By Steve Herte
Scars and Other Distinguishing Marks by Richard Christian Matheson (New York: Tor Books, 1988), 288 pages.
Read
any good books lately? I just finished a dandy. A good friend
recommended this to me, advising me to think of “Twilight Zone”
and Stephen King while reading it. Well, that was all I needed to
hear. Scars and Other Distinguishing Marks by
Richard Christian Matheson (1988) is a collection of short stories
featuring plot twists reminiscent of Twilight Zone episodes.
In fact several of them were published in Twilight Zone
Magazine.
I
didn’t have to wait too long for the “Stephen King” part
because the man himself wrote a glowing forward to the book,
complimenting Matheson on style and amazing brevity while getting to
the point of each story without wasting words. After having read 61
of Mr. King’s books, I trust his opinion implicitly and he did not
disappoint. In addition, there is the introduction by Dennis
Etchinson, another noted writer of fantasy and horror, author of The
Dark Country (who tied with King in 1982 for the World
Fantasy Award) that set my curiosity humming for Matheson’s tales.
This
led me into an examination of Matheson himself. I originally had him
confused with his famous father, but Richard Christian Matheson
stands on his own, living proof that the acorn does not fall far from
the tree. He was born on October 14, 1953, to Richard Burton and Ruth
Matheson. His mother was a clinical psychologist, specializing in
cases of substance abuse. His younger brother, Chris, is also a
writer, with Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure (1989)
to his credit. Richard became a professional writer in 1978 and has
written over 300 teleplays as well as screenplays for movies. When
he’s not writing, he’s on the front lines for animal rights. And
would it surprise anyone to learn that he’s also a ghost hunter?
Before
we examine his television and motion picture work, let’s take a
look at Scars. It’s a masterly collection of 26 short
stories, one written in conjunction with his father, and a screenplay
from Amazing Stories titled “Magic Saturday.”
I
must admit that the first couple of stories were rather obtuse and
had me wondering what Matheson was getting at, but then he hit his
stride with the next tale and I was eager to find out what happened
next and what will happen in the following story. Allow me to give
brief encapsulations and you can be the judge of whether or not they
entice.
"Third
Wind” –
A man trying to achieve a new personal best in his athletic running
discovers he can’t stop.
"Sentences” –
A man has his screwed-up life rewritten by a company called “Script
Sure,” but they don’t consult the original scriptwriter.
"Unknown
Drives” –
A slow-moving farm truck driver frustrates an impatient driver in a
Mustang on a narrow, two-lane road, deliberately.
“Timed
Exposure” –
A couple uses a carnival photo booth that doesn’t print the photos
until later and another customer sees they predict murder.
“Obsolete” –
A robot homeowner cans his old human woman servant.
“Red” –
A father is picking up the pieces of his daughter who got caught on
the car door handle while riding her bike.
“Beholder” –
A woman artist paints herself into a steamy love scene.
“Dead
End” –
A couple in a Porsche trying to bring the life back into their
marriage can’t avoid a dead end (literally) in the Hollywood Hills.
“Graduation” –
Letters from college reveal a mysterious dorm room death and later a
devastating fire but these experiences yield an “A” grade in
Philosophy.
“Conversation
Piece” –
The only story in interview format, a man explains how he enjoys
selling his own body parts for a living to support his family.
“Echoes” –
A millionaire businessman suddenly hears screams and moans increasing
in volume and pain and hurls himself out of a window.
“Incorporation” –
A yuppie learns that the meaning of “I am the corporation” is
literal in this case – over an open fire.
“Hell” –
On a 100-degree-plus day in L.A., three cars block a woman’s car
and push her over a cliff while the Doors “When the Music’s
Over,” plays.
“Break-Up”
– A man leaves his brokenhearted lover, immediately forgets her and
transforms into someone else.
“Mr.
Right” –
A woman tells her psychiatrist about the psycho wife-beater she
married but she can’t leave him because of his prowess in bed.
“Cancelled” –
A network “King of the Spin-offs” imagines dead versions of
himself in his house and dies of fright.
“Mugger” –
A thieving team steals eyes for profit.
“The
Dark Ones” –
A dolphin family flees human fishermen, told from their point of
view.
“Holiday” –
Karl meets Santa Claus in Bermuda and gets a gift from his childhood.
“Vampire” –
All one-word sentences, no verbs, articles, conjunctions,
prepositions.
“Intruder” –
An automated home protection system prefers to “remove” rather
than “stun” intruders.
