| Hedges Capers | ... | John | |
| Severn Darden | ... | Mr. Marduke | |
| Susan Strasberg | ... | Polly Wiltse | |
| Percy Rodrigues | ... | Capt. Lojoie H. Desplain IV | |
| Denver Pyle | ... | Grandpappy John | |
| R.G. Armstrong | ... | Bristowe | |
| Harris Yulin | ... | Zebulon Yandro | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Val Avery | ... | Cobart | |
| Sidney Clute | ... | Charles | |
| Sharon Henesy | ... | Lily | |
| Honor Hound | ... | Himself | |
| Chester Jones | ... | Uncle Anansi | |
| Alfred Ryder | ... | O. J. Onselm | |
| William Traylor | ... | Reverend Millen | |
| White Lightnin' | ... | Themselves | |
Directed by | |||
| John Newland | |||
Writing credits(in alphabetical order) | ||
| Melvin Levy | ||
| Manly Wade Wellman | book "Who Fears the Devil?" | |
Produced by | |||
| Barney Rosenzweig | .... | producer | |
Original Music by | |||
| Hoyt Axton | |||
| Roger Kellaway | |||
Cinematography by | |||
| Flemming Olsen | |||
Special Effects by | |||
| Gene Warren | .... | special effects | |
|
|
|
|
|
| Songcatcher | Tender Mercies | Somewhere in Time | Napoleon Dynamite | Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey |
|
IMDb User Rating: |
IMDb User Rating: |
IMDb User Rating: |
IMDb User Rating: |
IMDb User Rating: |
| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| IMDb Drama section | IMDb USA section |
A dark magical fantasy based on several of Manly Wade Wellman's stories about a guitar player who wanders across the rural American Southeast, confronting evil magicians, monsters, and perhaps the Devil himself.
The special effects are of only medium quality, even for 1973, and I can only suggest looking past them to the down-home, country-flavored fairy tale being told, woven together from fireside stories and folk traditions Wellman heard and adapted.
It's always hard to put on film what a poetic writer has described - the charm and mystery of Wellman's beloved Carolinan countryside, the old-fashioned courtesies and customs of the mountain people - and this movie does not quite succeed, perhaps because it did not really try. The magical creatures are put in the foreground, and the setting (Wellman's true love) is made a generic Southern backdrop. John in the book is a devout Christian (more, he might could be a friend of Christ); John in the movie is darkly hinted to be a son of the Devil.
My own enjoyment of this movie was very mixed: I felt frustrated by how often and how far the movie fell short of the books, and tantalized more by what the movie *could* have been than by what it *was*, but I'm glad I didn't miss seeing it.
If you also enjoyed the movie and want to see more of the character, read Wellman's "Silver John" books: "Who Fears the Devil?" (or "John the Balladeer"), "The Old Gods Waken", "After Dark", "The Lost and the Lurking", "The Hanging Stones", and "The Voice of the Mountain". There are also Wellman fan sites on the Web.