Netflix's 10-Part Horror Series Made Pulling Off The Perfect Twist Look Easy

15 hours ago 5
Violet McGraw as Young Nell in The Haunting of Hill House

Published Mar 26, 2026, 11:46 PM EDT

Dhruv is a Lead Writer in Screen Rant's New TV division. He has been consistently contributing to the website for over two years and has written thousands of articles covering streaming trends, movie/TV analysis, and pop culture breakdowns.
Before Screen Rant, he was a Senior Writer for The Cinemaholic, covering everything from anime to television, from reality TV to movies.
After high school, he was on his way to become a Civil Engineer. However, he soon realized that writing was his true calling. As a result, he took a leap and never looked back.

Pulling off the perfect twists in the horror genre is no easy feat, but a 10-part Netflix horror miniseries manages to keep its biggest revelation both shocking and eerily inevitable.

Some of the best twists in the history of cinema have come from the horror genre. For instance, M. Night Shyamalan's The Sixth Sense has one of the greatest and most shocking twists that have ever graced the screens. Similarly, 2001's The Others, too, remains one of the best depictions of how a horror twist should be executed.

Even on the small screen, a Mike Flanagan show on Netflix times its biggest twist so brilliantly that it almost makes it look easy.

The Haunting Of Hill House's Bent-Neck Lady Twist Lived Up To Its Major Hype

The Bent Neck Lady in The Haunting of Hill House

In most mainstream horror movies and shows, ghosts and spirits follow a linear logic. They are portrayed as supernatural entities who either represent someone who died in the past or as overarching evil forces that exist in the realm beyond human comprehension. There is nothing inherently wrong with these portrayals of ghosts in movies and TV shows, but their depiction often feels predictable and bound by familiar tropes.

The ghost of a bent-neck lady is introduced in The Haunting of Hill House's early moments. She, too, comes off as another conventional ghost, making it hard not to believe that she is the spirit of someone who died in the central setting a long time ago.

However, as the show progresses, it becomes evident that only one character, Nell, can see her, hinting that the Bent-Neck Lady's story is somehow tied to Nell's overarching narrative. With each scene in which she appears, you, as a viewer, grow increasingly curious about how she is connected to Nell.

With a surprising twist of events, Mike Flanagan's The Haunting of Hill House finally reveals that the Bent-Neck Lady was no one but Nell herself. Nell was being haunted by her own ghost all along. This terrifying reveal bends the rules of time and highlights how, beyond the human realm, time may not be as linear as it seems.

Instead of trying to explain the logic behind the twist, The Haunting of Hill House maintains an air of ambiguity surrounding it. This allows viewers to fill in the blanks and come up with their own theories surrounding the time-bending twist. At the same time, it also adds a layer of cosmicism to the series by establishing how

"The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown." — H.P. Lovecraft

The Bent-Neck Lady Twist Was Only One Ingredient In The Haunting Of Hill House's Success

Oliver Jackson Cohen in The Haunting of Hill House Image courtesy of Everett Collection

The Haunting of Hill House benefits a lot from being an adaptation of a solid source material written by Shirley Jackson. At the same time, though, it is Mike Flanagan's creative vision that allows the series to work as a classic horror novel's contemporary adaptation.

While the show takes many creative liberties and significantly changes the original book, it captures its essence by showing how ghosts can be both literal supernatural entities and deeply personal manifestations of grief and trauma.

Instead of directly adapting The Haunting of Hill House, the Netflix series even borrows from other popular literary works, like Stephen King's The Shining, Shakespeare's Hamlet, and Shirley Jackson's other stories.

It brilliantly dissolves elements from all of these into its story to tell a deeply moving tale about how familial ties can both anchor individuals in moments of despair and become the very forces that haunt them long after they are gone.

Mike Flanagan has delivered a long line of highly acclaimed movies and shows after The Haunting of Hill House. However, the Netflix show arguably remains his best work in the horror genre.

03123551_poster_w780.jpg
Read Entire Article