9 / 10
The Haunting is Robert Wise’s 1963 American gothic horror film adapting Shirley Jackson’s 1959 novel The Haunting of Hill House. The film depicts paranormal researcher Dr. John Markway inviting three subjects to spend a week at the supposedly haunted Hill House to investigate paranormal phenomena. Eleanor Vance, a fragile woman who has spent eleven years caring for her dying mother, becomes the central subject. Julie Harris plays Eleanor. Claire Bloom plays Theodora, a clairvoyant. Richard Johnson plays Markway. Russ Tamblyn plays Luke Sanderson, who inherited the house. Lois Maxwell plays Markway’s wife Grace. Fay Compton plays Mrs. Sanderson. The screenplay was written by Nelson Gidding. The film was produced by Argyle Enterprises and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on a budget of approximately 1 million dollars. The work has aged into classic haunted-house cinema across subsequent decades.
The film is one of the defining haunted-house films and the strongest screen adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s novel. The Wise direction uses sound, suggestion, and Eleanor’s deteriorating mental state rather than visible apparitions or special effects. The camera depicts what Hill House does to its inhabitants rather than what supernatural beings might be doing within it. The Julie Harris performance carries the central role of a woman whose loneliness and psychological fragility make her perfect prey for whatever Hill House actually is. The film treats the haunting as ambiguous in the same way The Innocents (1961) does, with the supernatural reading and the psychological reading remaining equally available throughout. The result is one of the few haunted-house films that operates effectively through implication rather than display.
The Sound Design
Wise relied on sound rather than visual effects to construct dread. The film contains pounding noises that move through walls. Voices speak through closed doors. Eleanor hears whispers that name her specifically. Doors breathe in and out as if something on the other side is alive. The audio design was substantially ahead of what 1963 horror filmmaking typically attempted.
The film to suggest rather than show became the model for subsequent atmospheric horror. The director Robert Wise had previously edited Citizen Kane (1941) and directed The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951). His technical understanding allowed him to construct sequences that worked through audio engineering rather than image. The pounding sequences in particular have been studied by subsequent horror filmmakers. This of having Eleanor and Theodora hold hands while listening to the pounding moving down the corridor became one of the classic horror sequences.
For Writers
Sound can produce effects that image cannot reach. Similar logic applies to fiction. The reader who hears something through a wall in your prose imagines worse than any description could provide.
Julie Harris as Eleanor
Harris plays Eleanor as a woman whose entire adult life has been care-giving for her dying mother. She has had no friends, no relationships, and no experiences beyond the sickroom. The trip to Hill House is the first event of her own life she has chosen. The performance gives Eleanor the specific desperation of someone who has waited eleven years for permission to exist.
The performance establishes that Eleanor will not return from Hill House. The audience sees her arrival as the beginning of her destruction rather than as a horror film victim’s setup. Harris plays Eleanor with the precise quality of someone seeking belonging in any form available, including becoming part of a haunted house that wants her. The reading is supported by the film’s closing scene where Eleanor’s voice joins the house’s narration. Hill House has been wanting someone for centuries. Eleanor was looking for somewhere to belong. They found each other.
For Writers
Character motivation can make horror feel inevitable rather than arbitrary. The same applies to fiction. The victim who arrives already prepared to be consumed is more powerful than the victim who is surprised by their fate.
The Theodora Subtext
Claire Bloom plays Theodora as a clairvoyant whose lesbian identity is suggested through 1963-permitted coding. Theodora’s references to having left a relationship with another woman, her physical interest in Eleanor, and her sharp wit all signal the character’s sexuality through indirect means. The 1963 Production Code constrained how directly Theodora could be depicted. The constraints produced suggestion rather than statement.
Jackson’s source novel makes Theodora’s lesbian identity considerably clearer. The film softens the content without eliminating it. Subsequent productions including the 2018 Netflix series The Haunting of Hill House have addressed the character more directly. The 1963 film’s restrained approach has aged better than later adaptations have made their explicit versions. The suggestion in the 1963 film operates with more power than the direct treatment in later versions, because the audience completes the implication rather than receiving the information.
For Writers
Constraints that production conditions impose can produce stronger work than direct treatment would have generated. The same applies to creative work. The implication you cannot state directly may be more effective than the direct statement.
Craft Note
Robert Wise had begun as a film editor and learned visual technique from Orson Welles during Citizen Kane production. His subsequent directing career included wide range from Star Trek The Motion Picture (1979) to The Sound of Music (1965). The Haunting represents his strongest horror work and demonstrates that directors with serious musical and science fiction credits could also make defining horror films when given material that demanded restraint.
Verdict
The Haunting is one of the classic haunted-house films and the strongest screen adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s novel. The sound design rather than visual effects set the model for subsequent atmospheric horror. The Julie Harris performance makes Eleanor’s destruction feel inevitable rather than arbitrary. The Theodora subtext demonstrates that Production Code constraints could produce stronger work than direct treatment. Worth viewing for anyone interested in haunted-house horror, in Shirley Jackson adaptation, or in films whose restraint produces more power than display would have generated.
FAQ
How does the film compare to the 1999 remake?
The 1999 Jan de Bont remake replaces atmospheric implication with extensive visual effects. The remake fails the source in fundamental ways the original respected. The 1963 version remains the definitive screen adaptation.
Should I read the Jackson novel first?
Either order works. The novel is short and remains widely read. Reading it provides context for what the adaptation preserved and what it modified.
How does the film compare to Netflix’s Haunting of Hill House?
The 2018 Netflix series uses the novel as starting point rather than adapting it. The series works as separate work rather than as competing adaptation. Both productions justify engagement.
How does the runtime function?
The film runs approximately one hour fifty-two minutes. The runtime accommodates the slow dread accumulation that the script demanded.
What is the cultural impact of the film?
Substantial sustained impact through haunted-house horror filmmaking, atmospheric horror practice, and continued critical engagement across six decades.
Is the film actually scary?
Yes, but through suggestion rather than display. Audiences expecting visible apparitions and jump scares may find the film too restrained. Audiences who accept atmospheric horror find it among the strongest examples.