The Haunting in Connecticut

Some things cannot be explained.

6.2
20091h 42m

When the Campbell family moves to upstate Connecticut, they soon learn that their charming Victorian home has a disturbing history: not only was the house a transformed funeral parlor where inconceivable acts occurred, but the owner's clairvoyant son Jonah served as a demonic messenger, providing a gateway for spiritual entities to crossover.

Production

Logo for Lionsgate
Logo for Gold Circle Films

Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: The Chilling Séance

The Chilling Séance

Cast

Photo of Virginia Madsen

Virginia Madsen

Sara Campbell

Photo of Kyle Gallner

Kyle Gallner

Matt Campbell

Photo of Martin Donovan

Martin Donovan

Peter Campbell

Photo of Elias Koteas

Elias Koteas

Reverend Popescu

Photo of Sophi Knight

Sophi Knight

Mary Campbell

Photo of Ty Wood

Ty Wood

Billy Campbell

Photo of D.W. Brown

D.W. Brown

Dr. Brooks

Photo of John B. Lowe

John B. Lowe

Mr. Sinclair

Photo of Adriana O'Neil

Adriana O'Neil

Chemo Nurse

Photo of John Bluethner

John Bluethner

Ramsey Aickman

Photo of Darren Ross

Darren Ross

Paramedic #1

Photo of Sarah Constible

Sarah Constible

Paramedic #2

Photo of Blake Taylor

Blake Taylor

1920's Séance Attendee #1

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Reviews

J

John Chard

6/10

The Connecticut Horror.

Supposedly grounded in truth, The Haunting in Connecticut is a decent little spooker, yet still a pic that has all the pitfalls of other notable films of its ilk. Plot for what it's worth has a family move into a new home, only to find that it has ghosts and ghoulies residing within. But why?

There's good strength in the family dynamic at work here, the eldest son has cancer and is undergoing treatment. Thus he becomes the conduit for the strange happenings, and this as his parents fight impending grief and personal worries. The scares toddle along effectively, atmosphere via camera work and sound effects is perfectly efficient, and the story has enough mystery about it to carry you through to the end.

Unfortunately there's a lot of daft stuff as well, I mean who in their right mind would sleep in a basement room and not force open an adjoining door to see what is in there? It's these ridiculous leaps of faith required that if you are not willing? Then they kill the movie for you. The ending also takes some believing, such is the rampant stench of Hollywood of it all.

Well performed in the main (Virginia Madsen solid as a rock/Elias Koteas shining in spite of being under used), this deserves to be rated above average. But ultimately it rings hollow at times and quickly runs out of scares in the last third. 6/10

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