I had the
pleasure recently of watching a classic ghost story from 1944 starring Ray
Milland and Gail Russell titled The
Uninvited. It is a black and white film filled with intrigues more than
horror, and with a mystery to be solved.
Rick Fitzgerald
(Ray Milland) and his sister Pamela (Ruth Hussey) find a house on a bluff
overlooking the ocean while on holiday in Cornwall. They have the means to
purchase the house, and move there from London to take up residence full time.
They bring their housekeeper with them, and are soon troubled by moaning and
wailing in the night, which can only be from ghosts.
They
discover that Windward House had a sordid past, and that the owner, Commander
Beech (Donald Crisp) had sold it to them just to get it off his hands. His
granddaughter Stella (Gail Russell) is an orphan being raised by him since her
parents’ deaths, and he wants to keep her away from the house.
Rick
befriends Stella and they develop a close friendship. But Windward House has secrets
that threaten their lives.
I thought it
a little odd that siblings, brother and sister, would buy a house to live in
together, but this is 1944 after all. It was the middle of WWII, and life was
very different then. People in England who were well off did have servants or
housekeepers.
The black
and white cinematography lends itself well to the nighttime scenes in the old
house and on the cliffs oceanside. Charles Lang was nominated for an Academy
Award for best black and white cinematography. Considering this is a film from
1944, the special effects are adequate. Very misty looking ghosts appear to the
homeowners. It is one of the first films to portray a haunting as an actual
event; previously ghosts were used for comedy. The ghost story was tapped into very
early on in cinema for a type of story that moviegoers would be sure to embrace.
Edith Head
designed the costumes. Victor Young composed Stella by Starlight, now a jazz standard, for this film. Rick is a
musician and composes and plays the tune for Stella. The melody did sound
vaguely familiar.
A great
addition to the DVD was a visual essay on The
Uninvited called Giving Up the Ghost
by filmmaker Michael Almereyda that was filmed in 2013 for Criterion
Collection. It focused closely on the stars of the film: Ray Milland, the famous
Academy Award winning actor for his performance in The Lost Weekend, and Gail Russell, an actress with a tragic life
despite her career in film.
If you like
an intelligent ghost story with a mystery to be solved, then this is for you. I
was impressed by the screenplay; good dialogue and scenes for the characters, a
house that almost has an aliveness (or deathlike presence), and some fun scenes
during a séance.
The Uninvited will be
shown on the TCM station on 10/29/16, so you can catch this excellent
supernatural mystery/romance right before Halloween.