Hush Made By The Director Of Haunting Of Hill House Is The Most Terrifying Thing On Netflix

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He handcuffed a stranded woman to a bed with little mercy; orchestrated a complex, breathlessly spooky haunted house story; and soon, he’ll bring Danny Torrance back to the screen – Mike Flanagan is no joke. 

The horror director’s vision of Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House took artistic liberties, but to extraordinary effect – crafting a contemporary old-school fright-fest with disquieting, traumatic ideas that cut deeper than the many, many bumps in the night.

There’s a common thread through Flanagan’s work: our humanity-bred fear of the dark.

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Check out the trailer for Hush below:

While his name has ascended into high-profile entertainment stardom, – especially with his upcoming film; Doctor Sleep, an adaptation of Stephen King’s sequel to The Shining – one only needs to glance back to 2016 to see Flanagan’s investment in the horror game.

Hush dropped on Netflix three years ago, and it’s still recognised as a brilliant, definitively scary slasher. Rather than the hammy theatrics of Crystal Lake’s resident machete-wielding, hockey mask-wearing killer, Flanagan strips the genre down to its most primal metaphor: cat and mouse.

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Except, there’s a devilish twist: the story revolves around a deaf and mute writer who has to fight for her life in an isolated, woodland home when a masked killer appears at her window.

It’s a film that specialises in the kind of terror that eats away at your sanity; something Flanagan says is very intentional. The horror director says that the modern trend of jump scares equalling horror only serves to harm the genre.

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In an interview with Bloody Disgusting, Flanagan said: 

Audiences have grown to equate being startled with being scared, and will complain that a movie ‘isn’t scary enough’ if it doesn’t have enough jump scares… so that means that a lot of studios will insist on shoving jump scares into a movie, regardless of character or story structure, thinking it ‘makes it scarier’.

This fundamental miscommunication between the audience and the studios has resulted in a very unfortunate trend in horror, in my opinion.

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Clearly, the man knows his onions. Variety’s Geoff Berkshire wrote: ‘Silence is golden in Hush, one of the more inspired concoctions to emerge from the busy Blumhouse horror-thriller assembly line in recent years.’

The Guardian’s Benjamin Lee wrote: ‘It’s a sharp, finely tuned thriller that goes down familiar paths but with flair and skill. Flanagan doesn’t hold back on the gore, but he doesn’t rely on it.’

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In a particularly telling sentiment, Entertainment Weekly’s Clark Collis wrote:

Flanagan’s taut direction reinforces his rep as an up-and-comer we will hopefully be hearing much more from.

Hush is available to watch on Netflix – probably not one for those with heart issues.

Doctor Sleep will arrive in UK cinemas on October 31st. 

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