''Intensity'' is a 1997 American
television psychological thriller film directed by
Yves Simoneau, and starring
John C. McGinley,
Molly Parker,
Piper Laurie, and Tori Paul. Based on the 1995
novel of the same name by
Dean Koontz, it focuses on a young woman who accompanies her friend home for
Thanksgiving, only to be met by a violent
serial killer.
The film originally was released as a two-part
miniseries
A miniseries or mini-series is a television series that tells a story in a predetermined, limited number of episodes. "Limited series" is another more recent US term which is sometimes used interchangeably. , the popularity of miniseries format h ...
on
Fox
Foxes are small to medium-sized, omnivorous mammals belonging to several genera of the family Canidae. They have a flattened skull, upright, triangular ears, a pointed, slightly upturned snout, and a long bushy tail (or ''brush'').
Twelv ...
on August 5, 1997, with part two airing the following day.
Plot
Chyna Shepherd accompanies her friend Laura Templeton to her family's house in rural
Washington for
Thanksgiving dinner. A
serial killer named Edgler Vess invades the house and kills Laura and her family, as Chyna hides in the killer's
RV. When Vess stops at a gas station, Chyna escapes and asks the two attendants to call the police. Before she has time to explain, Vess returns and torments the two workers before brutally killing them with a
shotgun
A shotgun (also known as a scattergun, or historically as a fowling piece) is a long gun, long-barreled firearm designed to shoot a straight-walled cartridge (firearms), cartridge known as a shotshell, which usually discharges numerous small p ...
. Chyna then learns that he is holding a 14-year-old girl named Ariel hostage in his basement. She becomes determined to save Ariel and uses one of the shopkeepers' cars to follows Vess back to his home. On the road she runs into a woman named Miriam and asks her to call the police. Miriam believes Chyna is disturbed and moves on.
Miriam stops at the gas station and finds the shopkeepers' bodies, leading her to believe Chyna's story. She makes a hysterical phone call to the police, telling them that they "need to save Chyna and Ariel," which the police interpret as the ramblings of a lunatic. Upon trying to fall back to sleep, the policeman, Ethan Trevaine, remembers the name Ariel from a missing person's case and begins investigating. Meanwhile, Chyna's car runs out of gasoline, so she abandons it in the middle of the road, forcing Vess to stop. As Vess pushes the car down an embankment, Chyna enters his RV and hides, unknowingly leaving foot prints. Vess suspects another person has entered the RV, but feigns obliviousness. He then kills Miriam when she tries to run him off the road and save Chyna. When they arrive at his home, Chyna attempts to free Ariel from a fortified room but is attacked and subdued by Vess.
As a captive, Chyna speaks with Vess and has flashbacks to her traumatic childhood: as a little girl, she witnessed her disturbed, abusive mother and her boyfriend kill her neighbors. In turn, Vess reveals his obsession with the "intensity" of any particular experience and declares his intention to kill both her and Ariel, but offers Chyna a slightly more merciful death if she agrees to aid him in mentally torturing Ariel out of her
catatonia. The two have further
existential conversations regarding
God and the nature of
good and evil
In religion, ethics, philosophy, and psychology "good and evil" is a very common dichotomy. In cultures with Manichaean and Abrahamic religious influence, evil is perceived as the dualistic antagonistic opposite of good, in which good shoul ...
.
When Vess is late returning to work after the Thanksgiving holiday, he lies and tells his boss he had to make a last-minute trip to
Portland
Portland most commonly refers to:
* Portland, Oregon, the largest city in the state of Oregon, in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States
* Portland, Maine, the largest city in the state of Maine, in the New England region of the northeas ...
and got home later than expected. He departs, leaving Chyna chained to the dining room table. She watches in horror as one of Vess's other captives escapes from a drain hatch in his backyard, only to be mauled to death by Vess's bloodthirsty
German Shepherds. Chyna manages to free herself and seizes the opportunity to escape with Ariel. After dressing in Vess's dog-training gear and spraying ammonia in the eyes of his dogs, Chyna attempts to flee with Ariel in Vess's mobile home, but unwittingly triggers an alarm that causes him to return home early.
Before they can make their escape, an unmarked vehicle and a police car arrive. Although Chyna believes Vess to be in the unmarked vehicle driven by Trevaine, it is revealed that Vess is actually a Sheriff who emerges from the police car and opens fire on Trevaine, killing him before turning his attention to the mobile home. Chyna and Ariel manage to escape back to Vess's house, where Chyna ultimately gets the better of Vess. She sets him on fire, confines him in Ariel's old room, and watches as he burns to death.
In the aftermath, Chyna visits Ariel in a psychiatric hospital but is denied custody of her in a hearing; she is told that the young girl will require extensive therapy to recover from her trauma. As Chyna prepares to leave without her, Ariel, speaking for the first time, suddenly calls out to her the name "Badger", a character from a story Chyna had told her about to help bring her courage while escaping from Vess. The two embrace, and it is implied that Chyna's custody of Ariel was granted.
Cast
Production
The miniseries was filmed in
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Release
''Intensity'' aired in two parts on
Fox
Foxes are small to medium-sized, omnivorous mammals belonging to several genera of the family Canidae. They have a flattened skull, upright, triangular ears, a pointed, slightly upturned snout, and a long bushy tail (or ''brush'').
Twelv ...
network on August 5 and August 6, 1997, respectively. The film was the first summer-released miniseries or television film produced by Fox at the time.
Critical response
Ron Miller of ''
Knight Ridder News'' praised the film as a "horror masterpiece, intelligently conceived and brilliantly executed, and the best program of its time television has ever produced." Tom Shales of ''
The Washington Post'' panned the film for its graphic subject matter, writing: "''Intensity'' is certainly not without its shocks and scares. But the whole thing is so stomach-churning and nasty that you don't so much watch it as subject yourself to it. Life is really much too short to spend four hours of it with a preening, prancing monster like Edgler Vess."
Hal Boedeker of ''
The Baltimore Sun'' criticized the film for its plot holes and cliched elements, writing: "So it pushes the boundaries for made-for-TV thrillers. Do we need to start a national furor over it? Nope. Don't watch. A more crucial rating for ''Intensity'' would be a big fat I (for illogical)."
In a 2021 retrospective assessment of the film for ''
Screen Rant
''Screen Rant'' is an entertainment website that offers news in the fields of television, films, video games, and film theories. ''Screen Rant'' was launched by Vic Holtreman in 2003, and originally had its primary office in Ogden, Utah. ''Scr ...
'', critic Cathal Gunning wrote that ''Intensity'' is the best adaptation of a Dean Koontz novel to date.
Home media
In 2012,
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment (abbreviated as SPHE) is the home video distribution division of Sony Pictures Entertainment, a subsidiary of Sony Group Corporation.
Background
SPHE is responsible for the distribution of the Sony Pictures lib ...
released ''Intensity'' on
DVD-R
DVD recordable and DVD rewritable are optical disc recording technologies. Both terms describe DVD optical discs that can be written to by a DVD recorder, whereas only 'rewritable' discs are able to erase and rewrite data. Data is written ('burne ...
through their "Choice Collection" of made-on-demand discs.
References
External links
*
*
{{Yves Simoneau
1997 television films
1997 films
American serial killer films
American thriller films
Fiction about familicide
Films based on American novels
Films based on works by Dean Koontz
Films set in Washington (state)
Films shot in Vancouver
Films scored by George S. Clinton
Films with screenplays by Stephen Tolkin
Fox network original films
Home invasions in film
Thanksgiving in films
1990s English-language films
1990s American films
1990s serial killer films
1990s thriller films