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Legend of Hell House (Widescreen)
 
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Legend of Hell House (Widescreen)

Roddy McDowall , Gayle Hunnicutt , John Hough    PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)   DVD
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (67 customer reviews)

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Four people enter the Belasco Mansion, the so-called "Everest of haunted houses," hired by a dying millionaire to investigate the possibility of life after death. Physicist Clive Revill leads the quartet, which includes his wife Gayle Hunnicut and two mediums. Pamela Franklin, young and impulsive, immediately makes contact with what she perceives as a tortured spirit, while Roddy McDowall, the only survivor from the previous investigation 20 years ago, closes himself off completely, deathly afraid of the malevolent forces that crushed his former comrades in body and spirit. Science fiction and horror legend Richard Matheson, responsible for penning such horror classics as The Devil Rides Out and Roger Corman's The Pit and the Pendulum, brings a literate sensibility and a refreshing seriousness to the haunted-house genre with this adaptation of his novel Hell House. Director John Hough follows Matheson's lead with a moody but sober approach, balancing the physical threats of objects lethally leaping to life with the slow, subtle possession of the characters by a truly evil spirit. Parts of the script feel like so much scientific mumbo jumbo, with characters discussing the finer points of supernatural manifestation and ectoplasmic activity, but Hough's deliberate direction gives it the necessary solemnity to take it all seriously. --Sean Axmaker

Description

In sits there, shrouded in mist and mystery, a nesting place for living evil and terror from the dead. It's Hell House. Roddy McDowall heads the cast of this exciting chiller about four psychic investigators and the dark, brooding mansion they themselves call "the Mt. Everest of haunted houses." It's already destroyed one team of researchers. Now this brave quartet ventures in for another try at unraveling its secret. But before they succeed, they must suffer through madness, murder and everything else the spirits that dwell here have in store for them. Yet learning the truth just might drive them all insane. An ingeniously-devised ghost story, THE LEG OF HELL HOUSE will thrill and delight veteran horror fans from the first creaking door to the very last slithering shadow.

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Customer Reviews

67 Reviews
5 star:
 (39)
4 star:
 (17)
3 star:
 (7)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (67 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Ghosts all around, May 1 2011
By 
E. A Solinas "ea_solinas" (MD USA) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Legend of Hell House (DVD)
When it comes to horror movies, less is more -- the less you show, the more scares you have. And "The Legend of Hell House" is an excellent example of that, with the scares being filtered through eerie acting, weird poultergeisty occurrences, and horrible tales of the past. The downside: it all falls apart (literally) at the ending.

A weird old millionaire hires physicist Lionel Barrett (Clive Revill) to prove the existence of life after death, by sending him to "the one place where it has yet to be refuted" (which doesn't make logical sense since you cannot confirm or deny that, but who watches horror for logic?).

The place in question is the Belasco House, once owned by a vast sadistic pervert who had orgies and massacres and so on at the house. Along with his wife Ann (Gayle Hunnicutt), Barrett brings mental medium Florence Tanner (Pamela Franklin) and physical medium Ben Fischer (Roddy McDowall), but he's convinced that he can use a machine to flush the negative electromagnetic energy out of the house.

Of course, it's not that easy -- Florence becomes close to the erratic ghost of the owner's dead son, while Fischer is struggling with memories of a ghastly expedition to the same house that he barely survived. Possessions, attacks and sinister secrets all come to the surface, and not all of them will come out alive.

"The Legend of Hell House" is creepy. Very creepy. Lots of slow-moving, eerie scenes that are propelled mainly by atmosphere and the actors, and punctuated with shrieks and the occasional spurt of violence (Florence gets attacked by a possessed cat). It unwinds slowly with hints and clues about what's going on, and slowly building up to some shocking twists.

Additionally, the actors are magnificent. Revill is excellent as a stuffy, rather rude guy who thinks that the mediums are superstitious losers, and Hunnicutt has a few good scenes as a "wanton sleepwalker." But the best performances are by Franklin as a naive, religious young girl, and McDowell as a man tortured by the past.

So what goes wrong with this movie? Well, it comes unraveled in the last few scenes. Suddenly Roddy McDowall is yelling and posing and getting blown around. And of course, the Big Revelation is... less than bone-chilling. You're more likely to just go, "What, that was the twist?"

"The Legend of Hell House" is a haunting, eerie movie that centers on four excellent actors, but the tension and creepiness basically disintegrate at the end. However, it's still a horror classic worth scaring yourself with.
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4.0 out of 5 stars An Above Average Horror Film, Nov 14 2010
By 
A. Wheeler (Ottawa, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Legend of Hell House (Widescreen) (DVD)
What makes a good horror film? In my opinion it is three major things: The first is the atmosphere and style of the film, how it affects our mood and experience as we view it. The second is the development of strong characters that make the viewer care as to what happens to them in this horrific environment. Finally, the source of the terror has to be so frightening that it creates a foreboding dread in the viewer because the nature of its evil comes across as too realistic or possible within the context of the film.

The Legend of Hell House does a very good job in regard to these criteria. The atmosphere and style of the film is very good, offering the viewer a very foreboding haunted house that has a very grim history of sadistic evil. The characters in the film are interesting and diverse: the arrogant scientist and his devoted wife; the naive young woman who is a professional medium; and finally, the battle weary medium, played by Roddy McDowall in one of his better performances, who was the only survivor of the last group that attempted to explore the supernatural events at Hell House. Finally, you have an evil spirit that seems to have every vice and sinful disposition known to humanity, and the diabolical power to carry them out. Why this spirit would not be in Hell, rather than Hell House, only God knows.

The fate of two of the characters, the scientist and the young female medium, both brilliantly played by Clive Revill and Pamela Franklin respectively, is particularly interesting. The two characters that ended up meeting their doom at the will of this evil spirit were also the two characters that had the most noticeable weaknesses in character than made them so vulnerable. In the end, it was the arrogance of the scientist and the naïveté of the young woman medium that led to their doom. The film does a nice job of making the character and psychological development of these two characters within the context of the film the apex of what transpires in Hell House, and ultimately what makes the film work as an above average horror film.

I found the ending of the film somewhat disappointing, in a sense almost anti-climatic and rather banal, though I suppose one could argue that the downfall of the evil spirit was the sin of pride. Nevertheless, a fine horror film that can be enjoyed by any fan of the genre.
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5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best horror/supernatural films ever made, July 12 2004
By 
M. R Turner "zenresistance" (Los Estados Unidos) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Legend of Hell House (Widescreen) (DVD)
This film is a classic in every sense of the word. It has every element of supernatural and even some psychological horror. It has the spooky house, and a superb cast of characters. It is extrenmely well-written, and the direction and cinematography are truly excellent.

This film marked one of the late Roddy McDowall's best screen performances, and I'm not the only one who says that. It was even mentioned by several members of the Motion Picture Academy at memorials after his death a few years ago.

If you are looking for a genuinely good fright movie, you cannot go wrong with this film. It is required for any good horror movie collection.

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