The Haunting of Netflix: Ranking Mike Flanagan’s Top Streaming Series

Spoilers

October is here, which means it’s time to observe the sacred 31-day ancestral feast known as Spooky Season.

Obviously, our favorite way to celebrate is by revisiting beloved horror classics from years past.

But while most pop culture sites are focusing on movies that will keep you up at night, we here at TV Fanatic prefer to examine the most memorable horror limited series — specifically, the ones created by Mike Flanagan.

(Netflix screenshot)

For the uninitiated, Flanagan is basically the streaming world’s answer to Stephen King:

He’s prolific, he’s wildly popular; and while his stories offer plenty of chills from the supernatural realm, he’s typically more interested in moments of genuine poignancy than cheap jump scares.

While non-Netflix subscribers might be more familiar with Flanagan’s feature films (Hush, Oculus, and, appropriately, the King adaptation Dr. Sleep), recent years have found the horror maestro helming sprawling, deeply personal streaming shows that often recall the work of his Maine-based mentor.

Beginning with 2018’s The Haunting of Hill House, Flanagan has churned out five limited series as part of his development deal with the OG streaming giant.

And each has a tremendous amount to offer in terms of thought-provoking terror.

So whether you’re new to his work or wondering which Flanagan favorite is most worthy of a second binge session, check out our definitive (and, of course, highly subjective) ranking of his unforgettable Netflix projects:

The Haunting of Hill House

Victoria Pedretti in The Haunting of Hill House
(Courtesy of Netflix)

A loose — very loose, in fact — adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s classic 1959 novel, Flanagan’s freshman foray into the world of series television is just as interested in the traumatic after-effects of an encounter with the spirit world as in the titular haunting itself.

Employing the non-linear, flashback-heavy narrative style that Flanagan often favors, the show centers around the increasingly beleaguered Crane family.

When a husband-and-wife team of professional house-flippers (perennial Flanagan favorites Henry Thomas and Carla Gugino) purchase the ominous Hill House, they and their five children move in and hunker down for what promises to be a lengthy renovation project.

But the house, as you might have guessed, has other plans.

A Haunting of Hill House poster
(Netflix)

Obviously, haunted house stories are nothing new, but Flanagan puts a fresh spin on the usual tropes via a narrative that moves seamlessly between past and present, exploring the traumatic impact of the world’s most ill-fated real estate deal.

This is psychologically charged gothic horror at its finest, and with apologies to Ghosts, it might be the best haunted house series of all time.

Her stoic demeanor might say otherwise, but somewhere, the spirit of Shirley Jackson is very proud.

Midnight Mass

Bev Keane on Midnight Mass
(EIKE SCHROTER/NETFLIX © 2021)

If you were disappointed by the recent Max adaptation of King’s 1975 novel Salem’s Lot (as you should be), then Midnight Mass might be just what you need to satisfy your thirst for a nuanced small-town vampire saga.

Arguably Flanagan’s richest and most personal work, this series is as invested in the very human struggles of the citizens of Crockett Island as it is in the supernatural happenings around them.

The show mines the usual vampire tropes and finds satisfying motherlodes of subtextual gold.

The alcoholics’ cravings, the religious seeker’s quest for immortality, and the universal desire for eternal youth are all given their due here.

Complete with prodigal son returning to his troubled hometown and a bloodsucker infestation that rapidly goes from bad to worse, the story certainly owes some thematic debts to King’s original exploration of the question, “What if Dracula, but in rural America?”

In this case, however, the pupil may have surpassed the master.

The Haunting of Bly Manor

Bly Manor Gardener - The Haunting of Bly Manor
(EIKE SCHROTER/NETFLIX)

Usually, when horror fans gush about the ending of a favorite film or series, they mean that the story delivered a final scare that left them reeling.

But The Haunting of Bly Manor delivered a very different sort of memorable conclusion.

We won’t spoil it here, but believe us when we say that the finale of this series will have you dabbing at your eyes and blaming it on seasonal allergies.

A spiritual sequel to Hill House, Bly is a bit uneven at times.

It’s not quite as chilling as its predecessor, and at least one installment demands so much patience that we can’t help but think its main function was fulfilling Netflix’s episode order.

But the framing device leads to a conclusion in which a mysterious narrator (Carla Gugino! Again!) offers a memorable lesson on the meaning of love, loss, and grief.

Is it dusty in here, or is it just us?

Gerald’s Game

A poster for the movie Gerald's Game
(Netflix)

What’s that you say? This is a movie and not a limited series?

Well, you’ve got us there. But no discussion of Flanagan’s Netflix contributions would be complete without this deeply disturbing adaptation of King’s equally effed-up novel.

In news that’s sure to astonish you, this one features Carla Gugino and Henry Thomas, alongside Bruce Greenwood, who also features prominently in the next item on this list.

As psychologically complex as Hill House, the film manages to craft edge-of-your-seat suspense from the story of a woman who spends most of the movie handcuffed to a bedpost. No mean feat!

Unfortunately, this flick goes off the rails a bit with a third act that can only be described as … well, monstrous. You’ve been warned.

The Fall of the House of Usher

Watch Them Rain - The Fall of the House of Usher Season 1 Episode 8
(Netflix (Screenshot))

The first Flanagan series that might be described as a dark comedy, this one takes many of its tonal cues from an unexpected source — namely, HBO’s Succession.

And while it’s generally a good thing to emulate the greats, the fast-talking banter of Jesse Armstrong’s iconic corporate satire is a tough trick to pull off.

Attempting to re-interpret Edgar Allan Poe’s gothic tale of a family’s downfall (as with Hill House, this is a very loose adaptation) through such a specific lens may have been a mistake.

As with all Flanagan projects, there’s much to admire here.

Greenwood is reliably sharp as the wealthy patriarch, and Henry Thomas (did we mention Flanagan loves this guy?) shines in his sleaziest role yet (complete with unfortunate man bun).

But while Flanagan’s skewering of corporate America is delightfully sharp, this series fails to deliver either the scares or the poignancy of its predecessors, and revealing the episodic structure at the outset leads to a level of predictability that undermines many of the attempted twists

The Midnight Club

The Midnight Club Key Art
(Netflix)

Look, we’re big, big Mike Flanagan fans here at TV Fanatic — which is why it pains us to say that the auteur’s first young adult offering was a big ol’ swing and a miss.

What could have been a nostalgic throwback to youth-oriented horror series like Are You Afraid of the Dark? instead felt like a glacially paced and overly self-serious attempt at something loftier.

We respect Flanagan’s refusal to be tied down, and his staunch belief that horror and heart can and should go together.

And it’s worth noting that for all our youthful vitality, we do not belong to the target demo for this show.

But sometimes, even the most well-intentioned experiments simply fall flat, and frankly, The Midnight Club left us looking at the clock and longing for bedtime.

Over to you TV fanatics! Hit the comments section below to share your thoughts on Mike Flanagan’s incredible body of work!

Watch Haunting of Hill House Online


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