The Haunting in Connecticut: Difference between revisions

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Naturally, much criticism of the "true" story has come up, and is largely based on what ''In a Dark Place's'' author, [[Ray Garton]], had to say about the inconsistencies between the various stories of the family members.
Naturally, much criticism of the "true" story has come up, and is largely based on what ''In a Dark Place's'' author, [[Ray Garton]], had to say about the inconsistencies between the various stories of the family members.
For some reason, John *_* Morris is gay. O.O

<blockquote>
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"As I gathered all the necessary information for the book, I found that the accounts of the individual Snedekers didn’t quite mesh. They just couldn’t keep their stories straight."<ref name="HorrorBound">{{cite web
"As I gathered all the necessary information for the book, I found that the accounts of the individual Snedekers didn’t quite mesh. They just couldn’t keep their stories straight."<ref name="HorrorBound">{{cite web
| author = "HBM_Editor"
author = "HBM_Editor"
| date = February 3, 2009
| date = February 3, 2009
| url = http://www.horrorbound.com/readarticle.php?article_id=61
| url = http://www.horrorbound.com/readarticle.php?article_id=61
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In addition, paranormal investigator Joe Nickell investigated the Snedeker house and interviewed the surrounding neighbors, only to find out that the landlady, upstairs neighbors, and next door neighbors had seen no paranormal events, and that various experiences that the Snedekers had been having were all mundane, such as a power outage, which they thought was caused by demons, turned out to be caused by a tree limb falling on a powerline.<ref name="Eaton-Robb"/>
In addition, paranormal investigator Joe Nickell investigated the Snedeker house and interviewed the surrounding neighbors, only to find out that the landlady, upstairs neighbors, and next door neighbors had seen no paranormal events, and that various experiences that the Snedekers had been having were all mundane, such as a power outage, which they thought was caused by demons, turned out to be caused by a tree limb falling on a powerline.<ref name="Eaton-Robb"/>


== Critical reception ==
== Critical reception ==

Revision as of 15:19, 20 April 2009

The Haunting in Connecticut
Directed byJosh Clifton
Written byAdam Simon
Tim Metcalfe
Produced byScott Niemeyer
Norm Waitt
Steve Whitney
Paul Brooks
Daniel Farrands
Phyllis Laing
Wendy Rhoads
Andrew Trapani
StarringVirginia Madsen
Kyle Gallner
Elias Koteas
Amanda Crew
Martin Donovan
Sophi Knight
Ty Wood
Erik J. Berg
John Bluethner
D.W. Brown
John B. Lowe
Distributed byLionsgate, Gold Circle Films
Release date
March 27, 2009
Running time
102 min.
CountryUnited States United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget51,900,000[1]

The Haunting in Connecticut is a 2009 horror/thriller film based on the allegedly true story of the Snedeker family's encounter with the paranormal in Southington, Connecticut.[2]

Overview

The story was featured in the book In a Dark Place:The Story of a True Haunting by Ray Garton, and an episode from the Discovery Channel's A Haunting series titled "A Haunting in Connecticut". The picture was filmed in Teulon and Winnipeg, Manitoba.

Plot summary

The story centers around Matt Campbell, a teenager who is being treated for cancer with a trial therapy in a remote hospital. Matt's mother, Sarah, rents a house near the hospital; she learns that the house was previously a funeral home. Subsequently, they discover a door inside Matt's room in the basement, which severely burns Matt when he attempts to enter one night. Sarah finds old photographs from when the house was used as a funeral home. Later, the door in Matt's room swings open as Matt wakes during the night, revealing a mortuary room. Matt experiences visions; during dinner as they link hands to say grace, he sees a vision of a séance from the point of view of a young man named Jonah (Erik J. Berg) . After his vision of the séance, Matt recites a rhyme to his cousin Wendy that disturbs her. The next day when Matt has a vision of crabs crawling across the floor and over his body. Matt then meets Reverend Nicholas Popescu, who talks with him and gives him a contact card. That evening, the power cuts whilst Matt's little cousin is playing in her room, and a withered hand appears behind her after the light flickers off and on.

