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Title: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 03, 2002, 03:27:27 AM
Luciaphil recently called this movie to our attention.  It's supposed to be a classic film about a haunting that inspired certain aspects of DS.

Now, I noticed in my TV schedule that SciFi is scheduled to air "The Uninvited" late-night this Wednesday (actually early Thurs. a.m., at least where I live).

I can't wait to see it!  Set your VCRs ...

Now all I have to look for is those movies Gothick mentioned, which I had never heard of, and that Two-Headed Thing that wouldn't Die or whatever it is ...

::)

Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Gerard on April 03, 2002, 04:07:27 AM
That is one of the creepiest, classiest ghost movies ever made, a real chiller which can still make you shiver today.  It's right up there with "The Innocents", based on Henry James "The Turn of the Screw", which inspired a certain other storyline in our beloved series.

Gerard
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Raineypark on April 03, 2002, 04:57:13 AM
Vlad, I was all set to program my VCR to tape "The Uninvited"....only to check my local TV Guide listings and find that SciFi is showing no such thing here.  How does that work?  My local cable company doesn't carry it during the overnight period from 3am to about 6 or 7 am...even tho SciFi is broadcasting elsewhere?  How stupid is that?

Well, be sure YOU tape it because it really IS an absolute CLASSIC ghost story.
Raineypark
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Mark Rainey on April 03, 2002, 05:05:57 AM
The Uninvited with Ray Milland is a wonderful ghost movie (and is where the song "Stella By Starlight" comes from). It's certainly full of the classic gothic atmosphere that DS drew upon in its early days. But I wonder if that's what Sci Fi Channel is actually showing. There's a very schlocky Uninvited, starring a stellar cast of nobodies, from 1988 about a giant mutant rat -- more in line with SFC's usual fare.

--Mark
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: The_Late_Mrs._Collins on April 03, 2002, 05:17:31 AM

No, they _are_ showing the classic movie.


THE UNINVITED

This spooky Hollywood classic, based on a novel by Dorothy Macardle, finds a brother and sister (Ray Milland, Academy Award-winner for The Lost Weekend, and Ruth Hussey) inhabiting a seaside mansion that happens to be haunted by the spectre of a dead woman. Will the siblings be able to solve the mystery behind the woman's death and bring peace to their home before it's too late? A worthy drama as well as a ghost story, it was Oscar-nominated for its cinematography.

Airs Thursday, April 4, at 3AM ET/PT*


 I've seen it many times and it's wonderfully atmospheric.  Some trivia:  Gail Russell (who plays Stella) played Cornelia Otis Skinner in the film Our Hearts Were Young and Gay.  Skinner has a key role in The Uninvited.
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Raineypark on April 03, 2002, 05:50:53 AM
Well, that's nice to know, that they're showing the Real Thing everywhere but here!!

Now I'm REALLY pissed off!! [angryf]
Raineypark
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Josette on April 03, 2002, 07:01:13 AM
Sounds good!  Thank you for alerting us to it, Vlad.  I haven't checked my listings yet, so I hope we get it here.
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Donna on April 03, 2002, 07:03:35 AM
Don't feel too bad Rainey ......

They aren't showing it here on our sci fi station either ... :'( I don't know where you're at but I live in the Seattle area.  


DONNA
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Luciaphile on April 03, 2002, 07:16:28 AM
How cool!  I had no idea it would air so soon.  I hope you all enjoy it--it really is a good ghost story (nearly as good as the Val Lewton RKO films).

Luciaphil
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Raineypark on April 03, 2002, 07:18:29 AM
To Hell with the SciFi channel Donna....we'll just go rent the bloomin' thing from Blockbuster...... ;)

Raineypark
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Gerard on April 03, 2002, 05:27:05 PM
Quote
Don't feel too bad Rainey ......

They aren't showing it here on our sci fi station either ... :'( I don't know where you're at but I live in the Seattle area.  


