Let’s be honest—when Barbara Steele’s name shows up in the credits, you know you’re in for something. You’re not sure what, exactly. But it’ll probably involve shadows, stares, high cheekbones, and someone dying from an exotic form of melodrama. The Ghost (1963), directed by Riccardo Freda under one of his many aliases, delivers all of that. And then some. Not much more—but definitely “some.”
Set in 1910 Scotland, shot somewhere that clearly isn’t Scotland, and dubbed by people who sound like they’ve never heard a Scottish accent in their lives, The Ghost is a cold pot of Gothic leftovers—heated just enough to still be edible. There’s poisoning. There’s betrayal. There’s Barbara Steele looking like she’s either about to faint or commit a felony. And there’s a ghost. Probably.
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⚰️ The Setup: Murder by Misery and Greed
Here’s the story: Dr. Hichcock—no, not that Hichcock, though this film might as well be an unofficial sequel to The Horrible Dr. Hichcock—is wheelchair-bound, cranky, and conveniently rich. His wife, Margaret (Barbara Steele, bringing 110% eye-shadow), and her secret lover, Dr. Livingstone (played by a human beige swatch named Peter Baldwin), have had just about enough of his whining and mysterious diseases.
So they poison him, naturally. Not in a fun, creative way, either—just old-fashioned, premeditated murder with a dash of “You’ll never walk again, but now you’ll never breathe again either.”
But wait! Soon after Hichcock’s death, strange things start happening. There’s a mysterious figure in black. Rooms rattle. Jewelry moves. And Barbara Steele begins unraveling like a lace doily in a wind tunnel.
Did Hichcock survive? Is he back from the grave? Or is this just guilt, gaslighting, and the side effects of living in a house with more candelabras than common sense?
🧛♀️ Barbara Steele: Queen of the Haunted and Hair-Raising
Let’s not kid ourselves: Steele is the reason you’re here. And she doesn’t disappoint. Whether she’s plotting murder or recoiling from some shadowy shape that may or may not be a coat rack, she commands every frame like she’s the patron saint of gothic dread.
No one delivers lines like a funeral procession quite like Barbara Steele. No one drinks poison with such elegance. And no one does “descending into madness” with more hair volume. She is, in every way, the black lace glue holding this creaky picture together.
Unfortunately, the script treats her like a Victoria’s Secret mannequin caught in a Lovecraft novel—there to seduce, scream, and die fabulously.
💀 The Ghost (Spoiler: Kinda)
Is there really a ghost? Sort of. Maybe. Not really.
This isn’t The Haunting or Poltergeist. It’s more like a Scooby-Doo episode with better wallpaper. The haunting feels like a prank half the time. There’s a floating crucifix here, a mysteriously opened door there. The film teases you with supernatural flair, but you get the sense it’s too cheap (and too cynical) to commit.
By the time the twist is revealed—you guessed it, not a ghost, just murderers double-crossing each other like it’s an Edwardian soap opera—you’re not disappointed, you’re just mildly annoyed you fell for the fog machine.
🎬 Direction: Shadows and Shrugs
Riccardo Freda (or “Robert Hampton,” as the credits coyly tell us) directs with the confidence of a man who knows this will play on late-night TV for the next 40 years. He hits the beats: long hallways, sudden organ stings, candelabras in stormy corridors, and sudden zooms on Barbara Steele’s horrified face. It’s all present, but never really inspired.
Everything moves like molasses down a marble staircase—slow, dramatic, and somehow sticky. The film wants to be Rebecca meets House on Haunted Hill, but ends up somewhere between Dark Shadows and a community theater staging of Gaslight.
🛋️ The Set Design: Decay Chic
Say what you will about the story, the sets are on point. This is classic Gothic indulgence. Huge, echoing mansions. Drafty rooms. Drapes that billow like they’ve seen things. Every inch of the set is dressed like it’s auditioning to be haunted. It’s like someone bought the Addams Family house on layaway and then never dusted it again.
It makes you want to light a candle and write a suicide note in cursive.
🔪 Violence, Gore, and the Italian Touch
Italian horror always has a slightly more operatic sense of violence, and The Ghost is no exception. There’s some poison, a bludgeoning or two, and the occasional “Oh no, I’ve been strangled by an offscreen shadow!” moment. It’s never gory, but it’s got the kind of sanitized bloodshed that feels halfway between Shakespeare and soap opera.
The horror is psychological, if you squint. And melodramatic, even if you don’t.
🧠 Themes: Guilt, Greed, and Ghosts That Aren’t
The movie flirts with big ideas—betrayal, madness, the lingering weight of guilt—but it handles them with all the subtlety of a stage magician who’s forgotten his cards. Every revelation is shouted. Every plot twist is underlined. Subtext? This movie doesn’t do subtext. It yells all its thoughts like it’s trying to impress the neighbors.
Still, there’s something charming in its clumsiness. Like a haunted house attraction at the county fair: cheesy, dusty, but trying its best to spook you with fishing wire and conviction.
🧃 Final Thoughts: Mediocre, Macabre, and Mildly Entertaining
The Ghost isn’t a good movie. But it’s not a bad one either. It’s the kind of film you watch because you like the vibe, not the plot. Because you want to see Barbara Steele make tragic expressions in candlelight. Because you love a foggy graveyard and a poisoned drink.
It’s mid-tier Gothic with mid-tier thrills—but Barbara elevates it from forgettable to faintly fascinating. She’s not haunting you. You’re haunting her. Watching her try to breathe life into this script is the real supernatural feat.
Final Rating: ★★★☆☆ (3 out of 5 haunted doorknobs)
Come for the high cheekbones. Stay for the toxic relationships. Leave when the ghost turns out to be your conscience in a cape.

