The Haunting of Hill House is not one of those shows or films that can be described as not particularly scary, but packing a wallop when it comes to it’s intensity, and suspense. No…This is an old fashioned ghost story, the kind that puts your head on a swivel in the dark, the kind that asks you to take a small break and allow your eyes to imbibe something flowery and light after, the kind where you’re sitting by the camp fire and a chill begins to sink into your bones, despite the fact that you are sitting next to fire. Your fear so laser focused that the heat from it now boils your nerves, and the storyteller now instinctively realizing that your focus is now singularly narrow (and thus properly prepared) that they can literally make any form of misdirection, or movement and cause you the audience to pop and instantaneously move from out of your seat. It’s a fear rooted in identifying and relating to these expertly drawn characters. Seeing so much of ourselves within them that we begin to see their journey as our own. So that when they are scared, we are scared, and when they jump, we jump. This in particular is not atypical to the genre – especially if it’s a well done member of the genre – what is atpical though, is the level of execution. Whether on TV or film, as is the case in almost any genre, but especially ( I believe) in horror, there’s always some character who is not as well drawn as the others someone who seems two dimensional, who is difficult to understand, whose motivations may be paper thin. For example, in hereditary (one of my favourite films of this year) Gabriel Byrne’s character I never quite figured out (which admittedly could just mean it flew over my head) I understood his preliminary motivations sure, and to some small extent what drive his insipid silence, but beyond that he seemed to be much less deep, much more superficial than Toni Collete’s beleaguered Annie Graham, or Alex Wolff’s moody Peter Graham, and that household was just three members deep. Hill house has no such issues. Every single member of the Crain family is so well drawn out, so well defined, so crystal clear in both their conscious and unconscious motivations. that it hands this show a depth and weight I don’t know that i’ve really ever seen in the genre – especially again in a show that is this jam packed with actual frights and scares. I don’t claim to be a horror expert, and while I’ve watched a lot of horror films, I don’t think of myself as necessarily academic in the field. So I can’t claim the kind of confidence to make this feeling to be in stone, but out of the number of horror films that I have laid my eyes upon, (Which is quite a number) this is unlike any other.