DONNA


A lotta times, local cable companies will pre-empt late night programs on various channels for infomercials and the such.  When I lived in Alaska, the local cable company did that all the time, including with the Sci-Fi Channel.  It would drive me crazy - I would be up late if I didn't hafta get up, watching some movie, and with only ten minutes or so left it suddenly vanished, replaced by some washed-up, has-been "star" pushing stuff to roast your turkey in five minutes or color your hair in ten, or roast your hair or color your turkey, or whatever.

Gerard
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Teresa on April 03, 2002, 06:33:46 PM
I love that movie. My mom bought it for me for Christmas this year and I think I've watched it about
20 times or so. It was one of my favorites growing up.
I also got House on Haunted Hill with Vincent Price. That is a good one also.
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: jennifer on April 03, 2002, 10:14:57 PM
Love that movie am going to check my listings now but isn't SCiFI the same throught the country!!

jennifer
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 04, 2002, 03:24:59 AM
Quote

Love that movie am going to check my listings now but isn't SCiFI the same throught the country!!



I would have thought so, but from what others are saying, apparently not!

I checked the TV listings in my local newspaper today, and now it says that there is "PAID PROGRAMMING" in that time slot.  (Probably one of those ab tighteners.)

Then I checked TV Guide online, and it said the same thing.  Then I did a search in TV Guide online for "Uninvited," and in my area it's now scheduled to show at 2 a.m. on Friday, April 5.  I'm trying to figure out if that means "late night Thursday" or "late night Friday."

?!?

I kind of doubt the video stores here have it.  The "Blockbuster" store carries mostly just that -- "blockbusters" -- the latest tripe, in other words.



Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Midnite on April 04, 2002, 03:31:47 AM
I don't know if this will help, but on the SciFi website, while "The Uninvited" is listed under April 4, since each day on their Schedulebot starts and ends at 6 a.m., the way it's showing up (3 a.m. in the East and also via the West Coast feed) is that it's at the very bottom of their April 4 schedule.  But since clear-thinking people consider that a day begins and ends at 12 a.m., that's actually early in the morning on April 5.  So I'd recommend you check your schedule for 3 a.m. ET on Thursday nite/Friday morning instead of early Thursday morning.

I'm keeping my fingers crossed for you guys... It's a FANTASTIC movie!
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Bob_the_Bartender on April 04, 2002, 03:50:54 AM
Dear Fellow Dark Shadows Fans,

I agree, "The Univited" is a cerebral ghost flick.  It's quite spooky.  Along with Ray Milland and Ruth Hussey, I believe that the great Alan Napier, Alfred from the Batman 1960's tv show, co-stars in the film.

I remember reading an interview with Ray Milland shortly before his death in the mid 1970's.  Mr. Milland commented on how the current movies were garbage in comparison to the films that were made in the glory days of the movie studios back in the 1930's.

Yeah, Mr. Milland was quite right in his assessment of the 1970's movies.  Did you ever see him star in that science fiction classic, "The Man With Two Heads"?  Mr. Milland plays a nasty old guy who dies and, to keep him "alive," has his severed head attached to the body of ex-New York Giant defensive end Rosey Grier.  Talk about lousy films!  This flick may be even worse than the one Mark Rainey mentioned, "Uninvited."  Big Rosey Grier has to run around with this phony head on his shoulder for almost the entire film.  In any event, Mr. Milland's flick rates down there with "Empire of the Ants," and "Frogs" as one of the truly worst sci-fi flicks of the 1970's.

Of course, this probably means that the Sci-Fi Channel will show it over the Fourth of July weekend.

Bob the Bartender, who considers "Spooks Run Wild" with Bela Lugosi and the Bowery Boys as one of the greatest horror movies ever made.
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Mark Rainey on April 04, 2002, 04:38:40 AM
I've always liked Ray Milland, even though he appeared in a fair amount of wasted celluloid. Anybody see The Man with the X-Ray Eyes? Certainly more visceral than The Uninvited, but a pretty effective sense of dread going on in that one, despite cheesy effects.

