
Here, a widower, Jim (Barry Nelson) and his family move into a run-down apartment building in San Francisco. The eldest daughter, Peggy (Susan Dey) manages the two younger siblings, Robert (Leif Garrett) and Jane (Dawn Lyn) all day while the Dad is away at work most of the time.
While exploring the building, the children discover a vacant upstairs apartment, and a doorway that leads into a wintry landscape. There, they meet a strange man who likes to chop wood…as well as other things.
While exploring the building, the children discover a vacant upstairs apartment, and a doorway that leads into a wintry landscape. There, they meet a strange man who likes to chop wood…as well as other things.
Almost immediately, the children befriend this enigmatic figure, even as Dey dismisses him as nothing more than an imaginary friend. Before long, however, the specter confesses his loneliness to the children and grows romantically interested in Dey. He’d like Peggy to be his new wife.
And just to make sure she never tries to leave him (as his first wife did, unsuccessfully…), he plans to build a brick-wall around Peggy in an apartment closet…
There have been many worse episodes of Ghost Story/Circle of Fear, but “Doorway to Death is another one of those interminable episodes in which the biggest stumbling block is pacing. In an effort to pad out the fifty-minute running time, this episode repeats crucial scenes and gives us the same visual and thematic information over and over.

Despite the repetitive nature of the story and the slow pacing, there are images in “Doorway to Death” that linger and resonate. Dey’s character, Peggy, awakens from a troubled slumber and finds -- to her horror -- a set of wet footprints leading right up to the side of her bed. Since there’s no sign of a visitor, and no rain or snow outside, this moment is legitimately unnerving. She has evidence of an interloper close-by, but no rational explanation for that presence. It's creepy.
“Doorway to Death” resolves with a tremendous amount of exposition jammed into a few moments. That dialogue informs the audience of the crucial details. The ghost killed his wife, then went to jail and was executed.
Now, he’s lonely and haunting the apartment, waiting to take a new bride. This back-story is told in tremendous detail, but then Nelson’s character just brushes it off cavalierly, without offering his own interpretation of the things that occurred. How, I wonder, can he justify his willful blindness? I mean, who else does he think bricked-up his daughter in the closet? It’s one thing not to believe in the supernatural. It’s another not to believe your own eyes.
Now, he’s lonely and haunting the apartment, waiting to take a new bride. This back-story is told in tremendous detail, but then Nelson’s character just brushes it off cavalierly, without offering his own interpretation of the things that occurred. How, I wonder, can he justify his willful blindness? I mean, who else does he think bricked-up his daughter in the closet? It’s one thing not to believe in the supernatural. It’s another not to believe your own eyes.
“Doorway to Death” is long-winded and not particularly scary. The ghost here –-- a man with an axe who lives in a snowy cabin, clearly forecasts The Shining’s Jack Torrance -- is seen too frequently on screen here to be legitimately scary. Unlike those odd, malevolent jars in “Earth, Air, Fire and Water” and the sinister rocking horse in “Dark Vengeance,” this ghost doesn’t see, like an adequate repository for our fears.
Again, “Doorway to Death” is not terrible,and not great….just mediocre.
Next week, another move back towards greatness for Circle of Fear with the chilling “Legion of Demons.”
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