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The Haunting (1963, US/UK)
In Robert Wise's effective, low-key haunted-house film
with low-key suggestive horror, about paranormal research conducted
in New England's 90 year-old Hill House mansion, with many disturbing
scenes ("The dead are not quiet in Hill House"):
- the spooky opening narration (pre- and post-title
credits) about the haunted history of Hill House, in voice-over,
by paranormal researcher Dr. John Markway (Richard Johnson): "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 (Howard Lang), 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 (Pamela Buckley) 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 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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Old Bedridden Abigail
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Evil Companion
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- the frightening scenes of terror in the New England
Hill House during a weekend research study conducted by Dr. Markway
- with three participants: Luke Sanderson (Russ Tamblyn), a skeptical
and brash American - and a nephew of the house's owners, and the
next in line to inherit the house; Eleanor "Nell" Lance
(Julie Harris), an unstable, timid, insecure, unloved, psychically-gifted
woman; and Theodora "Theo" (Claire Bloom), a modern-day
'witch' with clairvoyance and ESP skills
- the scenes of the discovery of the house's supernatural
nature, with loud poundings, high-pitched laughter, bangings, opening
and closing doors, cold spots and drafts, a 'breathing' doorway,
sounds of glass breaking, and other spooky noises
- the scene when Eleanor "Nell" Lance had
the mistaken belief that she was holding the hand of roommate Theodora "Theo" in
the adjacent bed for comfort from mysterious and strange sounds surrounding
their dark room (unintelligible mumblings of a man, and a little
girl sobbing); she asked Theodora to stop squeezing her hand, and
then realized their beds were separated and that Theo wasn't anywhere
near her. 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 Eleanor - that the 'haunting' horror
had selected her and that she had finally found a "home"
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"Nell" Awakening in Fright
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Looking Down at Hand
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"God, oh God! Whose hand was I holding?"
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- in the climactic scary ending, Grace Markway (Lois
Maxwell), John's wife, inexplicably disappeared while sleeping
in the much-feared, most-haunted room - the dreaded nursery; Eleanor
ascended the rickety spiral staircase in the library. Dr. Markway
followed her up to its top platform to rescue her, and when they
both reached the platform at the top of the nearly-collapsed structure,
Eleanor saw Grace's face peering down at her from a trap-door in
the ceiling, and she fainted. Dr. Markway feared for Eleanor's
safety and ordered her to leave Hill House immediately, although
Eleanor was resistant
- the ending-conclusion when Eleanor felt that the house
was haunted, wanted to possess her, was speaking to her, and that
she belonged to it; 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,
Eleanor crashed her car into an old tree - and instantly died in
exactly the same spot that the first Mrs. Crain did; Dr. Markway
declared that Hill House was definitely haunted. Eleanor's soul was
claimed and now condemned (or invited) to join the other ghostly
forces roaming the dark corridors of Hill House; her 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)
(l to r): "Theo" and "Nell"
Eleanor Climbing Staircase
Grace's Sudden Appearance in Trap-Door
Eleanor's Jump-Scare Reaction to Grace's Face
Eleanor's Death: Crash into Tree
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