Wednesday, November 1, 2017

The Haunting (Argyle Enterprises/British MGM, 1963)

by Mark Gabrish Conlan • Copyright © 2017 by Mark Gabrish Conlan • All rights reserved

After The Old Dark House on last night’s Hallowe’en haunted-house marathon Turner Classic Movies showed The Haunting, a 1963 film made by director Robert Wise two decades after his apprenticeships at RKO under Orson Welles and Val Lewton. He and Mark Robson were film editors at RKO when Welles was signed to the studio, and they got to do the editing of Citizen Kane and The Magnificent Ambersons before George Schaefer, the RKO studio head who had hired Welles, was fired. His replacement, Charles Koerner, fired Welles and demoted everyone in his unit to the “B” ranks — where, fortunately, he hired a producer named Val Lewton to make low-budget horror films. Lewton, a former pulp writer of unusual taste and skill, decided that instead of trying to compete with the in-your-face monster movies from Universal, he’d show as little as possible of the horror elements in the film, often just hinting at them with shadows or depicting them with sound effects alone. Lewton promoted both Wise and Robson out of the cutting room and gave them assignments to direct, and Robson had a good if not spectacular career as a director while Wise rose through the ranks and ultimately made enough of a reputation he got to direct blockbuster “A” films. In 1951 he made one of the all-time great science-fiction movies, the original version of The Day  the Earth Stood Still, and by the end of the decade he was making major films like Somebody Up There Likes Me (with Paul Newman as boxer Rocky Graziano, a role intended for James Dean but recast with Newman after Dean’s death), I Want to Live! (a melodrama about a female career criminal who escapes punishment for her actual crimes but gets nailed — and executed — for a murder she did not commit: Susan Hayward won an Academy Award for playing the lead), and the multi-Oscar-winning musical West Side Story. Wise was in the middle of making the film Two for the Seesaw when he picked up Shirley Jackson’s haunted-house novel The Haunting of Hill House. At first he was just reading it for his own amusement and to have something to do during the long breaks for set-ups on a film set, but when a technician on Two for the Seesaw interrupted Wise’s reading to ask him a question, Wise had got so worked up in the story he was upset — and he realized that if he found Jackson’s novel that engrossing, maybe movie audiences would, too.

So he bought the rights to Jackson’s novel and asked to set it up at MGM — only MGM would give him a budget no higher than $1 million. However, their British subsidiary offered him a $1.1 million budget, so Wise agreed to make the film there — with the odd result that, even though the story takes place in New England, the locations and the largely British cast give the reality of old England and it would probably have been wiser for Wise and his writer, Nelson Gidding (the same one he’d worked with on I Want to Live!), simply to relocate the story to the other side of the Atlantic. A 20-minute prologue, narrated by the various characters we will meet in the film — mostly by British actor Richard Johnson as Dr. John Markway, a psychic researcher who’s looking for a genuinely haunted house so he can uncover the scientific basis for psychic phenomena — gives us the story of Hill House: it was built in the 1870’s by a wealthy financier (as, incidentally, was the house in The Magnificent Ambersons, which it visually resembles) for himself, his wife and their daughter — only the wife died on the day they were to move in without ever setting foot in the place, and the man became an ever more bitter recluse. When he died the daughter took over the place and became just as reclusive, and since none of the residents of Hill House ever seemed to leave the place long enough to marry and have families, whoever was in charge of probating the place had to look longer, harder and farther afield for relatives of the original builder to inherit the place. One woman took over after she’d got a job as caregiver for the elderly female occupant, only she liked to fool around with the hired help and was doing so when the old lady she was supposed to be taking care of croaked. At least she had a son, Luke Sanderson (Russ Tamblyn, who’d previously played the white Jets gang leader Riff in Wise’s film of West Side Story), who’s become a prissy and unscrupulous real-estate developer (he begins after a while to look like Trump in training!) who’s hoping Markway will validate that the house is indeed haunted so he can make tons of money selling vacation rentals to credulous tourists anxious to see the legendary place from inside.

