I apologise if this is a controversial view, but dare I suggest that some of the love for the Haunted House (as well as some of the other “Wardley classics”) might be based on nostalgia, both personal and borrowed?
I don’t deny that the Haunted House was clearly very successful in 1992, but I do wonder whether the happy memories from the ride’s early years might be making people remember it as better than it perhaps was, which in turn rubs off on younger enthusiasts who never rode the Haunted House. This then turns it into this godly ride that could do no wrong and is elevated onto a very high pedestal by both younger enthusiasts who never rode it and are hearing about how brilliant it was and by people who did ride it and might have some degree of nostalgia towards it coming into play.
That’s not discounting anyone’s opinions from the time, by the way, and I apologise if it comes across that way. I more mean that nostalgia can do funny things to people’s recollections of an experience (believe me, I know that from first-hand experience!), so I do often wonder whether the Haunted House and the other “Wardley classics” would be revered so much if they had stayed around for longer and lived into the modern era.
I could be completely wrong here, but my thought is that while someone who rode the Haunted House in 1992 could have thought it was brilliant, the goalposts of what constitute a revered ride have changed considerably since 1992. Had the ride been “revived”, you’d be viewing it through the lens of the 2023 industry, which I do feel might have made people view it in a very different light.
The way I see it is that riding the Haunted House in 2023 would be like rewatching a film from the 80s or 90s that you’d remembered as being brilliant at the time. At the time of its release, you loved it, but in 2023, certain flaws become more apparent (think of all the films and TV shows from that time that are now being called out for racism, sexism, homophobia and the like, not to mention that special effects have come a long way in that timeframe too). It’s not a perfect analogy, as a film or TV show is different to a spooky dark ride, but overall, I feel like the same sort of sentiment rings true for both.
Having watched POVs of the Haunted House (which admittedly won’t tell the whole story), I must admit that I’m surprised that it is so revered while Duel was so hated. To me, it basically looks like Duel, but with better lighting, a different soundtrack and no blasters… at the time it operated, I don’t deny that it clearly worked well and was brilliant for the time, but I personally feel that for the 2023 theme park market, Curse is a better fit overall.