![]() ![]() ![]() It would much rather scare them to death. But unlike the NBC weeper, The Haunting of Hill House isn’t interested in making its viewers cry. Or, to put it in This Is Us terms: The haunted house is to the Crains as the Crockpot fire is to the Pearsons. But immediately, spirits start appearing and wreaking havoc on the five children, as well as their parents, Liv (Carla Gugino) and Hugh (Henry Thomas). More than two decades later, the kids are still reckoning with the effects of residing in that massive, creepy manor. Instead of casting Hill House as the center of a paranormal investigation like the book and its two subsequent movie adaptations, the series introduces us to the members of the Crain family, who move into the aging Massachusetts estate in the early 1990s with the intention of fixing it up and flipping it. Though it borrows some names and very basic plot details - Hill House: still a super-messed-up mansion where you definitely do not want to live! - the Netflix version is as much a family drama as a work of fright. This bingeable iteration of Jackson’s Gothic horror tale, which debuts Friday, is a non-literal adaptation of its source material. Given the current TV landscape, maybe I should have. I did not expect it to remind me of This Is Us. I expected Netflix’s The Haunting of Hill House to remind me of the Shirley Jackson novel on which it is based, or perhaps of other horror stories I’ve absorbed over the years. The traumatized members of the Crain family in The Haunting of Hill House. ![]()
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