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House on Haunted Hill (1959)
In schlock-meister director/producer
William Castle's campy, cheesy and gimmicky horror film - forty
years before its glossy, big-budget and elaborate remake House
on Haunted Hill (1999); this original, B-movie supernatural
horror film was filled with B-movie shocks and plot twists, multiple murder
plots, 'haunted house' atmospherics, a few jump-scares, and carnival freak-show
scares (decapitated heads, a hanging body, a falling chandelier, dripping
blood, etc.) but was very effective and entertaining:
- In the film's prologue, there were
two speakers describing the stone Gothic mansion ("the house on
haunted hill") that overlooked Los Angeles:
- the owner Watson Pritchard (Elisha Cook, Jr.) set
the tone by warning about the "bewitched"
horrors ahead. Pritchard was a firm believer that there had been seven
inexplicable, brutal murders (three women and four men) in the reputedly-haunted
house by ghosts that could now be heard at night; there had been beheadings
and amputations and body parts scattered throughout the house. "The
ghosts are moving tonight - restless, hungry....Since it was built
a century ago, seven people, including my brother, have been murdered
in there. Since then, I own the house. I've only spent one night there,
and when they found me in the morning, I-I was almost dead."
- Frederick Loren (Vincent Price), an eccentric and
slightly paranoid millionaire, an ex-playboy who was married to his
fourth "amusing" wife Annabelle Loren (Carol Ohmart), also
ominously explained how he had rented the 'house on haunted hill'
from Pritchard to host a strange and mysterious overnight party for
his wife. He explained that there might be murders, and that if any
of his five cross-section of guests survived the 8-hour night in
the locked house (after midnight), with barred windows, no electricity,
and no communications devices ("like a coffin"), each would
receive a bribe of $10,000 dollars; Dr. Trent realized that the ratio
of males to females now in the house was the same as the bloody history
of the house: ("4 of us are men, 3 are women, there's a ghost
for everybody")
Loren's Five Invited Guests to the Hosted "Haunted
House" Midnight Party, Plus His Wife
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Lance Schroeder (Richard Long)
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Ruth Bridgers (Julie Mitchum)
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Watson Pritchard (Elisha Cook, Jr.)
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Dr. David Trent (Alan Marshal)
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Nora Manning (Carolyn Craig)
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Annabelle Loren (Carol Ohmart)
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Each of the guests arrived in chauffeured "funeral
cars." The five guests (plus the hosts), three women and four
men, who claimed they were all strangers and had never met each other,
were:
- Lance Schroeder (Richard Long), a handsome test pilot
- Miss Ruth Bridgers (Julie Mitchum), an older newspaper
columnist writing a feature article on ghosts; also desperate for
money due to her gambling habit
- Watson Pritchard, the house's fearful owner, a drunken
sot
- Dr. David Trent (Alan Marshal), a psychiatrist conducting
research on hysteria, greedy
- Nora Manning (Carolyn Craig), a young, pretty secretary-typist
who worked for one of Loren's companies, low-paid and in need of
money
PLUS THE HOSTS
- Frederick Loren, wary, paranoid and jealous of his
conniving blonde wife Annabelle who wished he was dead
- Annabelle Loren, who thought her husband was psychotic
and the murderer of his previous wives ("He would kill me if
he could")
Loren had rented the house, by mail correspondence,
through the mansion's owner Watson Pritchard, one of the guests.
- in fact, the house did seem
spooked upon their arrival, with a slamming door and a falling chandelier.
There were blood stains on the ceiling that dripped blood, a wine
vat of acid in the cellar under a large trap door (the acid "destroys
everything with hair and flesh, just leaves the bones"), moving
walls and secret passageways, 'ghosts,' a severed head in Nora's
suitcase, flickering gas lights, voices from disembodied heads, etc.
Pritchard reminded everyone that the past murders in the house were
not just ordianary but "wild, violent and different."
- after a tour of the house led by Pritchard, Lance and
young guest Nora Manning split off and explored the basement on their
own. Lance entered a dark doorway leading to an empty room and found
himself locked in. As the lights dimmed, Nora experienced a brief and
frightful look at a black-garbed, wild-haired, female ghost who appeared
from the shadows. Lance was discovered in the now-unlocked room, recovering
from being struck on the forehead
- later at about
20 minutes to twelve-midnight, Lance and Nora snuck out together and
returned to the cellar with candles. While Lance investigated the possibility
of false walls in a different room, Nora was again menaced and frightened
- with an effective jump-scare - by the mysterious female ghost-ghoul.
She screamed before it scurried (or floated) off and disappeared. Just
before midnight in the upper hallway, a hand from a figure behind her
(the home's caretaker Jonas Slydes (Howard Hoffman)) covered Nora's
mouth and entreated:
"Come with us before he kills you."
