|
Poltergeist
(1982)
In director Tobe Hooper's and co-producer/co-writer
Steven Spielberg's horror classic - about a California suburban family
- the Freelings - whose home was invaded by malevolent ghosts (or
poltergeists); it all began when their youngest daughter was abducted,
and paranormal investigators and "house cleaning" experts
were summoned to the house:
- the family of successful real estate developer Steve
Freeling (Craig T. Nelson) and his wife Diane (JoBeth Williams)
lived in the Cuesta Verde housing development in Orange County,
California, in a suburban tract dream home, where ordinary objects
began to turn threatening through paranormal events (for example,
a TV screen, a backyard tree, a closet, and a favorite doll)
- the view of their young, wide-eyed 5 year-old daughter
Carol Anne Freeling (Heather O'Rourke) watching late-night TV snow
and her memorable words: ("They're heeere") - with special
effects of TV possession when she began to carry on a conversation
with the snowy-static; she later referred to the ghostly presence
as "The TV people"
- the inexplicable occurrences in the house: a bursting
glass of milk, bending silverware, and a view of chairs inexplicably
self-stacked in the kitchen
- the early terrifying scene in which the arm branches
of the gnarly backyard tree outside a bedroom window during a nighttime
thunderstorm became animated, crashed through the glass, and seized
8 year-old Robbie Freeling (Oliver Robins) from his bed - and half-devoured
him before he was saved by his father
|
|
|
Robbie Grabbed by Gnarly Backyard Tree
|
|
|
|
Carol Anne Sucked Into Bedroom Closet
|
- at the same time, the ghostly apparition named The
Beast emerged from the children's bedroom closet, and a swirling
wind pulled Carol Anne into her bedroom's closet into another dimension
- the experiences of UC Irvine parapsychologists called
to the house, including Dr. Lesh (Beatrice Straight), Ryan (Richard
Lawson), and Marty (Martin Casella), who witnessed toys and other
objects swirling around in Carol Anne's room; Dr. Lesh announced:
"The determination as to whether your home is haunted is not very
easy. What l meant to say was, it might very well be a poltergeist
intrusion instead of a classic haunting"
Three Parapsychologists
|
|
|
|
Swirling Objects in Bedroom
|
Marty Hallucinating The Deterioration of His Face
|
- the ghastly scene of para-psychologist Marty, after
raiding the Freeling's refrigerator late at night, spotting a left-over
steak moving on its own and a turkey leg infested with maggots
- and then looking into a bathroom mirror and having a morbid,
hallucinatory experience - his face deteriorated as he clawed at
his face and peeled back the rotting flesh with his fingers, pulling
off gobs of skin down to the bone
- the crucial clue given by Steve's boss, community
real-estate developer Lewis Teague (James Karen) about future construction
and project plans for the area and why there might be a problem with
the Freeling house in Cuesta Verde: "We've already made arrangements
for relocating the cemetery....Oh, don't worry about it. After all,
it's not an ancient tribal burial ground. lt's just people. Besides,
we've done it before (in Cuesta Verde)...All three hundred acres.
Well, let me tell you, it was quite a deal!"; Steve reacted
by considering the whole thing
"sacrilegious"
- there were further attempts at exorcism and house-cleansing
by short-statured, eccentric clairvoyant Tangina Barrons (Zelda Rubinstein)
- including her spellbinding monologue to about Carol Anne's relation
to the unseen spirits that had pulled her into their sphere: "There
is no death. There is only a transition to a different sphere of
consciousness. Carol Anne is not like those she's with. She's a living
presence in their spiritual, earth-bound plane. They're attracted
to the one thing about her that's different from themselves. Her
life-force - it is very strong. It gives off its own illumination.
It is a light that implies life and memory of love and home and earthly
pleasures, something they desperately desire but can't have anymore.
Right now, she's the closest thing to that, and that is a terrible
distraction from the real light that has finally come for them. Do
you understand me? These souls who for whatever reason are not at
rest are also not aware that they have passed on. They're not part
of consciousness as we know it. They're in a perpetual dream state,
a nightmare from which they cannot wake. Inside this spectral light
is salvation - a window to the next plane. They must pass through
this membrane with friends who are waiting to guide them to new destinies.
Carol Anne must help them cross over, and she will only hear her
mother's voice. Now, hold onto your selves. There's one more thing
- a terrible presence is in there with her. So much rage, so much
betrayal. I've never sensed anything like it. I don't know what hovers
over this house, but it was strong enough to punch a hole into this
world and take your daughter away from you. It keeps Carol Anne very
close to it and away from the spectral light. It lies to her. It
says things only a child can understand. He's been using her to restrain
the others. To her, it simply is another child. To us, it is the
Beast. Now let's go get your daughter."
- the amazing scene of the attempt of Diane to extract
Carol Anne from the other dimension, by tying a rope around Diane's
waist before she entered the portal in the bedroom closet to grab
her daughter; she emerged into the other dimension, the Beast was
confronted face-to-face, and Diane successfully brought Carol Anne
back - both were unconscious and covered in ectoplasm after falling
through the living room ceiling; Tangina prematurely declared: "This
house is clean"
- another scare-moment of the frightening, evil-grinning
clown doll in Robbie's room that vanished from its customary chair,
grabbed its owner Robbie, strangled him with its elongated snake-like
arm, and pulled him under the bed where Robbie fought off the doll
- the unseen malignant forceful poltergeist also attacked
Diane (to keep her from coming to Robbie's rescue); it bounced
her on the bed, hurled her against the bedroom wall, moved her
up the wall and dragged her across the ceiling; another slimy portal
opened up in Carol Anne's closet and attempted to pull them in
- the concluding scene of distraught suburban California
mother Diane Freeling, after confronting the Beast a second time,
running outside into the yard for help - in the rain - and making
a wrong step - she slipped into the muddy, excavated pit next to
the house, dug for their swimming pool, slid down the slippery slope
into the dirty water, and surfaced with skeletal faces of corpses
(with silent, screaming expressions) and coffins rising and erupting
behind her; the ghost story's key point was that the home had been
built over a local cemetery - where developers had never removed
and relocated the corpses as promised, but had only removed the headstones
- and the angry spirits sought retribution; in the terrifying climax,
the muddy corpses were being unearthed
- the words of Steve's strong rebuke of his own boss,
Lewis Teague, who was responsible for the catastrophe: "You
s-o-b. You moved the cemetery but you left the bodies, didn't ya?
You s-o-b. You left the bodies and you only moved the headstones.
You only moved the headstones. Lies. Lies."
- in the film's final moments, the enraged Beast sucked
the imploding house through the portal into another dimension until
there was nothing left
- after the family was checked into a Holiday Inn,
Steve wheeled the TV out of the room onto the balcony
|
"They're here"
Projection From TV into Bedroom Wall
Bent Silverware
Stacked Chairs
Developer Teague to Steve: Admitting The Relocation of
a Cemetery in Cuesta Verde
Tangina's Monologue
Tangina's Last Words: "Now let's go get your
daughter"
The Beast
Carol Anne Extracted by Diane
Poltergeist's Attack on Diane
Another Portal Opening Up in Bedroom Closet
Skeletons Rising Up in Pit Next to Diane
Steve's Rebuke of His Boss
House Imploding
Removal of TV from Family's Hotel Room
|