The Shout (1978)

the shout movie poster

I had planned to make this film last week’s Friday Night Horror movie, but about halfway through I stopped it to do some family things, and when I tried to pick it back up, my Internet was acting wonky and I couldn’t get it to play (it is currently on the Criterion Channel). But since it has been on my mind, I figure I’ll talk about it now.

A cricket game is being played at a mental institution. Patients and employees play alike, and a few outsiders are brought in as well. One such outsider, Robert (Tim Curry) takes score inside a covered wagon. A strange man (Alan Bates) joins him. This man begins to tell a story and the film follows.

In a small, seaside village live Anthony and Rachel Fielding (John Hurt and Susanna York). He’s an experimental composer who also plays organ for the local church. After services, one Sunday a stranger, Crossley (Alan Bates) begins talking to Anthony. Crossley has some odd ideas about theology and Anthony pushes him away stating that he has to go home. Instead, he meets with his mistress for a tryst.

When he does arrive home he is met at the door by Crossley, who slyly mentions how long it took Anthony to get to his home. Crossley then invites himself for dinner. He says that he spent fifteen years living in the Australian outback with the Aboriginal people where he learned their magic. He professes to know a shout that will kill anyone within listening distance.

At first, the Fieldings are put off by him, but then he seems to hold power over them. Rachel is seduced by him and Anthony does whatever he says. The film is somewhat vague on whether or not he does have supernatural power. It seems to be real, but it could also be a hallucination.

The entire film could be a hallucination, come to think of it. We periodically cut back to that cricket game. Crossley is there telling the story, at least I think it is Crossley. It is someone played by Alan Bates but I don’t believe he ever gives his name. Anthony is there, too, playing cricket. But again, is that Anthony, a different character played by John Hurt?

Are these two characters at the cricket match patients? Has the storyteller been telling the truth, or is he just making up a story? Is the cricket player actually Anthony? Is he now a patient at the hospital? Or do we see that person as Anthony inside the story because the storyteller just happens to be watching him play cricket?

The film doesn’t let us know any of the answers. It is enigmatic and strange. British films in the 1960s-1970s were often enigmatic and strange. They often dealt with the supernatural and relied more on mood and eeriness and plot. So it is with The Shout. Don’t expect the film to tell you anything and you might find yourself enjoying it.

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