Richard Matheson’s Hell House (1971) concludes with a violent, cathartic immolation. The titular mansion, a physical nexus of sadistic haunting, is burned to the ground by the surviving psychic, Barrett. The evil is destroyed; the cycle is broken. Or so it seems. A theoretical sequel, Hell House Part 2 , cannot begin with the house. It must begin with the absence of the house—a void that, in the logic of the supernatural, is often more dangerous than the structure itself. This essay argues that Hell House Part 2 would not be a story of a new haunting, but a story of the metastasis of trauma, where the “house” ceases to be a location and becomes a condition: a psychic, social, and even digital architecture of predation.
If the original Hell House was an analog machine of terror (physical walls, cold drafts, ectoplasmic projections), Part 2 must contend with the digital. Today, a “hell house” could exist in virtual reality, where participants consent to phobias being triggered by haptic feedback and AI-driven psychological profiling. Or it could exist as a dark web ritual, where the “house” is a server architecture designed to induce shared psychosis through strobing light, infrasound, and algorithmic suggestion.
Thus, the sequel’s central antagonist would not be a ghost or a copycat. It would be the survivor’s own self —the internalized Belasco. The new protagonist (perhaps Fischer, now elderly and fragile, or a new character connected to the original) would discover that the only way to truly end the cycle is not to destroy an external house, but to perform an exorcism on the internal architecture of fear. But here, the horror offers no easy victory. Because the internal house, once recognized, can never be fully demolished. It can only be mapped, inhabited with awareness, and perhaps—perhaps—decorated differently. hell house part 2
Here, the sequel would offer a profound critique of modern mediation: what happens when the haunted house is not a place you enter, but a feed that enters you ? The passive medium of television in the 1970s (referenced in Matheson’s original via the skeptical parapsychologist’s equipment) gives way to the immersive, 24/7 enclosure of the smartphone. Hell House Part 2 would argue that Belasco’s dream—total domination of another’s perception—has been democratized by social media algorithms, parasocial relationships, and the slow violence of digital surveillance.
The original Hell House operates on a materialist horror logic. Emeric Belasco, the depraved millionaire, did not summon literal demons; he weaponized the psychological and energetic residue of extreme suffering—rape, murder, isolation—into a resonant field. The house was a battery of sadism. In a sequel, Belasco cannot return. But his method can. Richard Matheson’s Hell House (1971) concludes with a
A sequel would ask: what of the children? Perhaps an unknown offspring of Belasco exists, not as a monster, but as a lonely inheritor of a psychic stain. Or perhaps the children of the 1970 expedition team develop inexplicable phobias, nightmares of a house they have never seen. This is not genetic memory in a biological sense, but architectural memory—a non-local imprint of atrocity that attaches itself to bloodlines. The sequel would thus move from gothic haunting to epigenetics, suggesting that the horrors we inflict on one another harden into the very chemistry of the next generation.
In this way, Hell House Part 2 becomes less a horror sequel and more a philosophical treatise: the only true haunting is the one we refuse to see is already ours. Or so it seems
Hell House Part 2 would fail if it merely recreated the shocks of the original. Its deeper purpose would be to reveal that the original hell house was never a building on a hill in Maine. It was a relationship —between predator and prey, between the past and the present, between the self and the shadow. The sequel’s final scene would not be an explosion. It would be a quiet, horrifying recognition: a character looking into a mirror and seeing, for just a moment, not Belasco’s face, but the shape of his wanting. And realizing that the fire is still burning, not in the walls, but in the blood.