Escape to Witch Mountain (1975 film)

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Escape to Witch Mountain
Escape to witch mountain movie poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by John Hough
Screenplay byRobert Malcolm Young
Based on Escape to Witch Mountain
by Alexander H. Key
Produced by Ron Miller
Jerome Courtland
Starring Eddie Albert
Ray Milland
Donald Pleasence
Kim Richards
Ike Eisenmann
Cinematography Frank V. Phillips, ASC
Edited byRobert Stafford
Music by Johnny Mandel
Production
company
Distributed by Buena Vista Distribution
Release date
  • March 21, 1975 (1975-03-21)(United States)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$20,000,000 [1]

Escape to Witch Mountain is a 1975 American fantasy science-fiction film, based on Alexander H. Key's 1968 novel of the same name and directed by John Hough. It was released on March 21, 1975 by Walt Disney Productions and Buena Vista Distribution Company. It is the first film of the Witch Mountain series.

Contents

Plot

The film centers upon the siblings Tony and Tia, whose surname they initially know only as that of their deceased adoptive parents, Malone. The children are placed in an orphanage, where they face difficulties stemming from their strange psychic/psionic abilities: Tony can psychokinetically move and control inanimate objects with the aid of his harmonica, while Tia can communicate telepathically to Tony and commune empathically with animals and experiences premonitions. Tia also possesses minor telekinetic abilities. She carries a "star case" with her at all times, which eventually reveals a strange map. Tia has fragmented memories of her early childhood, including an accident at sea and a man she later remembers as the children's Uncle Bené, who they believe drowned during their rescue.

During a field trip, Tia experiences a premonition and warns wealthy attorney Lucas Deranian against a potentially dangerous accident. Deranian informs his employer, millionaire Aristotle Bolt, of the children's unique abilities. Bolt, obsessed with the paranormal, demands that Deranian retrieve the children at all costs. Deranian's detective work leads him to the orphanage, where he poses as Tia and Tony's uncle, though not under the name Bené, and takes them to Bolt's mansion. Though initially suspicious of Bolt's motives, Tia and Tony are lured in by the wealthy trappings of Bolt's home. Bolt eventually reveals that he has been monitoring the children via a closed-circuit television system and that he and Deranian are fully aware of their unusual powers. The night of this revelation, Tia and Tony make an escape, using their abilities to psionically control a wild mustang, guard dogs, and the security fence, as well as using Winkie, Tia's cat, to make the allergic security guard let them pass.

Bolt sends Deranian and a thug, Ubermann, after the children. Tia and Tony hide out in a green-and-white Winnebago motor home owned by a crotchety widower named Jason O'Day. Initially negative toward the children, Jason gradually begins to recognize their powers and the truth of their story; Tia's vague memories of a disaster at sea intrigue him. He agrees to take the children on the route indicated by Tia's star case, which leads them to a mountain known as Witch Mountain, home to unexplainable phenomena. Avoiding Bolt, the law, and an incited mob convinced the children are witches, they eventually make their way up Witch Mountain, pursued by Deranian and Ubermann, as well as by Bolt in a helicopter. As their memories begin to fully return, the children realize their accident at sea did not involve a boat but a spacecraft. Tony and Tia are actually of extraterrestrial origin; the double star emblem on the star case stands for a binary star system where their home planet was located.

Having come to Earth because their own planet was dying, survivors of the journey made their way to Witch Mountain and formed a community to await the surviving children, each pair in possession of a star case to help them find their way to their new home. Tony and Tia are the first to reach their destination. The children are reunited with their Uncle Bené (who survived after all, thanks to an "accommodating" shark whom he'd telepathically asked for help) and board another spacecraft. When Bolt and the others leave in defeat, Jason witnesses the spaceship's return as it flies over him to say a final goodbye then landing nearby where the inhabitants now live.

Cast

Production

Differences from the novel

Escape to Witch Mountain is based on the novel by Alexander Key. Significant differences from the book include its tone and plot elements. For example, in the book, the children are befriended by Father O'Day, an athletic, young Catholic priest, rather than crusty widower Jason O'Day. The children's ship is shot down, rather than crashed, and the children are olive-skinned, though with light-colored hair, rather than fair-skinned and blonde-haired. In the book, Deranian is the main antagonist, and he is working for a shadowy European cabal who are trying to capture the children for their special powers, instead of for Aristotle Bolt. [2] The novel is set along or near the Atlantic Coast of the United States, whereas the film was shot along the Pacific Coast in California.

Filming locations

Soundtrack

The score for the film was a limited edition CD release by the Intrada label in 2016.

Reception

The film earned a Total Lifetime Gross at the Domestic North American Box Office of $20,000,000. The film charted on the All time Domestic North American Box Office at Rank No. 145 for 'Rated G' films under the MPAA. [8] The film earned $8,500,000 in rentals at the North American Box Office. [9]

Critical reviews were mixed to positive. On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 74% based on 23 reviews, with an average grade of 6 out of 10. [10]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times was positive, calling it "a scifi thriller that's fun, that's cheerfully implausible, that's scary but not too scary, and it works." [11] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film three stars out of four, calling it "a solid adventure for the under-12 set. That might sound like a back-handed compliment, but compared to other recent Disney live-action features, Witch Mountain is something special. Only rarely is it juvenile." [12] Vincent Canby of The New York Times called the film not so much scary, but also not exciting as well. [13] Tom Shales of The Washington Post noted that the film "gives children plenty of what they want from a movie—and that includes, conspicuously, repeated instances of kids making adults look like monkeys." [14] Geoff Brown was negative, writing that despite "a strong story line ... the Disney team seem content to fritter it away with silly comedy and footling displays of magic." [15]

Sequels and remakes

Escape to Witch Mountain (1975) is the first film in the franchise of the Witch Mountain films. The second and sequel film, Return from Witch Mountain , saw the return of Ike Eisenmann as Tony and Kim Richards as Tia. In September 1978, Return from Witch Mountain was released to theaters on a double feature with Escape to Witch Mountain (1975). In 1982, Beyond Witch Mountain was produced as a television film and broadcast on CBS through Walt Disney and serves as the third and final film in the series. In 1995, Escape to Witch Mountain was produced as a television film, with a different cast and several details changed or omitted, and released as part of The Wonderful World of Disney . A reworked Disney live-action feature film Race to Witch Mountain , with a new telling and directed by Andy Fickman, was theatrically released in March 2009.

Soundtrack

The score for the film was a limited edition CD release by the Intrada label in 2016.

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References

  1. Box Office Information for Escape to Witch Mountain. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved September 18, 2013.
  2. "Escape to Witch Mountain (1975) FAQ". Internet Movie Database . Retrieved 2009-03-27.
  3. "Escape to Witch Mountain".
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  9. "All-time Film Rental Champs", Variety, 7 January 1976 p 44
  10. "Escape to Witch Mountain". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved October 10, 2023.
  11. Ebert, Roger. "Escape to Witch Mountain". RogerEbert.com . Retrieved December 5, 2018.
  12. Siskel, Gene (April 1, 1975). "'Escape to Witch Mountain'". Chicago Tribune . Section 3, p. 5.
  13. Canby, Vincent (July 3, 1975). "Screen: 'Witch Mountain'—Disney Fantasy Shares Bill With 'Cinderella'". The New York Times . 21.
  14. Shales, Tom (March 25, 1975). "Escape to Witch Mountain". The Washington Post . B9.
  15. Brown, Geoff (May 1975). "Escape to Witch Mountain". The Monthly Film Bulletin . 42 (496): 105.