Captain," but I just wish the teleplay gave her more to do than, literally, sleepwalk.

Next week, a more provocative effort from writer Anthony Lawrence: “At the Cradle Foot.”

4 comments:

  1. Anonymous7:10 PM

    A weak script without major rewrites rarely results in a good episode or film.

    SGB

    ReplyDelete
  2. I just watched this episode for the first time since the initial run of "Ghost Story" when I was a kid, and it was a major disappointment -- I remembered it being much better and actually sorta spooky. I think the whole concept of the sea captain imprisoned in the rocks and concrete, with the harpoon that "put him out of his misery" still sticking out, was what made me always remember this episode. Sadly, over the intervening 40 years, I'd forgotten the long-winded, rather pointless plot! Definitely one of those shows that never lived up to it's potential.

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  3. Anonymous10:41 PM

    Well, the plot may drag a bit, but it works so well as a ghost story with all the great atmospheric effects: waves crashing, wind blowing, rain gusting, intermittent sun and clouds. There is a mood of "quiet" that runs through the plot, which is believable (e. g., when the ghost of Katherine appears (a quick glance) inside the motel, waking up Whitman, who goes on a search. Or the interesting scene when Rowlands brushes her hair with the antique brush. These are quaint scenes that go appropriately with the setting and the lost-lover-ghosts.

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  4. Anonymous3:22 PM

    still a favorite of mine - a calming story ghost story - of yester year.

    ReplyDelete

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