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The Haunting opened to mixed reception, the consensus generally being that it was a stylish film but had major flaws in the plot and lacked excitement. Variety called the acting effective, Davis Boulton's cinematography extraordinarily dextrous and visually exciting, and Elliott Scott's production design of the "monstrous" house most decidedly ...
The Haunting is a 1999 American supernatural horror film directed by Jan de Bont, and starring Liam Neeson, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Owen Wilson, and Lili Taylor, with Marian Seldes, Bruce Dern, Todd Field, and Virginia Madsen appearing in supporting roles.
The Haunting, a loose remake of the 1963 film, directed by Jan de Bont; The Haunting, a Spanish film by Elio Quiroga; A Haunting, a 2002–2007 and 2012–present American paranormal drama anthology TV series; The Haunting, a 2018–2020 American anthology series "The Haunting" (Back at the Barnyard), a 2008 TV episode
Film scholar David J. Hogan reiterated the film's underlying themes of sexual repression becoming the focus of supernatural activity, and compared elements of the film to Robert Wise's The Haunting (1963), based on The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson. [9]
[1] [2] King originally pitched the idea for Rose Red to Steven Spielberg as a feature film in 1996, [2] partly a loose remake of the 1963 film The Haunting. [1] [3] [4] The project went into turnaround and a complete script was written, but Spielberg demanded more thrills and action sequences while King wanted more horror.
The 1990 version of the film ran 91 minutes and was released on DVD in the UK as The Haunting (copyright at the end is to Concorde and New Horizons, companies owned by Corman). It featured scenes starring Wayne Grace as the son of the Karloff character (who irrelevantly summons forth a flying ghost in a satanic ritual) and Rick Dean as his ...
The following discussion is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page.
Jessica was partly influenced by the governess in Henry James's novella The Turn of the Screw, [16] as well as the character of Eleanor Lance in Robert Wise's film The Haunting (1963). [17] The theme of evil pervading the protagonist's mind was central: "I was alarmed by the notion that you can't defeat or defuse evil—it forever lives inside ...