In Arizona during the Civil War, a woman is accused of witchcraft, tied to a horse, and left to die in the desert. One hundred years later, the descendants of the woman's accusers start bein... Read allIn Arizona during the Civil War, a woman is accused of witchcraft, tied to a horse, and left to die in the desert. One hundred years later, the descendants of the woman's accusers start being killed off, and the townspeople suspect that the woman has come back as an evil spirit.In Arizona during the Civil War, a woman is accused of witchcraft, tied to a horse, and left to die in the desert. One hundred years later, the descendants of the woman's accusers start being killed off, and the townspeople suspect that the woman has come back as an evil spirit.
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The story begins with a bizarro 'execution'. A convicted Native American, Abinaki, is stripped naked and made to ride a rorse into the desert to die. It seems like an incredibly uncertain AND gratuitous way to kill her!
The film then jumps to a dying desert town in the present. Instead of showing it in the first scene, one of the characters gives an exposition where he explains that the Indian lady was accused by an evil priest...and she vowed revenge on him and everyone else associated with her death. Additionally, a mentally ill blind woman (Mayo) goes on and on about the death lady....and it's rather embarrassing to watch. Eventually (and it takes a LONG time), bad things start happening...all thanks to a vengeful Abinaki.
This movie had a very low budget and many of the supporting actors didn't seem like actors at all. Their delivery was terrible....though the dialog they were given was awful as well...often coming off as bombastic and self-important. The songs are generally bad as well...with some hilariously bad lyrics.
So is it worth seeing? For most of you, NO!! But, if you like seeing actors committing career suicide as Ray and Mayo do in this one, it's worth a look.
Is it possible to title your movie HAUNTED and not have any ghosts in it? This is more boredom beyond than anything else. It really says something for your film when the scariest thing in it is Aldo Ray's hairy back during a lovemaking scene (my eyes!!!). Director Michael DeGaetano previously made the amusingly titled UFO: TARGET EARTH and shows a real fine hand at the nonsensical. There are some bizarre subplots like Ray searching for gold and Ray being the boys real father, both of which are dropped cold. DeGaetano also sets up a senseless bit with a phone booth being installed by a graveyard next to a house so the Indian girl can call Ray from beyond the grave. Huh? Why not just have her call the home phone? The mind numbing finale has our female lead trapped in the phone booth with Ray outside, trying to find a way to get at her. He finally figures out to break the glass. Meanwhile, our hero brothers hang out at a burger joint and don't even show up to save the chick. For Aldo Ray fans (my condolences) only!
"Haunted" begins in good grindhouse fashion with an inter title prologue and a topless Native American woman being forced to ride a horse into the desert to die. Fast forward a century later, and the mission from which she was ousted is now a movie ranch being renovated by two brothers; their uncle (Aldo Ray) also resides there, along with their widowed blind mother (Virginia Mayo). The arrival of a young woman, Jennifer--who may or may not be the Native American woman, reincarnated--disrupts the already muddied familial waters.
While there is little by way of logic or followthrough here a far as narrative is concerned, "Haunted" at least succeeds for its propensity for the surreal. Completely bizarre elements, such as a phone booth being installed in a cemetery at the ranch, appear in the film with little to no explanation, and their function as plot devices seems shaky and utterly random. The plot itself predates something like the Salem witch trials-inspired "The Devonsville Terror" in that it focuses on an alleged witch returning a century later to avenge her death, but "Haunted" is much less cohesive and much weirder.
There is some great desert cinematography here, and the film is extremely atmospheric. It is all punctuated by a cheapie folk music soundtrack which was written and recorded for the film, and actually released on vinyl(!) The cast here range from inept to serviceable. Aldo Ray is at his most disheveled, while Virginia Mayo leans heavily into a soapy, melodramatic portrayal of the blind mother whose supernatural ravings may not actually be delusion. Brad Rearden, who some genre fans may recognize from "The Silent Scream," portrays the younger of the two brothers.
All in all, "Haunted" is a reasonably amusing oddity whose entertainment value mainly derives from the slipshod production and sheer strangeness that tends to come from B-grade fly-by-the-seat filmmaking of this era. It is certainly the only film I've ever seen in which spirits contact the living via a cemetery phone booth on a movie ranch--and for that, it's at least something. 6/10.
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to the interview with Jim Negele on the Code Red DVD, Aldo Ray was often difficult to work with because he was drunk during much of the shooting.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Maria's B-Movie Mayhem: Haunted (2011)