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The Amityville Horror (1979)
Director Stuart Rosenberg's was based on Jay Anson's
1977 fabricated book-account of the allegedly-true story of the Lutz
family, who in 1975 purchased a Dutch Colonial home on Long Island
in Amityville, marked with a sign reading: "High Hopes" -
the film's 'haunted-house' premise was similar to Spielberg's later
film Poltergeist (1982) and Kubrick's The
Shining (1980), and many others; there were three official’ sequels – Amityville
II: The Possession (1982), Amityville 3-D (1983) and Amityville:
The Evil Escapes (1989), plus a remake: The Amityville Horror
(2005); the film's tagline was: "FOR GOD'S SAKE, GET OUT!":
- the source of a home's supernatural forces (and
sounds of shotgun blasts inside) was explained by an opening title-card: "November
13, 1974, Amityville, Long Island. A mother, father and four of
their children murdered… No apparent motive"; on November
13, 1974, troubled 23 year-old eldest son Ronald "Butch" DeFeo
Jr. took his shotgun at 3:15 am and mass-murdered and slaughtered
his entire family at their Amityville home, including his parents
and four siblings (two brothers and two sisters aged 9-18); the
murders were reviewed by Sgt. Gionfriddo (Val Avery) at the crime
scene
- one year later, an interested house-seeking couple
was touring the same home - presented as a series of inserts intercut
with the massacre; the home to be purchased in Amityville, NY had
a prominent Dutch gambrel (barn-shaped) roof design (with two quarter-circular
windows serving as eyes on the 3rd floor) - seen in the title credits;
a newly-married family couple viewed the three-story Amityville
home (at 112 Ocean Ave.): George Lutz (James Brolin) and his pig-tailed
Catholic wife Kathy Lutz (Margot Kidder), with her three children
(from a prior marriage): Greg (K. C. Martel), Matt (Meeno Peluce),
and Amy (Natasha Ryan) were about to be the new occupants
- the real estate agent Mrs.
Townsend (Elsa Raven) boasted: "There's nothing like it on
the market. Not at this price"; although
Kathy was nervous about the price and the home's grisly history
("A guy kills his whole family"), George was unperturbed: "Houses
don't have memories"; they finally decided to purchase the
affordable, waterfront house for $80,000, under-priced from its
$120,000 value, and moved in about one month later
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George Lutz and Kathy Lutz (James Brolin and Margot
Kidder)
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- a purifying house-blessing (or exorcism) sequence
was conducted by family priest Father Frank Delaney (Rod Steiger)
alone in an upstairs bedroom (while the unaware Lutz family were
outside at the nearby water's edge and then on a motorboat); he
heard unexplained children laughing - manifesting that the home
might be haunted; Father Delaney experienced a locked window, a
door slamming by itself, buzzing flies gathering at the window
- and then covering his face; as he experienced nausea and stomach
sickness, the door slowly opened and he heard a disembodied voice
that threatened: "GET OUT!" - he fled from the home while
throwing up
- later that evening, Father Delaney attempted to
speak to Kathy by phone at the home on a disrupted, static-filled
phone line when she couldn't hear him and he became speechless;
he also suffered stigmata-like blisters and lacerations on the
palm of the hand that was holding the phone
- [Note: It appeared that the home's inexplicable
and disturbing paranormal events were a repeat of the Seven Deadly
Plagues (from the Biblical Book of Exodus, including water turned
into blood, frogs, lice, gnats, diseased livestock, boils, hail,
locusts, darkness for three days and killing of first-born sons).]
- the young daughter Amy disturbed the married couple
(Kathy revealing herself topless) in a love-making scene, when
she entered their bedroom and cried: "I wanna go home";
Kathy returned Amy to her room, closed the window and didn't notice
that the rocking chair was swaying on its own; during
the sleepless night at 3:15 am, insomniac George discovered the
windows in Amy's bedroom wide open and her doll sitting in
a rocking chair (not in the bed); he was inexplicaby drawn to check
on the boathouse; he also experienced a jump-scare when a black
cat screeched at him
- throughout the film, George (increasingly looking
like a bearded lumberjack) felt compelled to sharpen his axe and
to continually split logs outdoors to keep the fireplace stoked
in order to reduce the home's perceived chilliness
- later that afternoon, Kathy's Aunt Helena (Irene
Dailey), a former nun (with her full conventional nun outfit),
visited and arrived as a black substance bubbled up in the toilets
when flushed; she had barely arrived before the chandelier began
to vibrate; she immediately developed a cold sweat and felt unwell;
she ran from the house, drove off and began to vomit out of her
car door
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Black Sludge in the Toilets
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Aunt Helena's Sickened Reaction to the House's
Paranormal Presence
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- the following night, Kathy herself suffered nightmares
of the murders that occurred in the home; she awakened at 3:15
am, screaming:
"SHE WAS SHOT IN THE HEAD!"
