

Color, 1978, 92 mins. 37 secs.
Directed by Wes Craven
Starring Linda Blair, Lee Purcell, Jeremy Slate, Jeff McCracken, Jeff East, Carol Lawrence, Macdonald Carey, Fran Drescher
Doppelgänger Releasing (Blu-ray & DVD) (US RA/R1 HD/NTSC), Artisan (DVD) (US R1 NTSC), Xcess (Blu-ray) (Germany RB HD), Filmedia (Blu-ray) (France RB HD)
made-for-TV horror movies still hasn't quite gotten its due for the
importance it had on the genre, and that includes its use as a showcase for some of the biggest names to cut their teeth prior to or in between theatrical features. Tobe Hooper (Salem's Lot), John Carpenter (Someone's Watching Me!), and Steven Spielberg (Duel) are among the more obvious examples, and of course we also have Wes Craven. Following his one-two punch of Last House on the Left and The Hills Have Eyes, he wasn't exactly a hot in-demand name in Hollywood by the time the '70s were starting to wind down; however, he did find one more project that decade on the small screen with Stranger in Our House, now better known under its European theatrical title, Summer of Fear. Based on a novel by Lois Duncan (I Know What You Did Last Summer), this would be his first but hardly last foray into TV, with later projects including Invitation to Hell, the '80s redo of The Twilight Zone, and Chiller. The film also capped off a decade of made-forTV work for Linda Blair, who had just appeared in the, uh, distinctive Exorcist II: The Heretic but had made her mark on the tube with Sarah T. - Portrait of a Teenage Alcoholic and the notorious Born Innocent.
Rachel gives her a makeover, but increasingly
ominous things keep happening like horses freaking out and odd talismans like a human tooth turning up. Soon Julia's muscling in on Rachel's friends and even trying to swipe her boyfriend, Mike (McCracken), and after doing some research, Rachel starts to think there might be witchcraft afoot...
Craven (she later appeared in a great split-second cameo in the first Scream, of course)
and how the film fits in with her overall genre career. The presentation looks nice for the most part aside from a few brief instances that appear to be pulled from dupier material; it's presented full frame as shot versus the matted framing seen on some European releases. However, it's worth noting that this is the shorter theatrical edition of the film, running quite a bit shorter than the network TV running time (99 mins.) seen on the Artistan DVD. The extra time consists of three scenes including a brief dream sequence, an argument between Blair and her boyfriend, and a bit more witchcraft research and parental discussion. None of the losses impact the plot, but it's too bad they couldn't have been included as an extra at least (and obviously the commentary has been adjusted to compensate). The DTS-HD MA English 2.0 mono track is in decent condition but probably never sounded all that spectacular, and optional English SDH subtitles are available. A 1978 promo trailer and a poster and still gallery are also included.