Probably my favorite of his films, though, is Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder. He's one of those bad guys that on some level you just can't help hoping he succeeds in his plot. Such a charming gentleman.

I look back with fondness on Frogs, a real classic in the annals of awful movies. It grossed me out pretty good when I saw it in the theater in April of '72 -- gracious me, almost exactly 30 years ago. I saw it the same week as Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster, so I was one happy little budding horror writer at the time.

--Mark
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 04, 2002, 04:56:18 AM
Quote
I've always liked Ray Milland, even though he appeared in a fair amount of wasted celluloid. Anybody see The Man with the X-Ray Eyes?



I think Ray Milland was in one I distantly remember that I would love to see again -- a TV "movie of the week" during the '70s, "Death Takes a Holiday."  It also starred Yvette Mimieux.  I searched for info on the movie once, but it isn't mentioned in Maltin or any video or movie guides I've seen.  I know I thought it was very, very good when I was 10 or 11 or whatever.

Quote

Probably my favorite of his films, though, is Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder.



I'm going to have to watch for that, it's one I've missed.  I'm a big Hitchcock fan, from "Rebecca" to "Frenzy."

Quote


I look back with fondness on Frogs, a real classic in the annals of awful movies. .



I saw that recently and remembered it from the '70s, too!  I actually didn't think it was too bad, considering what it was.  Don't think I'd care to sit through "Willard" again, though.

And ... sorry to go on like this, but I finally saw the movie "The Other."  I read the book when I was about 10 or 11, or whenever it came out.  I loved that sort of thing at that time, but when I excitedly described the scene with the baby in the wine cask to my dad, he very angrily said I shouldn't be reading trash like that.

However, when I think of it now, that was very MILD stuff when you compare it to the gross outs of "horror" films that came out in the late '70s and later.

I lost all interest in the horror genre at that time because of those movies (slasher flicks, etc.)

So my descent back into that world, a re-introduction to it via "Dark Shadows," has been with some trepidation.  But my tastes haven't really changed.  The last good horror movie, to my knowledge, was "Rosemary's Baby."

BTW, I ended up liking the movie of "The Other" fairly well.  (It was interesting to see Uta Hagen, for one thing, since I was familiar with her acting theories from my long-ago life in the theatre ...)

And that scene with the baby in the wine cask was very tastefully done!

-Vlad





Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Gerard on April 04, 2002, 05:01:16 AM
Quote
I've always liked Ray Milland, even though he appeared in a fair amount of wasted celluloid. Anybody see The Man with the X-Ray Eyes? Certainly more visceral than The Uninvited, but a pretty effective sense of dread going on in that one, despite cheesy effects.

Probably my favorite of his films, though, is Hitchcock's Dial M for Murder. He's one of those bad guys that on some level you just can't help hoping he succeeds in his plot. Such a charming gentleman.

I look back with fondness on Frogs, a real classic in the annals of awful movies. It grossed me out pretty good when I saw it in the theater in April of '72 -- gracious me, almost exactly 30 years ago. I saw it the same week as Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster, so I was one happy little budding horror writer at the time.

--Mark


Eerie, Mark, eerie.  I saw both movies at the same time, as well.  "Frogs", especially, is a real treat.  an example of how to make a bad movie good.  When I saw it, it played as a double-feature with a rendition of "Murders of the Rue Morgue".  As for Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster, I remember a scene where the jolly green dragon curled up his tail and  - using his radioactive breath as a jet propellent - took off in the air to chase the Smog Monster.  At that point, my friend stood up, pointed at the screen, and started to shout:  "That's impossible!  Godzilla can't fly!"

Gerard
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Nancy on April 04, 2002, 05:18:42 AM
Quote


Eerie, Mark, eerie.  I saw both movies at the same time, as well.  "Frogs", especially, is a real treat.  an example of how to make a bad movie good.  When I saw it, it played as a double-feature with a rendition of "Murders of the Rue Morgue".  As for Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster, I remember a scene where the jolly green dragon curled up his tail and  - using his radioactive breath as a jet propellent - took off in the air to chase the Smog Monster.  At that point, my friend stood up, pointed at the screen, and started to shout:  "That's impossible!  Godzilla can't fly!"