- the next day, while Father Bolen (Don Stroud) was
driving Father Delaney in his car to the Lutz home, they experienced
a car wreck (the brake and steering systems mysteriously locked
and malfunctioned, and the hood opened, obscuring vision), and
both suffered minor injuries
- $1,500 dollars in cash (intended to pay caterers
for an arranged post-marriage party for Kathy's brother Jimmy (Marc
Vahanian)) strangely vanished from Jimmy's coat pocket; while most
of the family was at the wedding, Amy's babysitter Jackie (Amy
Wright) became trapped and hysterical in a dark closet without
a lock and couldn't get out; she yelled to Amy for help ("Amy!
Amy open the door. Amy? For Christ's sake, open the door!"),
but there was no response; later Amy claimed: "Jody wouldn't
let me"
- and then added: "Jody doesn't like George"
- later, while teasing Amy with a toy spider (dropped
onto her from a fishing pole), Greg suffered serious injury when
a wooden-framed window unexpectedly slammed down and crushed his
hand (accompanied by shrieking, Psycho-like violin strings);
that stormy night at 3:15 am, George found flies swarming around
the jammed open window in Amy's room; he went to investigate why
the front and basement doors burst open to the outside on their
own, and when he returned to Amy's room, the flies had disappeared
and the window moved easily - no longer jammed
- at the local Witches Brew bar where George met with
his business partner Jeff (Michael Sacks), the bartender remarked
that George's appearance was similar to the mass-murderer ("You
look just like that kid. You know, he was sittin' right in that
seat where you are when he was arrested"); Jeff complained
that George, whose behavior and look had became increasingly hostile
and noticeably strange and obsessed, was neglecting his responsibilities
at their land surveying business - bills weren't being paid and
customers were complaining; Jeff yelled at him: "I knew this
would happen! I told you you were taking on too much....You marry
a dame with three kids. You buy a big house with mortgages up to
your ass. You change your religion and you forget about business
- great!"
- George punched him
- in the house, Kathy heard Amy singing "Jesus
Loves Me" in her room; Kathy was told that Amy had an imaginary
friend-playmate named Jody, who told her about the boy who used
to live in her room ("He got hurt and he died"); when
she later checked on her daughter, Amy claimed that Jody was scared
and had left through the window; Mrs. Lutz saw two large glowing
red, swine-like eyes looking through her daughter Amy's upper window
(also accompanied by shrieking, Psycho-like violin strings);
later, she insisted to George:
"What I saw was not a cat!"
- library book research by George with Jeff and his
hippie girlfriend Carolyn (Helen Shaver) revealed that John Ketcham,
an accused and ostracized witch during the Salem Witch Trials,
had built a house on the same plot of land as the Lutz house; she
described how the house was built atop some "special ground"
as she used the words: "Devil Worship, Death, Sacrifice"
- the group returned to the house, where the psychically-sensitive
Carolyn recalled her earlier fears and her current feelings to
Jeff: "Are those vibes ever strong. It really pulls on you.
I gotta see the basement. That's where it's coming from";
the two stealthily entered the basement, as Carolyn described the
house site as a Native American tribal burial ground (known as
Shinnecock), used to abandon mentally-ill clansmen as a gravesite
(similar to Poltergeist (1982)): "There was a tribe
of Indians called the Shinnecocks, and they used this land as a
sort of exposure pen. They put all the crazy people here and left
them here to die"
- Harry, the family's black labrador dog, who incessantly
whined at a basement wall, marked a suspicious spot where the burial
ground might be located; Carolyn (and then George) used a pick-axe
to break through the outer brick wall and fully uncover a secret
room (with red walls) in the basement; George saw his face's ghostly
reflection in the reddish room; Carolyn exclaimed: "They come
and go through here" - she thought it was a portal for demons
to enter the mortal world; then, as Carolyn became possessed and
opened her mouth wider and wide and then declared: "Find the
well. It's the Passage to HELL!" (as a medium, she channeled
or took on the voice of Father Delaney); she then commanded - with
her ears covered - that the portal be covered back up: "COVER
IT!"
