I first saw THE CHANGELING way back when I was in high school. It was a late night showing on HBO, and I gotta tell you, it creeped me out. At the time, other than THE EXORCIST (1973), no other horror movie had gotten under my skin like this one.
So, I was very excited the other day to finally see THE CHANGELING again on DVD, since I hadn’t seen it in years. And while I have to admit that it didn’t scare me like it did back in the early 80s when I first saw it, it remains a first-rate horror movie.
It’s the type of horror movie that I love: an A-list cast, talented director, and a sense of seriousness that lifts it above standard horror fare. In short, it’s a high quality movie.
THE CHANGELING opens with a tragedy: composer John Russell (George C. Scott) watches helplessly as his wife and daughter are killed in a freak car accident. In an effort to rebuild his life, Russell moves across the country, from New York City to the suburbs of Seattle. He moves into a mansion, a quiet home where he hopes to be able to work on his music in solitude.
He soon begins hearing strange noises at night, noises that lead him to discover a secret room, and inside this room he finds a tiny wheelchair and other items belonging to a child. Russell soon realizes that there is a ghost in his house, a ghost of a child, and this ghost isn’t trying to frighten him away but on the contrary is trying to communicate with him. Russell wonders if perhaps the reason this spirit is seeking him might be connected to the fact that he lost his daughter at a young age.
Russell begins to investigate the history of the house, and what he learns leads him to the wealthy U.S. Senator Joseph Carmichael (Melvyn Douglas) who once lived in Russell’s house as a child. Russell finds himself caught in the middle of a conflict, with supernatural forces on one side, and the power of a U.S. Senator on the other.
THE CHANGELING is a well-made, creepy and haunting horror movie that certainly belongs in the conversation when discussing the best haunted house/ghost story movies ever made.
Director Peter Medak does a wonderful job here. The scenes in the house are creepy and atmospheric, and he makes full use of some truly memorable images. A simple child’s wheelchair has never been so eerie. Likewise, he uses the child’s voice to full effect and there are some shocking scenes as well, like one involving a bath tub. The film also looks great. It looks like something Hammer would have done had they still been in business in 1980 and had moved on to contemporary tales.

The creepy wheelchair in THE CHANGELING (1980).
Peter Medak has a ton of credits, most of them TV credits, including episodes of SPACE 1999 (1976-77), HOUSE (2004), BREAKING BAD (2009), and HANNIBAL (2013-14), among many, many others.
THE CHANGELING boasts an A-List cast, led by the great George C. Scott, who does a bang-up job here as a man still in grief over the loss of his wife and daughter. He makes John Russell believable as he channels his grief into helping the child ghost. You understand why Russell becomes so committed to the ghost’s plight, as he sees it as his job as a parent— especially a parent whose daughter was taken from him at a young age— to help this child who when alive had no one to help him.

George C. Scott as composer John Russell in THE CHANGELING.
And while George C. Scott is remembered as a star actor who worked on such powerful films as PATTON (1970), he was actually no stranger to genre films as he made several in his career, including the science fiction thriller THE DAY OF THE DOLPHIN (1973), Stephen King’s FIRESTARTER (1984), the TV movie THE MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE (1986), and the third EXORCIST movie, THE EXORCIST III (1990).
Likewise, veteran actor Melvyn Douglas adds class to the proceedings as Senator Carmichael. THE CHANGELING was the first of back to back ghost story movies which Douglas made just before his death in 1981, as he also starred in Peter Straub’s GHOST STORY (1981), his final screen credit.
And while Douglas enjoyed a long and varied film career spanning five decades, he began and ended his career with horror films, as he also starred in THE OLD DARK HOUSE (1932) with Boris Karloff, Charles Laughton, Ernest Thesiger, and Gloria Stuart, and in THE VAMPIRE BAT (1933) with Lionel Atwill, Fay Wray, and Dwight Frye.
Scott’s real life wife and frequent co-star Trish Van Devere appears as real estate agent Claire Norman who helps John with his investigation. She’s very good in the role. THE CHANGELING was the eighth time Van Devere and George C. Scott starred in a movie together. Trish Van Devere is still with us, as at present, she is 75.
And in another SPACE 1999 connection, Barry Morse appears briefly as a psychologist. Morse is probably most famous for his role as Lieutenant Philip Gerard on the TV show THE FUGITIVE (1963-1967) but genre fans remember him fondly as Professor Victor Bergman on the science fiction show SPACE 1999 (1975-76). Morse also appeared in the Amicus anthology horror movie ASYLUM (1972) starring Peter Cushing.
William Gray and Diana Maddox wrote the screenplay, based on a story by Russell Hunter. Gray also wrote the screenplay for the original PROM NIGHT (1980) starring Jamie Lee Curtis. The screenplay here for THE CHANGELING is far superior to the silly slasher story of PROM NIGHT.
THE CHANGELING will creep you out in the same way that the modern day PARANORMAL ACTIVITY movies do but with the added bonus of also delivering a solid story, something the PARANORMAL ACTIVITY movies have never done. And that’s what sets THE CHANGELING apart from a lot of other horror movies. It does something that most horror films do not do, and that is it generates scares and creates a sense of eeriness without skimping on its story. In fact, the story just might be the strongest part of this film.
THE CHANGELING is one of the best movies of its type. And while I didn’t find it quite as scary as I did way back in the early 80s, it still holds up very well today. In fact, if you’ve never seen it and you’re watching it for the first time, you might not want to watch it alone. Just sayin’.
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And it’s already in my collection! Woo hoo!