Tolstoy told us that ‘all happy families are alike, but every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way’, and perhaps the same holds true for un-haunted and haunted houses as well: That seems to be the premise of the Mike Flanagan-created ‘The Haunting Of’ franchise,
which visited
Hill House from Shirley Jackson’s book of the same name, in its Netflix debut, and now drops in at Bly Manor, to update the story of Henry James’ The Turn of the Screw for its second season. The nine-episode season became available to stream on Friday, 9 October, and quickly answers the question of what makes it different from other Turn of the Screw adaptations. (After all, the ‘modernising’ of James’ 1898 story was already achieved in the recent Mackenzie Davis-Finn Wolfhard film, The Turning.) That answer, in short, is: more ghosts. The Haunting of Bly Manor uses the same plot and narrative device as James’ tale: a governess arrives at an English country house to take charge of two orphaned children called Flora and Miles. Hired by their guardian (an absentee uncle) the young woman initially finds her new wards charming and angelic to a fault, only to later discover that they’re tied in some way to sinister apparitions haunting the house — the spirits of their former governess, who died by suicide, and her paramour, the valet. The account of her struggle to save the children from demonic possession is recounted to a group of listeners years later, by a friend to whom she entrusted a manuscript. To this plot, the Clarkson Twins — the writers for The Haunting of Bly Manor — add more layers, and characters. The governess (in this case, au pair) is an American recently arrived in the UK. Danielle (Victoria Pedretti) is afflicted by ghosts of her own, even before she arrives at Bly. The manor, relatively harmless in Henry James’ story, becomes a more malevolent entity in this retelling, cast in the mould of Hill House, where a place itself can exert a vile influence on its residents. Some characters from The Turn of the Screw — like Bly’s housekeeper Hannah Grose (played here by T’Nia Miller) and the children’s uncle Henry Wingrave (Henry Thomas) — get detailed back-stories, while others are newly introduced — the cook Owen (Rahul Kohli), and groundskeeper Jamie (Amelia Eve). Bly Manor’s story is split mainly across four timelines: the late 17th century, when the house is inhabited by two sisters Viola (Kate Siegel) and Perdita (Katie Parker), whose actions shape its subsequent misfortunes; 1986, when Danielle’s predecessor Rebecca Jessel (Tahirah Sharif) takes up the job at Bly and meets Henry’s valet Peter Quint (Oliver Jackson-Cohen); 1987, which marks Danielle’s arrival, triggering the main developments of this season; and 2007, when these developments are being narrated to a group of guests gathered for a wedding in California. The timelines are complicated not only due to several flashbacks, but also because many of the characters — most of the dead and at least some of the living — can “tuck [themselves] away” in a memory, “dream-hopping” to previous events while still ostensibly in the present. This
nonlinear notion of time
is something Bly Manor borrows from The Haunting of Hill House (along with, of course, a section of the cast — all Mike Flanagan regulars; Victoria Pedretti’s character being driven to the edge by visitations; frames with hidden figures; and
a certain signature scene
). In Hill House, we see Pedretti’s character Nell explain that “time is like confetti”, moments scattering around us like rain or snow. This idea is executed brilliantly in Bly Manor’s Episode 5, where Hannah Grose finds herself stuck in a discombobulating loop — déjà vu that leads to a poignant denouement. [caption id=“attachment_8904691” align=“alignnone” width=“640”]
All stills from The Haunting of Bly Manor | Netflix[/caption]