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  1. The Uninvited

    The Uninvited

    1944 · Horror · 1h 38m

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  1. Filming of The Uninvited began on April 16, 1943. Filming took place near Fort Bragg, California. Scenes of village exteriors and sailing ships were filmed on studio backlots. On April 19, Bracket had a budget meeting, during which he unsuccessfully tried to get the film's schedule extended from 42 days to 50.

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  3. Oct 4, 2010 · A look inside the Bowen Island dream house in British Columbia where "The Uninvited" was filmed. It's on the market for $6.95 million.

    • Where was 'The Uninvited' filmed?1
    • Where was 'The Uninvited' filmed?2
    • Where was 'The Uninvited' filmed?3
    • Where was 'The Uninvited' filmed?4
  4. Although The Uninvited takes place near the fictional town of Biddlecombe, somewhere on the rocky Devonshire coast of western England, the movie was actually shot in several areas up and down the California coast and on a soundstage.

  5. The Uninvited (1944) A brother and sister move into an old seaside house they find abandoned for many years on the English coast. Their original enchantment with the house diminishes as they hear stories of the previous owners and meet their daughter (now a young woman) who now lives as a neighbor with her grandfather.

  6. The Uninvited: Directed by Lewis Allen. With Ray Milland, Ruth Hussey, Donald Crisp, Cornelia Otis Skinner. A composer and his sister discover that the reason they are able to purchase a beautiful gothic seacoast mansion very cheaply is the house's unsavory past.

    • Lewis Allen
    • 2 min
  7. The Uninvited is directed by Lewis Allen and adapted to screenplay by Frank Partos and Dodie Smith from the novel Uneasy Freehold written by Dorothy Macardle. It stars Ray Milland, Gail Russell, Ruth Hussey, Donald Crisp and Cornelia Otis Skinner.

  8. Apr 7, 2016 · The Uninvited was one of the first movies, if not the first, to treat the supernatural intelligently, evident in its restrained screenplay (Dodie Smith and Frank Partos from Dorothy Macardle’s 1942 novel) and in Charles Lang’s Oscar-nominated cinematography.

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