The Movie Waffler New Release Review - HAUNTED ULSTER LIVE | The Movie Waffler

New Release Review - HAUNTED ULSTER LIVE

Haunted Ulster Live review
A pair of TV presenters spend Halloween Night 1998 broadcasting live from a haunted house in Belfast.

Review by Benjamin Poole

Directed by: Dominic O'Neill

Starring: Mark Claney, Aimée Richardson, Siobhan Kelly Dave Fleming, Antoinette Morelli

Haunted Ulster Live poster

Just like Daft Punk's first Essential Mix or the televised moon landings, Lesley Manning and Stephen Volk's Ghostwatch is a pop culture artefact which has achieved mythical status: everyone who saw/heard it the first time remembers where they were when it happened, and those who weren't initially there wish forever that they had been. Regarding the legendary circumstances of its broadcast ("honest guvnor, we presented it as a fictional film" etc), the experience of watching Ghostwatch as it first transpired on October 31st 1992 is impossible to relive, and, due to the nature of today's digital media, probably just as insurmountable to replicate (Volk did, however, write a short story sequel-recommended). This hasn't stopped people having a go though, viz. WNUF Halloween Special, bits of that V/H/S series and the recent Late Night With the Devil being within Ghostwatch's meta-tradition but offering diminished returns (alright, there was the ace episode of Inside No.9 which, to be fair, did actually seem to fool some of the people for some of its running time- "Oh Bobbah!"). And, in a timely spooky season release, here is Dominic O'Neill's Haunted Ulster Live, a homage with such narrative and representational fealty to Manning and Volk's masterpiece that it could well be a remake...

(Disclosure: Ghostwatch is not only one of my favourite films ever but one of my favourite actual things, up there with hot tea or Prince or rollercoasters. I'm obsessed and watch it every Hallowe'en, once on the big screen too, swank swank. I've interviewed Mr Volk and met him on several occasions since, including a time where he spilled a big jug of water over a table in Abergavenny Waterstones: amazing. Ghostwatch epitomises horror viewing, where the mode of consumption is mirrored by the film itself, as ordinary people in an ordinary house are haunted as we're watching in our equally quotidian circumstances which are increasingly destabilised: the family TV set itself must have suddenly seemed evil... ("like somebody’s mum," perhaps). I love the blithe cruelty of it, the betrayal of trust in deploying actual Parkinson, Sarah Greene etc, and the concurrent sense that in the '90s, along with stuff like The Day Today, pop culture was turning itself inside out for the fun of it. And it's scary, too. That whip pan where we see Pipes in the kid's room, where the camera looks back and he's gone; that two/three second moment frightened me more than any other horror film ever and is the reason I still can't walk around my house at night if the lights are off fml).

Haunted Ulster Live review

Haunted Ulster Live is Very Much Like Ghostwatch, a point that some reviewers have taken dismissive umbrage against (I accidentally broke my rule of not reading anything about a film before writing on it, as way before this commission I picked up on Haunted Ulster Live's festival run review), but nonetheless is an aspect of the film acknowledged by the filmmakers to the point of pride. Set at the end of the '90s, we are witness to a live Halloween broadcast from a suburban house wherein an exhausted single mother and her wall-eyed teens are apparently haunted by a poltergeist with urban folklore links to the local area. The intertextual trick or treats are manifest, from the blokey bts tech crew to a fella in a red mask standing imposingly in the background of the gathered crowd outside (at one point, the familiarity caused me a Pavlovian scan of the frame to try and spot any hidden Pipes... the habit of Ghostwatch rewatches).


Does this matter? With the essential pleasures of horror so primal and direct, the genre is necessarily cyclical as audiences repeatedly seek its dark sensations (I always think that, say, slashers, are like house music: variations on an insistent theme played at the same bpm, with just enough idiosyncratic twists and novelties to keep you dancing). The mode is reflective, and in an ongoing dialogue with itself, too (an extempore example is that exorcism film with Russell Crowe from this year, where he plays an actor performing as an exorcist in a plot which is wink-wink based on the filming of the actual The Exorcist; I think it was called "The Process of Ridding a Host from Demonic Influence"). All of which is to say that I'm ok with horror films ripping off other horror films, of building upon them and referencing them, even if the end result is a dilution of that unicorn phenomena which is the wholly original horror film.

Haunted Ulster Live review

You'll either get over the influence Haunted Ulster Live enjoys from Ghostwatch or not, and my advice would be to allow it. Because while O'Neill does take the Ghostwatch template and effectively xerox it, he then colours outside the lines in intriguing shades (another acknowledgement is the ominous intertitle presented in the same tenor and font as The Blair Witch Project - this is a film unnecessarily apologetic about its inspirations). Aside from the comedy (which is present in Ghostwatch's Welsh caller, but more conspicuous here: the first "picture" of the ghost made me laugh out loud) which O'Neill engages, Haunted Ulster Live is essentially a character study, and the sort of archetypes which lesser films depict with easy-going superficiality are given engaging development within. O'Neill elects not to focus on the beleaguered family, instead illustrating the presenters of the show – Michelle played by Aimee Richardson and Mark Claney's Gerry, the two effectively enacting the du jour old hand/pyt dynamic - with increasingly sympathetic detail.


Gerry is primarily presented as an old hat, embittered man on the telly (the dialogue invokes common enemy Eamonn Holmes), with Michelle an (unfairly) stereotyped ditz, but as the film progresses, both characters display heroism beyond their stereotype and challenge our assumptions. In the case of Gerry, it's as if Roger Mellie bopped Pipes on the nose or something, while Michelle combats the inherent sexism of the '90s (?) television industry. Along with this, there are two psychics who are brought in within the diegesis, and whom, especially in the case of Sinead (Antoinette Morelli - sensational) enrich the proceedings with unexpected emotional resonance. I mean, I do love Ghostwatch but it never made me tear up in the way a few scenes here did...

Haunted Ulster Live review

O'Neill's gimmickry is twofold: primarily there is Haunted Ulster Live's meta relationship with its predecessors but there is also the established conceit of live television, the latter of which is intriguingly developed and extended within this reflective plot structure (does it hold together? Not sure, but I'm looking forward to watching this again, probably as part of my family Hallowe'en marathon). And, also, most importantly, there are moments, these cold slivers, which transcend narrative chicanery and reach genre perfection by virtue of being really creepy. Could Haunted Ulster Live give me yet another reason to feel uncomfortable in my house, in the dark, alone with the lingering images of spilled blood, sooty footprints and a solitary hand pressed against a cold window?

Haunted Ulster Live is on UK/ROI VOD from October 14th.



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