Based on a book by Peter Straub, Ghost Story is an old fashioned haunted  yarn notable for being the final dramatic outing for song ‘n’ dance man Fred Astaire.

He’s Ricky, one of four old gents who call themselves the Chowder Society and they enjoy getting together to regale each other with tales of spooky spirits, the others are Sears James, a Lawyer, along with Dr. John Jaffrey and Edward Charles Wanderley, the Mayor.

Edward’s son dies after falling from a window. His girlfriend scared him out of it by transforming into a demon. Edward grieves for his favoured son, giving his other son Don a frosty welcome when he returns to his home town to grieve for his brother. Edward is killed when he falls from a bridge… He too witnesses the female demon who did for his son.

Soon, Don approaches the three remaining members of the Chowder society to request membership. The fee? A scary tale all of his own…

Ghost Story was a surprise hit in 1981 and ended up being the third highest grossing horror movie of the year. To give that some context, 1981 was slap bang in the middle of the great Slasher movie glut that threatened to overrun American horror cinema like Japanese Knotweed.

A refreshing break from kitchen knife murders, hockey masks and dorm room death, it still stands up today as a creepy little minor classic and as a swansong for Astaire it’s a great way to bow out after seventies disaster fodder like Towering Inferno and unexpected casting in the likes of Battlestar Galactica.

Seek it out and then gather some friends, maybe you can tell as few ghost yarns of your own…

For a more recent but equally terrifying haunted house, ghostly thriller don’t miss The Pact!


Break-out horror movie smash of the year that has been electrifying hardened genre fans and non-horror fans alike, “The Pact” combines the supernatural terrors of “Paranormal Activity” with the tense atmospherics of a serial killer thriller to create a unique, modern-day take on the classic ghost story.


And it’s out on October 1st! Pre-order yours here.

Previous Parts:

 

MORE ON THE INNOCENTS. CLICK HERE

After the Grand Guignol horror of William Castle’s lurid 13 Ghosts, time to go down a more subtle avenue with the 1961 British horror classic The Innocents.  Based on the Henry James novella The Turn of the Screw, this atmospheric slice of haunted gothic is a direct influence on the mood and look of the Nicole Kidman vehicle The Others and its claws are also in any number of other films that use chills and suggestion rather than shock and awe to fray the audiences nerves.

A young governess played by Deborah Kerr becomes convinced the house and grounds of the house where she works are haunted when her two charges start behaving oddly. The Innocents is more in line with a classic round the campfire ghost yarn or the chilling horror plays the BBC used to produce for Christmas in its golden era.

Although not a massive hit with audiences at the time (but then, neither was The Wizard of Oz… Or It’s A Wonderful Life), the film has grown in stature over the years and is now pretty much the benchmark for how to create a faultless haunted house movie. Martin Scorsese rates this film, placing The Innocents on his list of the 11 scariest horror films of all time while Time Out rates it 18th in it’s list of the 100 greatest British films.

Any horror fans and indeed any serious lover of cinema should watch this film and see how many genre rules are nailed down…

Break-out horror movie smash of the year that has been electrifying hardened genre fans and non-horror fans alike, “The Pact” combines the supernatural terrors of “Paranormal Activity” with the tense atmospherics of a serial killer thriller to create a unique, modern-day take on the classic ghost story.


And it’s out on October 1st! Pre-order yours here.

Previous Parts:

Tagged with:
 
 
PageLines Themes