House on Haunted Hill
An eccentric millionaire offers $10,000 to five guests if they can survive a single night locked inside his spooky, rented haunted mansion.
1 Preserved Masterpieces Indexed
The 1950s was an era defined by Cold War paranoia, nuclear anxieties, and the booming popularity of drive-in theaters. Science fiction merged with horror to create alien invasions, giant mutated insects, and atomic monsters, while showmanship reached hilarious, fun interactive heights.
As television sets entered average households, Hollywood studios struggled to fill theater seats. This led to high-energy creative gimmicks (like theater seats vibrating, or glowing skeletons flying over audiences) and legendary low-budget film productions. Filmmakers like William Castle (House on Haunted Hill) and Ed Wood (Plan 9 from Outer Space) emerged as cultural phenomenons, making highly enjoyable, retro-futuristic cult films that remain beloved classics.
1950s
Public Access / Unrestricted
An eccentric millionaire offers $10,000 to five guests if they can survive a single night locked inside his spooky, rented haunted mansion.