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The Haunting (1963, US/UK)
In director/producer Robert Wise's and MGM's classic,
effective, low-key haunted-house cult film, based upon Shirley Ann
Jackson's novel The Haunting of Hill House - it
featured low-key, atmospheric, suggestive horror through clever editing
and camerawork, similar to Val Lewton's horror masterpieces and The
Innocents (1961, UK);
it was about paranormal (ESP and supernatural) research conducted
in New England's 90 year-old Hill House mansion, with many disturbing
scenes ("The
dead are not quiet in Hill House").
[Note: A remake was also made, director Jan de Bont's The
Haunting (1999), starring Liam Neeson, Catherine Zeta-Jones
and Luke Wilson. Later, Burnt Offerings (1976) was a similar
film. The film techniques with rapid editing cuts, strange angular
shots, and fast zooms were later employed in films such as Sam
Raimi's Evil Dead trilogy.]
- in the film's spooky opening narrated
prologue (pre- and post-title credits),
the haunted history of Hill House was explained (in
voice-over) by paranormal researcher Dr.
John Markway (Richard Johnson). He told how
New Englander Hugh Crain (Howard Lang) had originally built the
Hill House mansion for his young wife, the first Mrs. Crain (Pamela
Buckley). Just seconds before she arrived at the house, however,
she was killed in an accident with a crashed wagon. There continued
to be a history of death within the house for generations to come. "An
evil old house, the kind some people call haunted, is like an undiscovered
country waiting to be explored. Hill House had stood for 90 years
and might stand for 90 more. Silence lay steadily against the wood
and stone of Hill House, and whatever walked there walked alone.
Scandal, murder, insanity, suicide. The history of Hill House was
ideal. It had everything I wanted. It was built 90-odd, very odd,
years ago by a man named Hugh Crain, as a home for
his wife and daughter in the most remote part of New England he
could find. It was an evil house from the beginning, a house that
was born bad. Hugh Crain's young wife died seconds
before she was to set eyes on the house. She was killed when for
no apparent reason, the horses bolted, crashing her carriage against
a big tree. Mrs. Crain was carried, uh, lifeless is the word I
think, into the home her husband had built for her. Hugh Crain
was left an embittered man, with a small daughter Abigail (Janet
Mansell), to bring up. Fortunately, for me that is, Hugh Crain
did not leave Hill House. He married again. The second Mrs. Crain's
(Frieda Knorr) death was even more interesting than her predecessors.
I've been unable to find out how or why she fell, although I have
my suspicions. Hugh Crain left Abigail with a nurse and went to
England where he died in a drowning accident. Marvelous, I mean,
the way the history of Hill House follows a classic path. For some
reason, Abigail always kept that same nursery room in Hill House
where she grew up - and grew old. In later years, she became a
bed-ridden invalid (Amy Dalby). She took a girl from the village
to live with her as a paid care-taker companion (Rosemary Dorken).
It's with this young companion the evil reputation of Hill House
really begins. The story goes that the old lady died calling for
help in the nursery upstairs, while her companion fooled around
with a farm-hand on the veranda. The companion inherited Hill House
and occupied it for many years. The local people believe that,
one way or another, she had murdered her benefactor. She lived
a life of complete solitude in the empty house, though some say
that the house was not empty and never has been since the night
old Miss Abby died. They say that whatever there was and still
is in the house, eventually drove the companion mad. We do know
she hanged herself. After her death, the house passed legally into
the hands of a distant relative in Boston, an old lady Mrs. Sanderson
(Fay Compton), who I very much wanted to see"
Voice-Over Prologue: The Haunted History of Hill
House
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Mrs. Crain's Death
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2nd Mrs. Crain's Death
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Young Abigail Crain
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Older Bedridden Abigail (Amy Dalby)
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Abigail's Evil Care-taker Companion (Rosemary
Dorken)
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- in the story, anthropologist and psychic investigator
Dr. John Markway was leading a research team
investigating New England's infamous 90 year old Hill House ("It
was an evil house from the beginning, a house that was born bad")
with a history of violent 'accidents.' Over a weekend visit to
the house, his scientific experimental study was designed to stir
up or "stimulate" any
occult forces that resided there, and to discover the presence
of the supernatural. The strange and unfriendly caretakers of the
house, the sinister Dudleys (Valentine Dyall and Rosalie Crutchley),
were a married couple who lived in town and would never spend an
overnight at Hill House
- there were frightening scenes of terror in the rented
Victorian New England Hill House during a weekend research study
conducted by Dr. Markway - with three participants:
- Luke Sanderson
(Russ Tamblyn), a skeptical, cynical, materialistic, and brash
American - and a playboyish nephew of the house's owners, and
the next in line to inherit the house
- Eleanor "Nell" Lance
(Julie Harris), 32 years old, an unstable, timid, insecure,
unloved, psychically-gifted woman; experienced
with poltergeists; she continually had disturbing inner monologues
throughout the film, and was still recovering (and guilt-ridden)
from her mother's recent death
- Theodora "Theo" (Claire
Bloom), beautiful and bright, uninhibited, a modern-day 'witch'
with clairvoyance and ESP skills, and lesbian-leaning with
a predatory sexual interest in Nell
- [Note: Grace Markway (Lois Maxwell), Markway's
disbelieving and hard-headed wife, joined the group later.]
