Tuesday, December 02, 2003

No, its not a musical.

I finally got around to watching The Haunting last night. No, not the cheesy, special-effects overrun 1999 flick with Liam Neeson and Catherine Zeta-Jones, but the much, much cooler 1963 version with Julie Harris and Claire Bloom, directed by Robert Wise. Both films were adapted from Shirley Jackson's novel "The Haunting of Hill House," and while I've never read the book, it's a safe bet the '63 version is truer to Jackson's written words. Wise does such a great job here, it's easy to forgive him for the bloated duds he spent too much of his later career making (and I like The Sound of Music). The story goes that Wise only agreed to take over The Sound of Music (William Wyler was originally to direct) if Fox would let him make The Sand Pebbles (which I dig, largely because of Steve McQueen), and of course, as we all know, The Sound of Music made an obsene amount of money at the box-office and went on to win 312 Oscars...but I digress.
Wise was an editor at RKO before his directorial career, and he notably edited Citizen Kane and The Magnificent Ambersons for Orson Welles. The influence of Welles and specifically Kane is deeply felt in The Haunting. Wise's use of the camera to create and sustain tension, dread and atmosphere is flat-out masterful. He succeeds in making Hill House one of the starring characters of the film--we regard it as as important a presence on screen as any of the flesh and blood actors at any given moment. The cast is excellent throughout (Harris is a bit over-the-top, but it works for the film) and there are a handful of genuinely scary moments, with virtually no special effects. Wise creates scares from mood, lighting, camera work, sound effects and psychological dread. The result is certainly more haunting than most of today's effects and gore-laden "horror" films.

Listening to Paul Westerberg's new cd, Come Feel Me Tremble. It's my first time through, so I can't give a definitive opinion yet, but I like it. Nothing earth-shaking, just good basic Westerberg.

Okay, I have to run...A Charlie Brown Christmas comes on in 3 minutes!

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