Gerard



I love all those movies - especially Godzilla versus the Smog Monster. I guess my next favorite would be the classic Retilicus.

I loved "The Uninvited" too.  The other really creepy, well done ghost movie was The Haunting with Julie Harris.

Nancy
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Mark Rainey on April 04, 2002, 05:57:40 AM
Quote
As for Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster, I remember a scene where the jolly green dragon curled up his tail and  - using his radioactive breath as a jet propellent - took off in the air to chase the Smog Monster.  At that point, my friend stood up, pointed at the screen, and started to shout:  "That's impossible!  Godzilla can't fly!"

Silly gaijin. Godzilla is actually charcoal gray, not green. The labeling of Godzilla as green has always been a gross misnomer.

However, for the first time in his history, he is a dark shade of green in his next-to-latest movie, Godzilla vs. Megaguiras (2001).

But yer reaction to Godzilla flying was the same as mine. Big lizards should not fly. Monsters like Rodan fly. ;)

Ya know, speaking of Ray Milland, I always thought that when Luke Skywalker removed Darth Vader's helmet, the guy inside looked an awful lot like Ray Milland (the actor's name is Sebastian Shaw, of all things).

--Mark
Title: Re: Ray Milland
Post by: The Late Mrs. Collins on April 04, 2002, 08:45:43 AM

Vlad wrote:
I think Ray Milland was in one I distantly remember that I would love to see again -- a TV "movie of the week" during the '70s, "Death Takes a Holiday."  It also starred Yvette Mimieux.  I searched for info on the movie once, but it isn't mentioned in Maltin or any video or movie guides I've seen.  I know I thought it was very, very good when I was 10 or 11 or whatever.



Actually, Melvyn Douglas was in that version, not Ray Milland.  To see Ray Milland at his best: _It Happens Every Spring_, _Kitty_, _Arise, My Love_, _The Major and the Minor_ (just because it's fun), and , of course, The Lost Weekend.  Oh, and don't miss _Reap the Wild Wind_ .  Dig the squid! ;D  And I must also mention _So Evil My Love_ .  This is a gem that isn't mentioned very much, but deserves to be.
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Josette on April 04, 2002, 10:22:11 AM
Midnite's explanation seems to be the correct one.  I checked the Schedulebot and TV Guide.  It's on the April 4 schedule, but after all of the day's programs, past midnight, and at 3:00 a.m., which would be the morning of the 5th.  At 3:00 a.m. to 6.00 a.m. today (4th) it shows Paid Programming.  But at 3:00 a.m. of the 5th, it has the movie listed, as does my TV Guide.

Hopefully this will be the same for everyone else!!
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: shadows1 on April 05, 2002, 08:37:54 AM
  Having read all your recommendations to watch "The Uninvited," I have programmed my TIVO to record it.  It will be airing at 3AM Eastern Time on Fri, April 5th on the Sci-Fi Channel.  The movie has a rating of 3 and a half stars!!  I can hardly wait to see it.  Thanks for the heads-up on this movie.  
  When I was growing-up, I couldn't get enough of spooky movies.  I lived in South Texas and we had a show called "Dr. Zekow."  He hosted a different scary movie every Saturday night at 10:30pm..  I still remember pleading with my mom to let me stay up and watch.  I had to earn the right to stay up by doing extra chores - but it was always worth it.  The funny thing is that my folks were friends with the man that played Dr. Zekow and would howl with laughter when they saw him as Dr. Zekow.  I would plead with them to leave the room as it took away the suspense and horror of the show.  He'd rise up from a coffin wearing a cape just like Barnabus - and this was way before DS ever became a series.  Dr. Zekow also wore eyes that had been made from a ping-pong ball that had been halved and were colored with red streaks...kinda gave him the bug-eyed Igor (Marty Feldman) look in "Young Frankenstein."  The painted pupils in the balls masked the small holes that allowed Dr. Zekow to see.   It was really spooky until the moment when one or the other "eyes" fell out.  It was live TV back then, and I have to admit that there were some pretty hysterically funny moments.  I still remember the first horror movie that I watched - "The Crawling Eye."  Every Halloween, I pull that movie out and watch it along with "The House on Haunted Hill" with Vincent Price.  Gotta love it!
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Raineypark on April 05, 2002, 04:54:48 PM
Shadows1....I had no idea this was a Universal experience.  Up here in the NY Metro area we had John Zacherly in the late 50's and early 60's who did the same thing...hosted  late night horror movies.  He had a studio full of props and a "cast" of characters like his wife in the coffin (Isabella, I think) and his assistant ....damn, can't remember his name...and all sorts of other crazy things.  No wonder we were all SO READY for DS!! [crazd]

