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The Haunting

1999 • 112 minutes
3.3
19 reviews
17%
Tomatometer
M
Rating
Eligible

About this movie

In the 1860's, industrialist Hugh Crain financed the construction of Hill House, a beautiful but forbidding mansion where Crain hoped to house a wife and children. However, Crain died an unexplained death at Hill House, and ever since tales have circulated that the mansion is haunted by evil spirits. 130 years later, Dr. David Marrow (Liam Neeson), long fascinated by the Hill House legend, brings three people there for what he tells them will be a study in sleep disorders. Theo (Catherine Zeta-Jones) is outwardly brave, but it soon becomes evident that Hill House's sinister reputation has her on edge. Luke (Owen Wilson) quickly finds himself wondering: if this is really about studying sleep, why bring everyone to a haunted house? And Nell (Lili Taylor) finds herself inexplicably drawn to the mansion, with a fascination that soon bears terrifying fruit as the true story of Hill House is revealed. The Haunting was directed by Jan de Bont; the screenplay was written by David Self and based on Shirley Jackson's novel The Haunting Of Hill House, which was also the basis for Robert Wise's 1963 film The Haunting, widely regarded as one of the screen's finest ghost stories.
Rating
M

Ratings and reviews

3.3
19 reviews
Ken Smith
September 2, 2020
The Haunting reboot is exactly that, a retelling for a more modern audience. It does have flashy effects and bells and whistles, what it lacks however is the essence of what made the original so scary. Today's movie folk will probably take to this because it's made exclusively for them. Anyone who loved the original will fob this off as over the top hysterics with a softer touch but that's what sells now I guess.
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Nat
August 15, 2022
I watched this film after I finished Shirley Jackson's chilling novel. Unfortunately the screenwriters chose to make countless arbitrary changes to the original plot that defeat the purpose of anything the book was going for. In the novel the reader is left questioning which events are psychological and which are supernatural. The house isn't so much as haunted as the house IS the haunting. But the filmwriters just decided to go "screw it, the ghosts of child workers" or something.
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Richard Collins
October 30, 2016
Utter crap, especially in comparison to Robert Wise's far superior original film which is a classic.
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