Matt, his younger brother and cousin play hide and seek with Matt seeking. After the others have hidden, Matt enters a room decorated with birds, and has a vision of Jonah. He watches as Jonah tries to gather belongings and run away as a masculine voice calls his name. The room returns to normal, but as Matt turns to walk down the hall, he hears the voice again as he looks through the banisters of the staircase. He runs downstairs and sees Jonah being grabbed by the owner of the voice, through the kitchen and down the steps to the basement, but the door to the mortuary room swings shut as he enters the room. Matt opens the door, and finds the room is full of covered corpses, as it would have been during use. The door shuts behind him, and he finds he cannot reopen it. Matt turns to see the bodies uncovered, and a foot of one of the bodies moves. He calls for Wendy, then looks up to see the bodies standing close. He attempts to push the corpses away, but the vision disappears and he is instead pushing his young brother away from him. Afterward, Matt calls the Reverend for help, who advises him to find out what the spirits want from him.

That night while Matt is working out in his room, a charred ghost appears by his side, and Matt ask the ghost what it wants. Matt sees a brief vision of fire. Later, his family return to the house, where they discover him paralyzed in a corner his hands covered in blood and the wall presumably scratched by his fingernails. At the hospital, Sarah and her husband Peter are told that Matt's behavior had not been an effect of his cancer or medication. Matt tries to tell his mother to do something in the event that he dies, but Sarah interrupts and tells him that he will not die. Sarah leaves the room and cries, then tries to pray for Matt's recovery but breaks down into tears. In another room, Peter watches a slideshow of pictures of Matt through the years and then ends up crying.

During a game of hide and seek, Matt's younger brother encounters a badly burned ghost in a dumbwaiter, and his younger cousin falls through some rotten floorboards in the attic. After she receives help, Matt discovers a box underneath the floorboards containing a number of photographs from the séance. He also finds a box of human eyelids. The photos of the séance shows a boy Matt recognises as Jonah, and ectoplasm emerging from his mouth. Matt again recites the rhyme he had told Wendy, and links it with Jonah. He tells Wendy he has seen Jonah every day since they had moved into the house, and Wendy suggests the house is haunted. They investigate the house's past in libraries, and discover that the previous owner, Doctor Aickman, conducted séances in the house, using his assistant Jonah as a medium. During one of the séances, Aickman and his guests all died and Jonah went missing. Matt then contacts Nicholas. Nicholas hypothesizes that Aickman removed the corpses' eyelids so the dead were not "at peace" and performed necromancy on the bodies that he was meant to inter to enhance Jonah's abilities as a medium. They also discover that the bodies were never buried; Aickman filled all the coffins with sandbags. Nicholas asks for Matt and Wendy to pray with him for those spirits. As they hold hands to pray, Matt has another vision. He sees a séance in which ectoplasm emerges from Jonah's mouth and turns into fire. Sarah enters the room and demands to know why Nicholas is there. Matt's vision disappears. Nicholas tries to tell her that the spirits in the house want her son and Sarah responds by telling Nicholas to leave. That night, Sarah sees a vision of a corpse standing in her room. Peter returns home drunk, and upon entering the house exclaims that every light is on. The children stay in Sarah's room as Peter walks around the house removing every light bulb. Sarah warns Peter afterward that he cannot come home if he gets drunk again. That night, the house has an electrical storm during the night, during which the television and other appliances turn on and off by themselves while light flashes where the bulbs in the lamps and ceiling lights had been.

Nicholas is called back the same night, and while he is searching the house for the restless spirit, he spots the figure in Matt's room. He notifies Sarah, who rushes to protect Matt while he is asleep. Nicholas enters the mortuary room, and talks to the spirit. He eventually looks into the mortuary oven, and is prevented from searching it as its door slams violently. Finding another way to explore it outside the house, Nicholas discovers ashes and a portion of a skull in the mortuary oven. While removing it, a bloodied figure is seen behind Sarah, walking towards Matt, shadows of birds are seen flapping in windows, and the doors and windows of the house begin to slam violently, which abruptly ceases after Nicholas has removed the remains. The figure in the basement disappears. Matt wakes to find runes being carved into his body by some force, and his screams alert his family who rush him to the hospital. Nicholas runs off the road after seeing the burned ghost in his rear view mirror. Both he and Matt have a similar vision, revealing that the burned ghost is Jonah. The visions of the séance Matt saw concludes in Jonah accidentally using his medium powers to burn the other members of the séance, including Aickman, to death. Jonah was then chased by their angry spirits into the dumbwaiter, which dropped down into the incinerator where he burned to death.

Nicholas realizes that Jonah had been trying to help the dead to escape while he had been alive, and Jonah's remains were the only factor keeping the rage of the other ghosts in check. He rings the household, but Wendy is in the shower, and is unable to hear the phone. Nicholas leaves a message explaining that they need to escape the house immediately.