Raineypark
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Luciaphile on April 07, 2002, 05:00:08 AM
Soooooo, what did you all think of it?

Curious,
Luciaphil
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 09, 2002, 02:13:50 AM
I haven't had a chance to watch it yet!  I did see the first few minutes showing the house atop a cliff with the sea crashing below.  However, it seemed that the movie began rather humorously rather than spookily, which surprised me.

Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Josette on April 09, 2002, 08:47:19 AM
Actually, I was reading your question, Luciaphil, the other night while watching it!!  Then I forgot to come back and comment!

Very good - a lot of mysteries and suspense and a very clever explanation once we learned it.

But, I mostly noticed all of the similarities to DS!!  Of course, having a seance and one person becoming possessed by the spirit is probably common to any story of this type.  But, then there was the cliff with the ocean below it and a well-know story of someone who died there and then others who almost do, and the particular perfume scent that's a giveaway when a certain ghost is around, and I'm sure there was more - all quite interesting!
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 11, 2002, 02:50:51 AM
BTW, Luciaphil, I forgot to mention ... I noticed in the opening credits that "The Uninvited" was co-written by Dodie Smith.  (In other words, either Leonard Maltin or I got it wrong -- as you said in another thread, Dodie Smith did not co-write "The Head That Wouldn't Die" or whatever it is!)

Someone may have been nipping the sherry ...

;)




Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 16, 2002, 04:27:49 AM
OK, finally saw "The Uninvited."

Here are some of the similarities to DS I noted:  the name "Windward" for the house, which sounds similar to "Windcliffe" Sanitarium, not to mention "Little Windward Island" on DS; a "malignant" (or was that "malevolent") house, which is similar to how Daphne describes Collinwood in 1840 (and, also, incidentally, seems to echo Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The House of the Seven Gables"); the sound of a sobbing woman late at night; flowers that wither suddenly; a woman in the past who falls to her death from a cliff near the house, and who now seems to haunt the mansion; the portrait of said woman; a floral scent accompanying a ghost's presence (cf. Josette's Jasmine, was it (one of my favorite teas, incidentally) and Daphne's lilacs) -- in this case, Mimosa (?), which I'd never heard of; an old book whose pages turn of themselves to reveal crucial information; and, last but not least, the perceived solution to a problem the family and friends are facing is to ... hold a seance!

I also noted that the male leading character's name was "Mr. Roderick," which seems to echo Edgar Allen Poe's Roderick Usher in "The Fall of the House of Usher."  "The Uninvited" also seems influenced by Poe's story in having a brother and sister as inhabitants of the spooky mansion.  Interesting how unlikely a scenario that would be today (a brother and sister living together).

Not all of these similarities with DS would necessarily jump out at you, and some of them are probably stock events in haunted house stories.  Still, I'd agree with Luciaphil that the DS writers were inspired by "The Uninvited."

I enjoyed the movie, although not as much as I did "The Pit and The Pendulum," which I had watched the night before.