Nora Fearful of Ghosts
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Jump-Scare: Menacing Female Hag-Ghoul Frightening
Nora in Cellar
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[Note: In the next scene, Jonas and his blind wife
Mrs. Slydes (Leona Anderson) were introduced by Loren to the guests
- they were the home's caretakers. 'Mr. Slydes' was the man in the
hallway, and 'Mrs. Slydes' resembled the ghoul that had scared Nora
earlier.]
- afew minutes before midnight, when the house was locked
up and Nora was unable to depart, Loren presented each guest with a "party
favor" - a .45 caliber, compact, semi-automatic Colt hand-gun
in a miniature coffin. Shortly later, the severed female head that
Nora claimed was in her suitcase was found by Lance hanging in Nora's
closet.
- the main events that ended the film were
precipitated by the suicidal hanging of Loren's wife Annabelle in the
stairwell. Everyone wondered - was it suicide or murder? Had Loren
pre-emptively murdered his wife? (SPOILER: It was faked. She had allied
herself with Dr. David Trent to create "the perfect crime" -
the two lovers were planning on orchestrating Loren's murder to acquire
his wealth and fortune)
- Lance looked after Nora's safety and then went to
investigate on his own, and discovered a secret room at the end of
the second floor hallway - but the door slid shut behind him. As
a thunderstorm raged outside, and the lights went out, the terrified
Nora became spooked in her room when Annabelle's suicide rope entered
her window and coiled around her feet. She was deliberately being
driven to "the brink
of absolute hysteria" by the haunting ghosts (via the machinations
of both Loren and Annabelle, and her partner in crime Dr. Trent).
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Plot Twist: Dr. Trent and Annabelle, Two Lovers
Scheming to Orchestrate Her Husband Loren's Murder
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- Nora fled from her room with her gun, and came upon Loren
in the basement's wine cellar with his gun. Believing that he would
try to kill her (like he had done his wife), she shot him. (SPOILER:
The vengeful Loren also manipulatively faked his murder. The gun used
to shoot him had blanks in it). She screamed and ran off.
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Nora's 'Murder' of Loren
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- as Dr. Trent entered the cellar to dump Frederick's body
into the acid vat hidden beneath a large trap-door in the floor, there
was a 'lights-out' struggle between the two, and it sounded like Loren's
body was dumped into the vat.
[SPOILER: However, it was soon revealed that a revived
Frederick Loren had pushed Dr. Trent's body into the vat of acid.]
- shortly later after hearing the shot, Annabelle arrived
to join Trent in the cellar. Once she entered, all of the doors shut
and locked, and she watched as a skeleton emerged dancing from the
vat. [Note: From a side room, Loren was manipulating an "Emergo" marionette
skeleton.] She believed it was her vengeful dead-murdered husband's
skeleton. Scared out of her wits, the conniving wife was pursued and
taunted by the skeleton, with Loren's voice:
"At last, you've got it all. Everything I have,
even my life. But you're not going to live to enjoy it. Come with
me, murderess. Come with me."
- Annabelle screamed as the skeleton touched her shoulder,
recoiled and backed up in fright, and tumbled into the vat behind
her. Loren emerged from the shadows, manipulating the puppet-like
skeleton on wires and strings. He offered silky-voiced eulogies for
the two deceased plotters against him:
"Goodnight, Doctor. Goodnight, Annabelle. The
crime you two planned was indeed perfect. Only the victim is alive
and the murderers are not. It's a pity you didn't know when you started
your game of murder that I was playing too."
- all of the guests convened in the wine cellar, where
Loren was indeed alive. He surrendered and admitted to his guests that
the gun Nora used to kill him only had blanks. He had been able to
prove that Trent and his wife Annabelle had died trying to kill him,
but failed: "I'm ready for justice to decide if I'm innocent or
guilty."
- in the final line of dialogue, the terrified Watson Pritchard
warned that the ghosts of the doomed house were now unleashed - while
looking straight into the camera:
"They'll be more, many more. They're coming for
me now - and then they'll come for you!"
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Prologue from "House on Haunted Hill" Owner Watson Pritchard (Elisha
Cook, Jr.)
Prologue by Millionaire Frederick Loren (Vincent Price) Hosting a Party in the
House
Reflection of Guests On the Surface of a Vat of Acid in the Cellar
Severed Head in Nora's Suitcase
The Home's Caretakers - The Slydes
Severed Head in Nora's Closet
Annabelle's Suicidal Hanging in Hallway's Stairwell
Rope Coiled Around Nora's Feet
Nora Spooked by Vision of Ghostly Annabelle Outside Her Window and Hanging by
the Neck in the Hallway
Taunting and Murdered, 'Loren's' Vengeful Skeleton (a Marionette)
Emerged and Rose Up From the Acid Vat
Frightfully Scared, Annabelle Backed Up Into Vat
Loren's Scare Tactic Against his Unfaithful Wife Annabelle
with an "Emergo" Marionette Skeleton
The Four Surviving Guests
Loren's Admission That Two Died Trying to Kill Him
Final Words Offered by Terrified Watson Pritchard
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