Review

'House (Hausu)' - A cult classic fever dream

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House (or Hausu) is an absolute fever dream of a film. The closest one could get to describing it would be a cross between an adult version of a Scooby Doo haunted house episode and 70s Japanese culture. It truly is hard to create a proper explanation with words though as House is a one of a kind spectacle that has earned its cult status. If House has not been on your radar until now, make sure to include it on your watch list.

The film follows a young girl named Beauty (Kimiko Ikegami) as she prepares to spend the summer on vacation with her father. Beauty becomes distraught though when she learns her father has remarried while gone for work, feeling like he is replacing her mother who died years earlier. Beauty decides to reach out to her aunt, who she has not spoken to in years, and stay with her for the summer. She invites six of her closest school friends to accompany her to her aunt’s mansion in the countryside. Upon their arrival, things slowly start going awry and the story starts to escalate as the girls start disappearing one by one.

When the film company Toho originally approached director Nobuhiko Obayashi for a story, they had a vision for this film to resemble an already successful hit film. That film? Jaws. Yes you read that correctly, the inspiration for House was supposed to be Jaws. While House does not have a killer shark or even a closeby waterfront, it is by far better for its originality. A lot of that is due to the writer turned director Obayashi and his pre-teen daughter whom he sought ideas from for House. According to Obayashi, adults “only think about things they understand…everything on that boring human level” while “children can come up with things that can’t be explained”. Many of her ideas are represented in this film and are what give House its uniqueness.

Another factor into House’s cult status is the stunning visual storytelling. The set pieces sit together well to make us feel like we are truly in this huge haunted mansion, but at the same time it feels so foreign and unnatural. The special FX and editing feel so different and not anything you will have ever experienced, providing this feeling of a fever dream while watching it. Obiyashi stated that he desired the special effects to specifically look unrealistic, as if a child had created them. This idea incorporated with the storytelling is what makes House different. It feels in the same realm of a Raimi or Jackson work. By mixing horror with the fantastical it allows us as a viewer to be scared, but at the same time allows us to have fun with it since the film does not feel as weighted in reality.

House is a true spectacle of bizarre art. Everything about it is unique and experimental, and feels like nothing you will ever experience again. House earns its status as a cult classic and one of the top haunted house movies of all time.

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