The ending of the movie seemed extremely rushed, and a significant element blatantly ripped off "Rebecca" (I'm hazarding a guess, anyway, that Daphne du Maurier's novel came out before the novel "The Uninvited" came out; at least the movie "Rebecca" preceeds the movie "The Uninvited" by about five years.)

And if I were to compare the movies "Rebecca" and "The Uninvited," I'd say I found "Rebecca" vastly superior.  I've seen that movie three times, and my appreciation for it grows each time.  Perhaps I'll need to do the same with "The Uninvited."

"The Uninvited" had quite a bit of unexpected humor, as well as actually dealing with the supernatural, and so the two movies are really doing two different things.  But the "Mrs. Danvers" character in "The Uninvited" was not nearly as effective, I thought.  The movie needed to explore this character more, and her relationship with her "best friend" who had foresworn ever having children (hints of a possible lesbian relationship lurk here, as in "Rebecca.")  And Hitchcock's direction of "Rebecca" is flawless.

The piece "Stella by Starlight" was lovely (if you have parents who were young in the 1940s, they're no doubt familiar with it).

It would be great to find a pianist who could play this at a gathering of DS friends ...



Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 16, 2002, 05:23:16 AM
Additions to the above "review" (I should have checked imdb.com before posting!):

I wasn't sure of the Ray Milland character's name, but I see from imdb.com that it is "Roderick Fitzgerald."  (I think he was called Rick for short.)  So "Roderick" as a first name has a closer connection than I thought with Poe's character, Roderick Usher, in "The Fall of the House of Usher."

The Mrs. Danvers  character's name in "The Uninvited" is Miss Holloway.

I know I really should do more research and find out when the novel on which the movie was based was published, though I would put my money on "Rebecca" having appeared first.  The novel is "Uneasy Freehold" (awkward title!) by Dorothy Macardle.

And a final morsel for Dickens fans (I know there is at least ONE of you out there!). Did you note the reference to one of the characters early in the movie reading "Bleak House" (incidentally, my favorite novel!).  The brief appearance of the loony "Miss Bird" was a small homage to Dickens' "Miss Flite" in "Bleak House" (the half-mad lady who keeps all the caged birds, setting them free at the conclusion of Jarndyce v. Jarndyce).
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Luciaphile on April 16, 2002, 05:41:24 AM
Quote

I know I really should do more research and find out when the novel on which the movie was based was published, though I would put my money on "Rebecca" having appeared first.  The novel is "Uneasy Freehold" (awkward title!) by Dorothy Macardle.


Not that awkward if you're British, lol.  I can't access WorldCat right now, but I would be willing to bet that it was the British title, because I know the book was also called "The Uninvited", at least the edition I read was titled as such.

Rebecca was published in 1938.
Uneasy Freehold was published in 1942.

The unexpected humor you mentioned probably had something to do with the screen presence of Ray Milland and Ruth Hussey (who was wonderful in The Philadelphia Story).  Despite Milland's final, um, unfortunate films, he had a persona associated with light comedies.  

There have been better films, but this one unnerved me, particularly that scene where they're in the studio, leave and then we see what happens to the flowers.  Mary Meredith's portrait has always creeped me out no end and finding out that Elizabeth Russell was used as the model for that never made me feel any easier :)

Luciaphil
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Raineypark on April 16, 2002, 02:20:15 PM
Sorry Vlad....I'm one of the people who's Cable Company didn't carry "The Uninvited" so I could neither watch it, nor tape it.  I'm on the hunt for a VHS copy now.

"BLEAK HOUSE?!!!"

Your favorite novel is "Bleak House"?  Lordy, lordy, you ARE a Dickens freak.  That one completely defeated me.  I've tried to start it 3 or 4 times, but the very IDEA of "Jarndyce V. Jarndyce" exhausts me!!  

However, I do use the term frequently....as in "....this ball game is taking longer than Jarndyce V. Jarndyce"....which produces blank looks from my companions, and a smug sense of superiority for me [lghy]

Rainey
Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 17, 2002, 03:30:49 AM
Thanks for the info, Luciaphil.  I just reserved a library copy, which was listed under the title "The Uninvited," not "Uneasy Freehold."