- there were many scenes of the discovery of the imposing
house's spooky noises and strange supernatural and alive nature,
with loud hammerings and poundings, high-pitched laughter, bangings,
the many opening and closing doors, cold spots and drafts, a 'breathing'
doorway (and turning doorknob), sounds of glass breaking, and other
noises; Nell almost fell off the veranda early in the film
and was saved by Dr. Markway, and she wrongly interpreted his attentiveness
as romantic
"Nell" Scared in Room in Middle of Night
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Nell: "Hold my hand, Theo. And for God's sake,
don't scream"
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Adjacent Wall in Room (With a Leaf Pattern and the Shape of a Face)
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- in the film's scariest scene - the film's most
memorable set-piece, after awakening from sleep, Eleanor "Nell" looked
across her dark room at a moonlit wall on
the other side of the room (with intricate leaf patterns that
formed a face); she began to hear mysterious
and strange sounds including unintelligible, muffled mumblings
of a man and deranged female laughter; she asked
her nearby roommate Theodora "Theo" in
the adjacent bed: "Are you awake? Don't say a word,
Theo. Not a word. Don't let it know you're in my room"; then she
asked to hold Theo's hand for comfort: "Hold my hand, Theo. And
for God's sake, don't scream"; when the man's threatening sermonizing
and the female's laughter stopped, Nell asked: "Is it over? Do
you think it's over?"; she asked Theodora to stop squeezing her hand: ("Theo. You're breaking
my hand")
- the sounds commenced again, however, this time with
the shrill crying of an agonized young child being hurt in some unexplained
way; Nell (in voice-over) reacted to the pain suffered by the child: ("This
is monstrous. This is cruel. It is hurting a Child, and I will not
let anyone, anything, hurt a child. I won't endure this. It thinks
to scare me. Well, it has, and poor Theo too. Honestly, it feels
like she's breaking my hand. I will take a lot from this filthy house
for his sake, but I will not go along with hurting a child. No, I
will not. I will get my mouth to open right now, and I will yell,
I will yell, I will yell")
"Nell's" Scream
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"Nell" Sitting Up in Fright in a Divan
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Theo Across the Room Next to an Empty Bed
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"Nell's" Outstretched Hand Gripping Nothing
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"Nell" Looking Down at Her Hand
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"God, oh God! Whose hand was I holding?"
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- Nell finally managed to scream, sat up in bed,
and turned on the lights, causing the voices to stop; and then she
realized that somehow, she had ended up on a divan next to the wall,
and that Theo was sleeping in one of two adjacent beds completely
across the room and nowhere near her; she had
the mistaken belief that their beds were next to each other; she
exclaimed: "God, oh God! Whose hand was I holding?" It
became clear that the unseen and invisible presence had squeezed
her hand and wanted to claim Nell - the 'haunting' horror
had selected her and that she had finally found a "home";
at times, however, she did suspect her own state of mind ("Maybe
I am insane")
- in the climactic scary ending, Mrs. Grace Markway
(Lois Maxwell), John's wife who had unexpectedly arrived to spend
the night, inexplicably disappeared while sleeping in the much-feared,
most-haunted room - the dreaded nursery; during a search for her,
"Nell" ascended the rickety, corkscrew-spiraling iron staircase
in the library (with a round tower) - a sexual symbol. Dr. Markway
followed her up to its top platform to rescue her; when they both
reached the platform at the top of the nearly-collapsed, unsafe, risky
and swaying structure, the distraught "Nell" saw
Grace's face peering down at her from a trap-door in the ceiling at
them, and fainted. Dr. Markway feared for Nell's safety and
ordered her to leave Hill House immediately, although Nell was resistant
- in the inevitable ending-conclusion, Nell felt that
the house was haunted, wanted to possess her and take advantage of
her, was speaking to her, and that she belonged to it; Dr. Markway
forced her to drive away immediately; she sped away in a car in the
driveway toward the gate. Taking an erratic course as the car became
possessed, she saw Grace racing across her path. Struggling with
the steering wheel, Nell crashed her car into an old oak tree - and
instantly died in exactly the same spot that the first Mrs. Crain
did; whether her death was intentional suicide or not was left up
to the viewer
- Dr. Markway declared that Hill House was definitely
haunted. Nell's soul was claimed and now condemned (or invited) to
join the other ghostly forces roaming the dark corridors of Hill
House
- Nell's voice-over ended the film, similar to the film's prologue: "Hill House
has stood for 90 years and might stand for 90 more. Within, walls
continue upright, bricks meet, floors are firm, and doors are sensibly
shut. Silence lies steadily against the wood and stone of Hill
House. And we who walk here...walk alone."
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Dr. John Markway (Richard Johnson)
Markway's Invitation of Guests
Hill House
Hill House's Winding, Spiral Staircase
Eleanor "Nell" Lance (Julie Harris)
Theodora "Theo" (Claire Bloom)
Luke Sanderson (Russ Tamblyn)
Unseen Force Causing the Wooden Door to Bow or Breathe Inward
and Outward
(l to r): "Theo" and "Nell" Cowering
Together Because of the "Breathing" Door and Other Thundering Noises
Nell Climbing Staircase
Grace's Sudden Appearance in Trap-Door
Nell's Jump-Scare Reaction to Grace's Face
Nell's Death: Crash into Tree
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