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Breaking Through the Basement Room Wall
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George Saw His Ghostly Reflection On Red Wall
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Carolyn: "They come and go through here"
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Carolyn: "It's the Passage to HELL!" (in
Father Delaney's voice)
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- George and Kathy found the wall-hanging crucifix
in the house turned upside down; it was removed and then they walked
through the house - using it for an exorcism, while chanting:
"Peace to this house and all who enter here. Forgive our sins
and save us from all illness. Grant this through Jesus Christ, our
Lord...", until the crucifix dropped from George's hands and
caused welts on Kathy's face
- the next day in a scene at the church's altar, Father
Delaney passionately prayed that the Amityville evil would end: "Give
them health of mind and body, that they may do Your will with perfect
love"; after the face of a mounted statue above him began
to crumble and sent clay splinters showering on him, he continued
praying to a diabolical God (after losing his faith), urging the
evil forces to take over: "Oh, Lord, I beg thee, give them
strength in the name of our Lord Jesus!" - he suffered a mental
breakdown from falling debris during the mass (as he cried out: "Ohhhhhhhhh,
LORRRRRRRRD, Ohhhh JESUS CHRIST!!!!") - and described how
he had become blinded; a few days later, he was viewed sitting
catatonic, silent and unresponsive on a bench in an outdoor park
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Father Delaney's Passionate Prayer
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Statue Crumbling - Falling Debris
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"Ohhhh LORRRRRD, Ohhhh JESUS CHRIST!!!"
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- that night at 3:15 a.m., George was again awakened;
he was inexplicably drawn downstairs, where he warned the demons
to depart: ("What do you want from us? Goddammit, this is
my house"); Kathy experienced a nightmarish hallucination
of George murdering Amy in her bed with an axe, and then attacking
her
- the next night, Kathy was awakened and found the
disheveled and insane George with blood-shot red eyes, sleeping
in front of the fireplace and yelling out: "I'm coming apart!
Oh, mother of God, I'm coming apart!"; as she asked about
his condition, she noticed puncture wounds on his ankles: "It
looks like teeth marks"; he fed the fire while ignoring her
(she urged them to pack up and leave), and then he angrily confronted
her: "I'm not going anywhere. You're the one that wanted a
house. This is it, so just shut up!"; when she called him
a "bastard," he smacked her hard across the face
- Kathy conducted further research about the original
Amityville murders at the county records office through microfilm
newspaper records; she found a picture of mass murderer/killer
Ronald DeFeo who had a striking resemblance to George !
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Kathy's Shock
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Mass Murderer Ronald DeFeo Resembled George
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- in the film's conclusion set on a stormy and rainy
night, George went insane and grabbed an axe in the boathouse (similar
to Jack Torrance's rampage in The Shining (1980)); as he
approached the house, he saw the red-eyed
"pig" in the window; then, as he climbed the stairs to
the third floor to search for the family, bloody "ooze" flowed
from nail holes in the stairway's walls and steps; Kathy protected
the children in the bathroom as George threatened to attack them
through the broken-down door and swung his axe at her, but missed
- before he snapped out of his delusionary state
- during the fierce lightning storm, the house began
to crumble as the basement erupted and lightning struck the house;
although the family escaped (down the bloody-slippery stairway),
clambored into the van and began to drive away, Amy begged George
to return and save their dog Harry; Kathy was reluctant ("George!
No! No!"), but George parked and ran back to the house anyway
(as Amy smiled), where he fell into a basement pit - filled with
thick black sludge; he was saved when Harry pulled him out of the
sludge pit, and then, although they were trapped in the locked
house (when the front door slammed shut), they escaped through
a broken window
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George Falling Into Basement Pit of Black Sludge
- Saved by Harry
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- the home and the Lutz' possessions were abandoned
after about 21 days (subtitles marked the 10th day, the 12th day
and so on), as the Lutz family drove away from the cursed home
in the anti-climactic ending, never to return; the final title
card announced: "George and Kathleen Lutz and their family
never reclaimed their house or their personal belongings. Today
they live in another state."
- at the conclusion of the end credits came the disclaimer: "This
motion picture is based on the book The Amityville Horror. Certain
characters and events have been changed to heighten dramatic effect."
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Amityville House - Shaped Like a Round Face with Eyes
Flies Assaulting Father Delaney During House Blessing -
He Heard "GET OUT!"
Stigmata-Like Burns on Delaney's Palm
Interrupted While Love-Making
Amy's Rocking Chair Swaying On Its Own
Ominous Time: 3:15 am
Bearded George Fanatically Splitting Wood with Axe
Amy's Teenaged Babysitter Jackie Trapped in Closet
Slammed Hand in Window Frame
Kathy's Discovery of Amy's Imaginary Friend Jody (Seen With Glowing Red
Eyes)
Upside-Down Crucifix
Kathy's Nightmare of George Murdering Amy With an Axe
Kathy's Nightmare: Her Own Head Split Open with the Axe
George: "I'm coming apart! Oh, mother of God, I'm coming apart!"
George's Insanity and Anger - He Yelled at Kathy and Slapped Her
Father Delaney - Catatonic and Unresponsive
George's Hallucination of a Red-Eyed Pig in Upstairs House Window
George Threatening Family With An Axe
Blood
Oozing From the Walls and Stairs
George Coming to His Senses - To Stop Threatening Kathy
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