I really enjoyed Ray Milland, and when I mentioned who was in the movie to my mother, she said, "Oh, yes, Ruth Hussey.  She made a lot of good movies."  (I, on the other hand, had never heard of Ms. Hussey, nor of Gail Russell.  Imdb.com has quite a bit of info on both actresses.  Ms. Russell's life was definitely a textbook Hollywood tragedy. )

One more comment about the movie:  the foyer in the house reminded me of the Clampitt mansion on that other childhood favorite series of mine, "The Beverly Hillbillies."   ;D  ;D  ;D

So sorry you weren't able to view the movie, Rainey.  I thought I was the only person who had never seen it.    :D   If you can't find it to rent, you could probably find it fairly inexpensively to purchase (spoken by one of Barnes and Noble's best online customers  :) ).  I know I will definitely watch it more than once, so you may find it worth purchasing.

Quote

"BLEAK HOUSE?!!!"

Your favorite novel is "Bleak House"?  Lordy, lordy, you ARE a Dickens freak.  That one completely defeated me.  I've tried to start it 3 or 4 times, but the very IDEA of "Jarndyce V. Jarndyce" exhausts me!!  

However, I do use the term frequently....as in "....this ball game is taking longer than Jarndyce V. Jarndyce"....which produces blank looks from my companions, and a smug sense of superiority for me [lghy]



Yes, very few people have even heard of "Bleak House," though it is certainly regarded as the greatest -- or one of the two or three greatest -- Victorian novels, and one of the top 10 novels of all time.  I would encourage you to give it another go-round.  I think as soon as you get to the minimalistic opening description that begins  "Fog everywhere.", you'll be hooked.  (I think you first have to get through a lengthy preamble about the Courts of Chancery, which I never fully understood.)  A very bittersweet, dark and tragic story.

The BBC did a nice -- albeit very understated -- rendering of the book some years ago that is available on video.  Diana Rigg in particular is superb.


Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Raineypark on April 17, 2002, 05:58:58 AM
Not to worry Vlad....I've seen "The Uninvited' more than a couple of times....but not recently and NOT the other night when the REST of the planet could get it on the SciFi channel, but we could not.....Thank you very much, Cablevision!!  :P  

Please, next I'll get started on our Cable company not carrying the Yankees,  and MB and Midnite will be yanking my posting priveleges for profanity SO fast I won't know what hit me!!!

Yes, it's the opening 400 pages or so about how the Courts of Chancery work that overwhelm me each time I try "Bleak House".  I've actually BOUGHT the bloomin' thing more than once, only to end up hauling it (in a wheelbarrow, I think) to the local library after surrendering once again.

But a filmed version with the delicious Dame Diana?!  Now THAT I could handle!! [lghy]

Rainey

Title: Re: "The Uninvited"
Post by: Philippe Cordier on April 18, 2002, 02:37:43 AM
WARNING:  Rather Off-Topic!  :D

Rainey,

I was hooked on the novel ("Bleak House") right from the start, so it could be the differences in our temperaments, I suppose.  It definitely is helpful to have a basic understanding of the British court system, and I think that must have been the subject of a lengthy editor's introduction that I was remembering.  I checked my current paperback copy last night and noticed that the description of the moral and physical fog that envelopes London begins on the very first page.  I remember when I first saw the BBC-TV version, I was greatly disappointed as it seemed slow moving and dull, whereas I had found the book tremendously exciting!  Watching this on video more recently, though, I had greater appreciation for its very Britishness, e.g. Denholm Elliott's rather dry (dust-dry) performance as John Jarndyce.  Ms. Rigg definitely gives it all a shot in the arm, though!

In reading these 19th century novels, I've found it's helpful to keep a notebook to keep track of all the characters ...  ;D

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Whew!  I think I'll take a brief sabbatical and let someone else post now ...

[blshy]