A dark specter with an unsettling silhouette has haunted Nell since she was a girl. Now "the Bent-Neck Lady" is back -- and she's calling Nell home.A dark specter with an unsettling silhouette has haunted Nell since she was a girl. Now "the Bent-Neck Lady" is back -- and she's calling Nell home.A dark specter with an unsettling silhouette has haunted Nell since she was a girl. Now "the Bent-Neck Lady" is back -- and she's calling Nell home.
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The first half of the season coalesces various character story arcs that culminates into the ending of episode 5, and what a pay off. I suspected the "twist" that's presented early on but it didn't matter. This is so effective, so simultaneously chilling and heartbreaking, that if you allow yourself to live in these characters it will sit with you long after the credits roll. No spoilers here, but even if you're not a fan of horror, watch this. Watch this now! This is horror done right.
I'm hoping the rest of the season is as well done. I suspect it will be.
I won't discuss any major plot details but will say it focuses on Nell. Quite a bit of the information drip-fed to us over the previous episodes has built towards the last five or so minutes of this episode, which is a pretty unforgettable.
The themes of trauma, depression and mental health have been tackled in various forms in the series, but this episode looks at the worst type of suffering. What I find particularly harrowing is watching someone make so many futile appeals for help.
As with all episodes it contains incredibly cinematic camerawork, editing, transitions and sound effects. The colours are beautiful and the lighting is very atmospheric.
All performances are great, particularly Victoria Pendretti who gives one of the best of the series so far.
I was conflicted whether to give this a perfect 10 or not. I usually think something deserves a perfect score if I never tire of rewatching it like I found with many episodes of The Sopranos, The Wire and Deadwood, but this is not that type of show. It is driven by a mysterious plot and revelations about characters, so once certain things are revealed it removes the intrigue. However, what it did do was to make me re-examine my own attitudes towards people who might be suffering mental health issues and want to do my best to help. That for me is the most powerful aspect of The Bent-Neck Lady.
Did you know
- TriviaRuss Tamblyn, who plays Nell's psychiatrist, appeared in the original film adaptation of The Haunting (1963).
- GoofsAt about 49:00, Hugh tells Nell about 2 o'clock and says that when the big hand is on the two and the little hand is on the 12, which is backwards.
This may be because he was pretty frazzled at the time, however.
- Quotes
Dr. Montague: How can a house, just a collection of bricks, wood, and glass have that much power over people?
Nell Crain: You've never been there.
Dr. Montague: Well, that's true. But see, neither have you, not for a long, long time. And I think that if you were to look at it today after all these years, empty in the woods, you'd find it's not a monster. It's barely even a house. It's a carcass.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Scariest "The Haunting of Hill House" Moments (2018)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 10m(70 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.00 : 1