It’s October, we Canucks just celebrated Thanksgiving. I’m patiently waiting for the leaves to turn fabulous colours and Halloween will soon be here. I thought of the many homes that were stars of the film and it was so hard to choose only 3 so, since Halloween is around the corner, I went the spooky route.
By the way…the answers to yesterday’s Oscar music fest is..”Say You Say Me” won the Oscar, “Miss CELIE’S Blues” was nominated and “Rhythm of the Night” got nadda!
Here are my 3…
1. REBECCA-1940
Joan Fontaine ( I truly dislike this pretentious actress as she reminded me of a former colleague I had to work with. I read Joan’s autobiography which resulted in my dislike for her) plays a meek gal who is the companion for an elderly woman when she meets Laurence Olivier who sweeps her off her feet. They marry and he brings her to Manderley, this huge mansion near the ocean. When I saw this mansion and the huge fireplace inside it, I wanted to live there. Well, poor Joan meets the huge staff and, then, she meets Judith Anderson as Mrs. Danvers who makes the word “intimidating” sound like an understatement. She is the head maid and the loyal friend to Rebecca, Olivier’s first wife, who died under mysterious circumstances. Mrs. Danvers makes it her mission to drive port Joannie insane. Her new husband seems to be cold and aloof and his friends don’t seem to be of much help. This is a gothic romance/mystery/ almost horror film with this beautiful mansion at the core. It is well acted especially by Judith Anderson( the Vulcan High priestess in Star Trek 3) and very well directed by Alfred Hitchcock, of course.
2. PSYCHO-1960
If you have not seen this film…you’ve been living under a rock…lol. It is a justly famous film by Alfred Hitchcock who had to use his TV crew to get this film done. We have heard about the shower scene, justly famous( chocolate syrup was used to simulate blood) and we know Anthony Perkins has mommy issues but we forget that Vera Miles, a favourite of Hitchcock( even though he couldn’t forgive her getting pregnant when he wanted to have her star in one of his films..I think it was “North by Northwest” but I’m going by my fractured memory..please correct me if I am wrong), played the sister of the ill fated Janet Leigh and square-jawed John Gavin was Janet’s love. John is the reason poor Janet( Marion Crane…Hitch had a thing for birds) stole the money( the McGuffin) which set the whole thing in motion. When Marion arrives at the run down motel, it seems dwarfed by the square box of the house at the top of a hill where mother resides with Norman. Most of the time, only the front facade of a home or business was built for a film but this home was built with all the walls and the roof and it is still standing! Nothing is inside it but it stands at the top of the hill and tourists can visit where Norman loses his mind. This is a brilliant film that caused quite the stir when it came out. Love the music and the camerawork. If you haven’t seen it, you need to see it,
3. THE HAUNTING-1963
To me, this is the home to beat because it seems to be alive screwing with the minds of the people who are staying there. An anthropologist with a keen interest in psychic phenomena brings 2 women who seem to have an innate psychic ability. One is an unstable woman who wants to escape her sister’s clutches and feels a kinship to the home and the other is a cynical woman who can sense things. Along for the ride is the cynical owner of the home played by Russ Tamblyn known for his athletic dancing in films like “West Side Story.” This home has cold spots, sounds, footsteps, doors moving, which is quite scary and the feeling the home does not want them to leave. The cinematography is brilliant and the writing is excellent. Forget the horrible remake with Liam Neeson, stick with this one but I will give a shout out to the TV mini series that was on HBO or Netflix or whatever, I got this series for Christmas. It’s well done although the ending was just ok for me but it is eerie. I still love this film.
Which homes seem to take centre stage for you, in films?
They did a remake of The Haunting that was awful.
ReplyDeleteI'll say the 80's film House - funny and scary.
I love Rebecca - there have been other adaptations but I like this one best. However, I like the book even better!
ReplyDeleteThough I've seen all three of your picks, the only one that I remember very well is Psycho--great film and great house. I saw it on the Universal Tour when I went there.
ReplyDeleteHouses that came into my mind right away are the one from Poltergeist (and I guess the whole neighborhood of houses) and the house in War of the Roses. Then there are all the creepy haunted house movies over the years. Lots to choose from in this topic.
Lee
Happy Belated Thanksgiving, Birgit! It doesn't appear to be a great year for fall colours, at least so far. I've seen the first two and loved them both! The Haunting sounds interesting and I'll look for it online. One haunted house movie that comes to mind is "The Others", starring Nicole Kidman. It was interesting!
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen that version of Rebecca, but I love the story. (Got the book after seeing the PBS version.) Of course I've seen Psycho.
ReplyDeleteThe 'PSYCHO' house is the perfect choice. Back in the late '70s & early '80s I worked fairly often at Universal Studios. I always told myself that sometime when I worked there, I was going to pack an overnight bag with me and stay all night by myself in the Psycho house. Believe it or not, back then, it could have been done very easily by someone working at the studio. Unfortunately, I never did that and I really regret it today.
ReplyDeleteAnother house that immediately comes to my mind is the one featured in Orson's 'CITIZEN KANE'.
~ D-FensDogG
Hi Birgit - not my favourite sort of film ... not good with horror. The Third Man comes to mind ... I can see others know them. Cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteHi Birgit,
ReplyDeleteBefore I forget it wasn’t North by Northwest Hitchcock intended to launch Vera into full-blown stardom with (I’m fairly sure he always had Eva Marie Saint in mind for that, though I think he considered Virginia McKenna) but in Vertigo. She discovered she was pregnant; she was married to Gordon Scott at the time-they had met when they costarred in Tarzan's Hidden Jungle and had to bow out. I love Vera Miles, but I think it was fortuitous for the film that Kim Novak played Madeleine/Judy. Kim had an ethereal quality that suited the part more than Vera's more down to earth sensibility. By the time Vera had the baby Hitch's focus on her had diminished. She was too independent minded to be molded the way he wished, but he liked her and recognized her talent, so he used her frequently in different productions (she was on Alfred Hitchcock Presents multiple times).
Back to your theme for the day. Great choices!
Rebecca isn’t one of my favorites of Hitchcock’s films, but it does have a wonderfully atmospheric sense of dread once I is at Mandalay plus an extraordinary performance by Judith Anderson.
The Bates house is such a famous part of Psycho, but the characters only spend a few minutes in the actual abode. It does, however, loom large over everything once Marion makes that fateful turn off the highway.
The remake is horrible, but the original Haunting is wonderfully eerie and economically told. Everyone is good in it, but Julie Harris is extraordinary.
The first three that occurred to me are 1947’s The Red House with Edward G. Robinson. The Uninvited from 1944 with Ray Milland, Ruth Hussey and the tragic Gail Russell and one that is slightly more recent, Poltergeist, though it’s hard to believe now that 1982 was 42 years ago!!
Definitely not a spooky pick, but one of my favorite houses was the one in Home Alone, particularly when I was a child. It always just looked so cozy to me.
ReplyDeleteOoh, Rebecca and Psycho were classics. Not familiar with The Haunting, but if your recommend it, I'm sure it is as well. Hope you are feeling well.
ReplyDeleteSandra sandracox.blogspot.com
Oooh, the Haunting looks much scarier than Psycho. I wouldn't last long in a house like that.
ReplyDeleteCheers, Birgit.
Psycho will always be my fav.
ReplyDelete