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The Uninvited (1944)
While vacationing on the English coast, composer Rick Fitzgerald and his sister Pamela discover an abandoned 18th-century house. Now, Rick tries to discover this house where he decided to buy it. In the end, Binary discovers that the reason why the price is so cheap is the past of the house, which seems to be full of evil.













21 September 1924, Chicago, Illinois, USA

21 June 1896, Dickinson, North Dakota, USA

7 January 1903, Birmingham, England, UK

30 October 1911, Providence, Rhode Island, USA

19 June 1890, Southfields, London, England, UK

27 July 1882, Bow, London, England, UK

3 January 1905, Neath, Glamorgan, Wales, UK

30 May 1899, Chicago, Illinois, USA


October 28, 2013
The Uninvited was...one of the first films to treat the supernatural seriously, and to play ghosts and hauntings as something other than fodder for comedy.
January 19, 2005
An impressive, though outdated, old-fashioned ghost story.
December 09, 2013
'This is the only way I can paint you,' says Milland, at the piano. 'Some black keys, and some white.' The speaker might as well be cinematographer Charles Lang, whose painterly compositions -- some black keys, and some white -- make this a spooky gem.
October 29, 2013
a serious-minded, visually elegant chiller with real dramatic weight that was destined to stand apart
March 25, 2006
The one thing -- and the only thing -- about this film is that it sets out to give you the shivers -- and will do so, if you're readily disposed.
February 15, 2009
Decidedly more spooky than scary.
November 05, 2013
Its thrills and chills are little frissons that tickle the imagination instead of grabbing by the throat.
February 09, 2006
The real strength of the film, though, is its atypical stance part way between psychology and the supernatural, achieving a disturbingly serious effect.
March 27, 2009
For modern audiences, the movie is more elegantly creepy than truly scary, but it still charms.
January 01, 2000
An archetypal 40s ghost story, ambitiously decked out in high studio finery, with billowing curtains and other kinds of hyperromantic kitsch that can put you in mind of death by tuberculosis, though ultimately it's a bit of a letdown.