“Dust” –
A man living on Mars is conducting a war against dust.
“Goosebumps” –
A mysterious bump under a man’s skin is eating him from the inside
and is growing.
“Mobius” –
A cop grills a retarded man into believing and confessing that he’s
a serial killer.
“Where
There’s a Will” –
A man wakes up buried in a coffin, claws his way out, and calls home
from a gas station only to find out he really is dead.
“Magic
Saturday” (screenplay)
– A grandfather and his grandson magically exchange bodies as
Grandpa is about to die.
It
just wouldn’t be a discussion of Richard Christian Matheson if I
were negligent in examining his work for television and the movies.
Matheson’s
teleplays run the gamut of the times – from Three’s
Company to several episodes of The A-Team. But
as time went on Matheson began to involve himself in the family
business of writing and adapting tales of horror and the fantastic.
Sole
Survivor (Columbia
TriStar Television, 2000): This four-hour miniseries starring Billy
Zane, Gloria Reuben and Isabella Hoffman is based on the best-seller
by Dean Koontz. After his wife and daughter are killed in a
plane crash, a newspaper reporter discovers that the crash may have
been related to a secret scientific experiment involving children. A
woman, who claims she was a survivor of the crash, approaches at his
wife's grave. This leads into a plot by the Quartermass organization
to capture her and a young girl she is protecting, for the girl has
the powers to heal and to transport. A villainous killer and a young
boy who can control minds from a distance lead the attack.
Masters
of Horror (2005-2007): Matheson contributed two
episodes to this highly-regarded horror series from Anchor Bay.
The
Damned Thing (2005): Matheson and Mick Garris
adapted this story by Ambrose Bierce. A monstrous
force devastates Sheriff Kevin Reddle's family and his small Texas
town. Reddle thinks there is a connection between force and an
invisible force that made his father kill his mother back in 1981. He
has to uncover and stop the so-called "Damned Thing" before
it decimates his whole town by forcing the residents to kill each
other and themselves.
Dance
of the Dead (2005): Matheson and
Garris adapted this episode from a short story of the same name by
Matheson’s father. Set in a post-apocalypse society, 17-year-old
Peggy lives with her over-protective mother and works in her
restaurant. She misses her sister Anna, who died some time ago. When
two couples of punks come to the place for some burgers, Peggy
becomes attracted to Jak, who invites her to go out on date with him
later. Peggy goes out with Jak without telling her mother, and they
go across town to a dark place, the Doom Room, where the Master of
Ceremonies (Robert Englund) is the ringmaster of a freak show with
dead performers. The MC injects blood in the dead, and they dance on
a ring for the audience. When Peggy sees her undead sister Anna
dancing in the show, the MC discloses the truth about her presence in
the circus.
Nightmares
and Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King (TNT,
2006 teleplay) In an eight-episode adaptation of King's short
stories, Matheson adapted the first episode, Battleground. A
hit man (William Hurt) who whacked a toy maker (Bruce Spence) finds
himself besieged in his apartment by an army of toy soldiers bent on
revenge.
Happy
Face Killer (Lifetime Television, 2014, with the
story and screenplay created in concert with his father): Serial
killer Keith Jesperson (David Arquette) murders at least eight women
over a five-year span. He taunts authorities with disturbing letters
and scribbled confessions signed with a happy face.
But
wait, there’s more! We wouldn’t be doing our job here at the
Celluloid Club if we didn’t include Matheson’s notable silver
screen credits.
Three
O’Clock High (Universal, 1987): High school
nerd, Jerry Mitchell (Casey Siemaszko) is assigned to write a piece
for the school paper about new boy Buddy Revell (Richard Tyson), who
is rumored to be a psychopathic nutcase. When Jerry accidentally
touches Buddy, Buddy tells him that they must fight in the parking
lot at 3 pm. Jerry will just about do anything to avoid the
confrontation.
Loose
Cannons (Columbia, 1990): This film, written in
partnership with his father, concerns a veteran police detective
whose new partner is a younger detective who's a brilliant
criminologist. There’s only one problem: he has multiple
personality disorder.
It
Waits (Anchor Bay,
2005): A lone female park ranger (Cerina Vincent) tries to track down
a vicious creature killing various people and terrorizing her at a
remote national park.
And
all this started with reading a book. All this research has me
curious about his father as well, especially that classic William
Shatner episode of Twilight
Zone.
Thanks Ed, for leading me on a new path of discovery!
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