Markway is married but his wife Grace (Lois Maxwell) is totally disinterested in his researches and deliberately stays away from Hill House until the movie is almost over. The two women who, along with Markway and Luke, form the odd foursome that occupies Hill House are Eleanor “Nell” Lance (Julie Harris), who’s walked out of an unpleasant living situation with her mother and stolen the family car to get to Hill House; and Theodora (Claire Bloom), a much more sophisticated woman (the legendary London fashion designer Mary Quant gets a special credit for doing Bloom’s clothes, three years before she shocked the world by inventing the mini-skirt) who was originally drawn as a Lesbian out to seduce Nell, but aside from one scene in which the two women are in bed together but not doing anything even remotely sexual, that was almost totally lost in the film as it stands. Various typical haunted-house things happen to the four during the movie, including them hearing thundering drum sounds coming from out of nowhere (“Oh, that’s just the Hill House samba school,” I joked), finding themselves locked in a room whose door mysteriously bends in and out (I thought it looked like it was made of rubber, and according to the “Trivia” section on this film’s imdb.com page, that’s exactly what it was), and a final climax straight out of Hitchcock’s Vertigo in which Nell, sure by this point that Hill House wants her to remain inside it no matter what the other people do, walks up a spiral staircase and is startled at the top by the appearance of a strange woman — in this case Markway’s wife Grace (ya remember Grace?), who after boycotting the study in the first place finally showed up to see what was going on and in particular whether her husband was having an affair with either or both of the other women.

The Haunting is the sort of horror film made for people who really don’t like horror films, and while Wise’s direction shows how much he learned from Welles and Lewton, what he didn’t seem to have learned from them was any sense of pace. He also didn’t seem to have learned — or if he had, he’d forgotten them by 1963 — Lewton’s skills at making not only scary but classic films on teeny budgets. The fact that Wise didn’t think $1 million was enough to make The Haunting the way he wanted to is an indication of what was wrong with his sensibilities; by this time he considered himself a Major Director who’d won Academy Awards both for himself and his stars on previous films, and a Haunting made on the Lewtonesque cheap wouldn’t have been considered worthy of a Wise credit by 1963 even though I couldn’t help but wish he would have made this film along Lewtonian lines, with a running time two-thirds of its actual (and very padded-seeming) 112 minutes and about one-twentieth of the budget. Wise also wasn’t helped by his casting decisions: of the four leads only Claire Bloom really creates a vivid, complex characterizations. Richard Johnson is overbearing, Russ Tamblyn surprisingly weak (especially given how well he’d done in West Side Story under Wise’s direction, though the real stars of West Side Story were supporting players George Chakiris and Rita Moreno, who stole the film right out from under its leads, the wretchedly miscast Natalie Wood and the simply incompetent Richard Beymer) and Julie Harris giving us yet another one of her introverted drips.

She’d been playing these sorts of characters ever since her 1952 feature-film debut in The Member of the Wedding, based on a depressing Southern-gothic story by Carson McCullers in which she repeated a role she’d created on stage, and she went on to play James Dean’s girlfriend in his first starring film East of Eden (Raymond Massey played Dean’s father, so TCM did back-to-back showings of two films featuring East of Eden cast members) and capped her long list of introverted roles by playing reclusive poet Emily Dickinson on stage and in a TV movie called The Belle of Amherst. (When she tried any other sort of role she was even worse: she played Sally Bowles in the 1950’s nonmusical adaptation of Christopher Isherwood’s Berlin stories, I Am a Camera, and she was as utterly wrong for that part as Liza Minnelli, in the 1971 film Cabaret, was right!) The Haunting was obviously trying to be a sophisticated ghost story, but it simply isn’t an interesting plot — we never get any explanation for why Hill House should be haunted (usually fictional haunted houses are haunted because of some ghastly crime that took place there generations before the main story, but not this one) — nor are the characters very compelling, and neither are the actors playing them (except for Claire Bloom, whose fascinating characterization seems to belong to another, better movie). It also doesn’t help that the film has a good but way overused musical score by Humphrey Searle, who composes in the tired old film-music tradition of using his score to explain everything; particularly after James Whale’s total avoidance of music in The Old Dark House and his evocative use of sound effects (particularly wind, rain and the other sounds one expects to be associated with storms), Searle’s overscoring seemed even more irritating than it would have without Whale’s commendable restraint still echoing in my eyes and ears! — 11/1/17