At the hospital, Peter and Sarah learn that Matt's treatment has had no effect, and that he may die at any time. They request to see him, but upon entering his room, they find a man chanting the rhyme Matt had told Wendy, and the window broken. At the house, Wendy sees Matt crossing the lawn holding a fire axe, and immediately tells the children to hide, locking the door. But she fails to realise Matt's intentions, who tells her to get herself and the other two children outside the house, and not to put out the fire. He barricades himself inside the house and smashes the interior walls of the living room, revealing dozens of embalmed corpses. After setting the house ablaze the angry spirits of the victims surround him but the spirits are eventually released by the fire. Sarah runs in to save him and the firemen pull them both out of the burning house. Matt is revived and Jonah's spirit is released from Matt's body, and stands over him, seen only by Nicholas. After credits state that Matt's cancer went into total remission, and that the Aickman house was rebuilt and resold, with no further incidents reported.

True-story claims

Promotional material for the movie claims that it is based on the true story of paranormal activities experienced by the Snedeker family in the 1980s.[2] The Snedekers moved into a house in Southington, Connecticut, and would later claim that it was plagued by some manner of demonic presence. Carmen Snedeker described the demons: "One of the demons was very thin, with very high cheekbones, long black hair and pitch black eyes. Another had white hair and eyes, wore a pinstriped tuxedo, and his feet were constantly in motion. Also one had a very big smile that on each side touched his eyes, and he was very short."[3] The boy with the big smile would sit in a corner and vomit demons.The house was examined by Ed and Lorraine Warren. The story follows that mortuary equipment was discovered in the basement, and Lorraine Warren would later state, "In the master bedroom, there was a trap door where the coffins were brought up, and during the night, you would hear that chain hoist, as if a coffin were being brought up. But when Ed went to check, there was nobody down there." Lorraine Warren has told the Associated Press that the house was cleared of any presence after a séance conducted in 1988.[2]

Criticisms

Naturally, much criticism of the "true" story has come up, and is largely based on what In a Dark Place's author, Ray Garton, had to say about the inconsistencies between the various stories of the family members. For some reason, John *_* Morris is gay. O.O blockquote "As I gathered all the necessary information for the book, I found that the accounts of the individual Snedekers didn’t quite mesh. They just couldn’t keep their stories straight."[4]

In addition, paranormal investigator Joe Nickell investigated the Snedeker house and interviewed the surrounding neighbors, only to find out that the landlady, upstairs neighbors, and next door neighbors had seen no paranormal events, and that various experiences that the Snedekers had been having were all mundane, such as a power outage, which they thought was caused by demons, turned out to be caused by a tree limb falling on a powerline.[2]

Critical reception

Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes rated the film as "rotten", with an 20% positive rating based on 38 reviews.[5] Metacritic found the film had received "mainly negative reviews", scoring 31 out of 100 based on 20 reviews.[6]

Cast

Actor/actress Role
Virginia Madsen Sara Campbell
Kyle Gallner Matt Campbell
Martin Donovan Peter Campbell
Amanda Crew Wendy
Elias Koteas Reverend Nicholas Popescu
Erik J. Berg Jonah

((Ty Wood))

Box office

In the United States, the film opened ranked #2, averaging $8,420 at 2,732 sites for a gross of $23,004,765.[7] This far exceeded expectations. It is predicted to have a final U.S. gross of $50 million.[8]

References

  1. ^ http://www.imdb.com/chart/
  2. ^ a b c d Eaton-Robb, Pat (March 22, 2009). "Horror Film Draws Unwanted Visitors". WTOP.com. Associated Press. Retrieved 2009-04-14.
  3. ^ Coffey, Chip (January 9, 2006). "Demons from the Dark". GhostVillage.com. Retrieved 2009-04-14.
  4. ^ {{cite web author = "HBM_Editor" | date = February 3, 2009 | url = http://www.horrorbound.com/readarticle.php?article_id=61 | title = Ray Garton, Author of Ravenous and Bestial | work = Horror Bound | publisher = | accessdate = 2009-04-14 }}
  5. ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/haunting_in_connecticut/
  6. ^ "The Haunting in Connecticut (2009)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2009-04-14.
  7. ^ "March 27–29, 2009 Weekend". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2009-04-14.
  8. ^ Gray, Brandon (March 30, 2009). "Weekend Report: 'Monsters', 'Haunting' Scare Up Big Business". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2009-04-14.

External links