The Uninvited (1944 film)
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The Uninvited | |
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Directed by | Lewis Allen |
Produced by | Charles Brackett |
Written by | Book Author: Dorothy Macardle Screenwriters: Frank Partos Dodie Smith |
Starring | Ray Milland Gail Russell Ruth Hussey Donald Crisp Cornelia Otis Skinner Dorothy Stickney |
Music by | Victor Young |
Cinematography | Charles B. Lang |
Editing by | Doane Harrison |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date(s) | February 10, 1944 |
Running time | 99 min. |
Country | USA |
Language | English Spanish |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
The Uninvited is a 1944 American supernatural mystery/romance film directed by Lewis Allen. It is based on the Dorothy Macardle novel Uneasy Freehold.
It was nominated for a 1945 Academy Award for Best Black and White Cinematography for Charles Lang's camerawork.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
London music critic Roderick "Rick" Fitzgerald (Ray Milland) and his sister Pamela (Ruth Hussey) discover a handsome, abandoned seaside house during a holiday in Cornwall. They purchase the property, called Windward House, for an unusually low price from its original owner, the imposing Commander Beech (Donald Crisp). During the transaction they meet Beech’s 20-year-old granddaughter Stella Meredith (Gail Russell), who lives with her grandfather in the nearby town. Stella is initially upset by the sale of Windward because of her fond memories of growing up there, despite it being the location of her mother’s tragic death when she was three. Her nostalgia over the house is discouraged by the Commander, who has forbidden Stella to enter. However, against Beech’s wishes, she gains access to Windward House through Roderick, who has become infatuated with her.
Rick and Pamela’s initial enchantment with the house diminishes when they begin to experience unexplained phenomena: cold spots, mysteriously wilting flowers, and the heartbreaking sobs and moans of an unseen woman. It becomes obvious that the house is haunted.
Rick invites Stella to Windward for dinner, and she soon becomes aware of the spirit. Rather than fearing it, she senses a calming presence that she associates with her mother, as well as a strong scent of mimosa-- her mother's favorite perfume. Suddenly Stella becomes weary and cold. Trance-like, she runs from the house toward the cliff and the rocky seas below. Rick grabs her just before she falls. Something in the house is trying to kill her. Upon returning to the house, they hear a scream from the live-in housekeeper, Lizzie Flynn (Barbara Everest). She has seen a ghostly apparition, and in short order decides to find a new residence (although remaining in the Fitzgeralds' employ).
The reasons for the haunting and how they relate to Stella prove to be a complex mystery. The strange occurrences are investigated by the Fitzgeralds along with the town physician, Dr. Scott (Alan Napier), whom they've befriended. In exploring the history of the family, they are told that Stella's father, a painter, had had an affair with his artist's model -- a Spanish girl named Carmel. Stella's mother Mary Meredith, from all accounts a proud, vivacious and flamboyant woman, found out about the infidelity and took Carmel to Paris, leaving her there. Carmel eventually came back, stole the infant Stella and, during a confrontation, flung Mary Meredith off the nearby cliff to her death. Shortly afterward, Carmel herself became ill and died.
Rick, Pamela and Dr. Scott conspire to dissuade Stella from her dangerous obsession with Windward by staging a fake séance. By using a makeshift Ouija board, they attempt to convey that Stella’s mother wants her daughter to stay away from the house. Suddenly the real ghost takes over the proceedings, communicating that it is guarding Stella, presumably from the ghost of Carmel. Stella abruptly becomes possessed and starts speaking Spanish. The séance is interrupted by Commander Beech, who removes Stella and secretly arranges for her to be sent to a sanitarium. The facility in question, The Mary Meredith Retreat, is run by a Miss Holloway (Cornelia Otis Skinner), Mary Meredith's former nurse and confidante. Holloway worships her former employer's memory with an obsession that borders on insanity.
The Fitzgeralds travel by train to the sanitarium to talk to Holloway, not knowing that Stella is there. Holloway tells them that after the death of her employer she took care of Carmel, who had contracted pneumonia and eventually died of the illness. The Fitzgeralds return home with little new information. Rifling through old journals from the previous village physician, Dr. Scott discovers that Carmel was murdered by Miss Holloway. The doctor is then called away to care for an ailing Commander Beech, who tells him that Stella is at the sanitarium. The group decides to go free Stella. They telephone Holloway and tell her that they are on their way.
At the Meredith Retreat, knowing the trio is en route, Holloway tells Stella that the Fitzgeralds have invited her to live with them to be closer to the spirit of her mother. She happily takes the train home, not knowing Holloway's motive is to send Stella alone to a malevolent spirit.
The trio arrives at the sanitarium only to find a deranged Holloway, who tells them that Stella is on her way to Windward House. They rush back home, but are twenty minutes behind the train. Stella arrives at the house to find her grandfather there. Ailing and weakened, he tries to get her to leave, but she remains. A ghostly presence appears, and her grandfather dies.
Stella approaches the ghost, convinced it is the protective spirit of her mother. But something about the apparition makes her scream with fright, and she flees again towards the cliffs. The trio arrives just in the nick of time to save her.
Inside the house, they are drawn again to the physician's journal found by Dr. Scott. They discover that before her murder at the hands of Miss Holloway, Carmel gave birth to a child. Stella's mother is actually Carmel, who had returned from Paris to retrieve her daughter. The scent of mimosa and the ghostly sobs have been emanating from Carmel all along. Upon discovering this, Stella feels that the spirit of her true mother is free, and has left the house.
Something evil, though, has remained. They flee the house -- all but Rick. He goes to confront the spirit of Stella's would-be mother, Mary Meredith, telling her that they are no longer afraid of her and that she has no power over them any more. The spirit then departs and the house is calm.
[edit] Trivia
Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- The Uninvited was among the very first Hollywood feature films to portray a haunting as an authentic supernatural event. [1] Previously, ghosts were often played for comedy (The Ghost Goes West, 1936; Topper, 1937) or revealed to be practical jokes (Blondie Has Servant Trouble, 1940) or subterfuge to obscure an illegal activity (The Cat and the Canary, 1939; Abbott and Costello’s Hold That Ghost, 1941).
- Victor Young’s lush, romantic score produced a popular hit, Stella by Starlight, based on the film’s main theme. Stella by Starlight has been recorded numerous times as an instrumental [2] by such artists as jazz greats Miles Davis, Stan Getz and Dexter Gordon, and as a vocal (with lyrics by Ned Washington) by singers Dick Haymes, Frank Sinatra, Ray Charles, Tony Bennett, Ella Fitzgerald and many others.
- Miss Holloway, as portrayed by Cornelia Otis Skinner, is often cited as a Lesbian caricature. For a detailed study, see Patricia White’s book Uninvited: Classical Hollywood Cinema and Lesbian Representability (Indiana University Press, 1999; ISBN 0253213452).
- The filmmakers initially did not intend to show any ghosts in the film, but Paramount’s unease resulted in the insertion of several ghost shots in post-production. According to the Internet Movie Database, the ghost’s facial features were modeled by actress Elizabeth Russell and physical form by model and bit player Lynda Grey. Russell also posed for the large portrait of "Mary Meredith" that is seen on the wall of Miss Holloway’s office in the film.
[edit] References
- ^ Hal Erickson’s All Movie Guide, via The New York Times [1]
- ^ Rolling Stone [2]
[edit] External links
- The Uninvited at the Internet Movie Database
- The Uninvited at Rotten Tomatoes
- The New York Times review of February 21, 1944 (requires registration) [3]