The Sentinel (1977)
During the seventies, the success of several disaster movies indirectly started a trend for all-star casts. Then when the horror genre became a bankable commodity once again and Hollywood started pouring money into such productions, the casting of famous actors both old and new continued. Hence Michael Winner’s 1977 adaptation of The Sentinel, based upon the book by Jeffrey Konvitz, features multiple stars from forties and fifties Hollywood. Their presence adds some gravitas to the production but like so many of the director’s other films, there is an unseemly and somewhat unpleasant quality to The Sentinel. Perhaps a different director could have brought the various elements of the story together more successfully. Winner creates both atmosphere and shocks, but it is all a little too knowing. He also commits a cardinal sin at the film’s climax. Casting disabled actors for shock value as the denizens of hell.
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