Something Evil

5.5
19721h 13m

A young couple moves into a farmhouse in rural Pennsylvania. What they don't know is that there is an unseen presence in the house, and that it wants to take possession of the wife.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Something Evil trailer (1972 Spielberg TVM)

Something Evil trailer (1972 Spielberg TVM)

Cast

Photo of Sandy Dennis

Sandy Dennis

Marjorie Worden

Photo of Darren McGavin

Darren McGavin

Paul Worden

Photo of Ralph Bellamy

Ralph Bellamy

Harry Lincoln

Photo of Jeff Corey

Jeff Corey

Gehrmann

Photo of Johnny Whitaker

Johnny Whitaker

Stevie Worden

Photo of John Rubinstein

John Rubinstein

Ernest Lincoln

Photo of Herb Armstrong

Herb Armstrong

Mr. Schiller

Photo of Norman Bartold

Norman Bartold

Mr. Hackett

Photo of Carl Gottlieb

Carl Gottlieb

Party Guest

Photo of John Hudkins

John Hudkins

McDermott

Photo of Paul Micale

Paul Micale

Mr. Faraday

Photo of Elizabeth Rogers

Elizabeth Rogers

Party Guest

Photo of Steven Spielberg

Steven Spielberg

Party Guest

Photo of Bruno VeSota

Bruno VeSota

Neighbor

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Reviews

J

John Chard

6/10

Beware the supernatural jam jars!

Early Steven Spielberg TV movie that is a considerable step down from Duel released the previous year, but showing signs of a directorial craft to follow.

Something Evil is not a great horror movie, well it was to those of us at a very young age who were allowed to watch it that is. The plot finds a family of four moving into a pastorally pleasing Pennsylvania farmhouse only to find a demon resides there. Hubbie works all hours in the city while mama and the two young children fall prey to something that manifests itself as red goo in jam jars or via a wind machine. Cue mama fighting the demon trying to take control of her family with love and pentacle art. Yep, it's really that simple, the budget doesn't stretch beyond that.

Spielberg shows some nice skills with his dissolves, close-ups and distorted angle shots, but much of the impact is undone by poor acting and a musical score that belongs on a ghost train ride at the funfair. A couple of characters appear, and then vanish until the last third of the movie needs them, while the special effects on offer are understandable low in quality. For its time, its budget and as an observation to the early work of a man who would become one of America's biggest directors, it's a curio piece worth sampling. But it's hardly essential for horror fans or Spielberg completists. 6/10

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