With the reboot of the legendary horror movie “Poltergeist” comes a resurgence of claims about the purported “curse” that surrounds the original film franchise, which first premiered to terrified audiences back in 1982.
After all, it didn’t take long for ”Poltergeist” to become known as the “most cursed production of all time,” as the deaths of numerous cast members caused some to wonder if something far more sinister than mere chance was at play, the Daily Mail reported,
It’s a track record that, at first glance, might raise some eyebrows.
First and foremost, there was actress Dominique Dunne, who played eldest daughter Dana Freeling in the film; she was murdered by her boyfriend not long after the movie premiered.
Then, actor Julian Beck, who played preacher Henry Kane in “Poltergeist II,” died of stomach cancer in 1985, according to the Daily Mail.
But it doesn’t end there.
Two years later, actor Will Sampson who played a medicine man named Taylor in the second film also died of kidney failure at the age of 53.
And perhaps most shockingly, in 1988, Heather O’Rourke, the 12-year-old girl who played character Carol Anne Freeling, unexpectedly died of cardiac arrest due to undiagnosed intestinal stenosis that led to shock and damaged her heart and lungs.
And, still…it continues.
Flashforward more than 20 years and actor Lou Perryman, who played character Pugsley in the first film, was murdered at his home in Austin, Texas, by an ex-convict named Seth Christopher Tatum; Tatum allegedly entered Perryman’s home and beat him more than 10 times with an ax.
A few years later in 2004, “Poltergeist II” director Brian Gibson, 59, died from bone cancer as well — and actor Richard Lawson, who played Ryan in the first “Poltergeist,” barely escaped death in 1992 when USAir Flight 405 crashed at LaGuardia Airport in New York City; 27 people perished in that accident.
It’s these incidents — and Lawson’s terrifying brush with death  — that have led some to wonder if there’s a curse on the film.
There are also some other creepy elements surrounding the movie, including the props that were used in a scene in which actress JoBeth Williams — who played the Freeling family matriarch — was assaulted by skeletons in her swimming pool — skeletons that filmmaker Stephen Spielberg reportedly insisted come from dead human beings, according to the Daily Mail.
“You have to understand that this sequence took probably four or five days to shoot … in my innocence … I assumed that these were not real skeletons,” Williams said in a TV Land interview conducted a few years back. “I found out — as did the whole crew — that they were using real skeletons, because it’s far too expensive … and I think that everybody got really creeped out by that.”
See the trailer for the original 1982 “Poltergeist” below:
Lawson, who also appeared in the TV Land special, didn’t overtly say that he believes in the curse, though he seemingly pondered it.
“I heard about the curse,” he said. “And then I get into a plane crash, trapped in my seat under water for the longest time. And I survived … is there some correlation?”
But not everyone who was involved with the film believes that the curse is even a remote possibility. Consider that Oliver Robbins, who played Robbie Freeling, told the Daily Mail that he doesn’t believe anyone involved with “Poltergeist” actually buys into the hype.
“There is no curse — it is just tragic coincidences,” he said. “With this curse mythology, I never spoke to Steven [Spielberg] about it, but I guess he thinks the events that took place were horribly tragic and awful but had no relation to the events that took place on set.”
See the trailer for the new “Poltergeist,” which releases on May 22, below:
All this in mind, Snopes, a website known for tackling the rumor mill, dubbed talk of the curse mere “legend” and explained that two of the four deaths that unfolded within six years of the first film’s release were actually among older people who were ailing.
“Though two of the deaths were foreseeable (expected, even), two others were not,” Snopes wrote. “It’s the combination of the two unexpected deaths that lies at the heart of every rumor about a ‘Poltergeist’ curse.”
Snopes also noted that many of the actors who were in the original series are alive and well, and are still leading vibrant Hollywood careers.
(H/T: Daily Mail)




  • 20 and 22 years after the original film, people died because of a curse? thats one lazy ass, procrastinating curse.
    nistron
    • Boompa2
      -
      I wonder how the cast members of the epic 1964 film, “Santa Claus Conquers the Martians” are doing these days?
      Boompa2
      • packerbacker12
        -
        LOL – I saw that on MST3K!
        packerbacker12
      • Spqr1
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        Pia Zadora, nuff said.
        Spqr1
      • Grover_Standpipe
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        Quiet a few are still alive, since they were very young when the film was made, plus, even hell does not want anybody who was in Santa Claus Conquers the Martians.
        Grover_Standpipe
    • WayTruthLife777
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      There was a curse alright. The one that will lead us all to death. It started with a woman and a piece of fruit.
      WayTruthLife777
      • Grover_Standpipe
        -
        That reminds me of an old joke. The punch line was: I’m just laughing at my buddy because he is picking watermelons.
        Grover_Standpipe
    • Terentilius
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      Winner! The light of Reason shines again.
      Terentilius
      • The-Monk
        -
        I replied on the 300 e-mail story.
        The-Monk
      • Terentilius
        -
        Thanks, buddy. Me too. Sorry it took so long. Got a sick four-legged friend here I have to look after today.
        Terentilius
    • PassTheFaith
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      “Why put off till tomorrow what you can do the day after tomorrow just as well.” – Mark Twain
      Day after tomorrow, year after next year, decade after next decade…same thing ;)
      PassTheFaith
    • millerlight
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      lmao,,,,,,,,
      millerlight
    • Apachexray1
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      2055 BLAZE News headlines: Everybody who originally seen Poltergeist in the theater died. Curse still alive!
      Apachexray1
      Show Conversation (1)
    • Gampy
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      A real curse would be having to watch that crappy movie again.
      Gampy
    • covi2955
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      Holy Cow, does that mean that a bunch of movies from the 1920s are cursed because their actors have died! I bet that whole DECADE was cursed! Man, what about in another 100 years!?! Could that movie that I made in 8th grade be cursed cause we’ll all have died eventually!?! It sure “raises some eyebrows”!
      Sorry for the excess of sarcasm.
      covi2955
  • MolonLave
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    That’s nothing! The entire cast of the original film production of Cleopatra has all died! Every extra, every actor every crew member!
    Everyone dies. It’s the law. The murders are unfortunate, and sad, but the only curse at play here is the curse of original sin.
    MolonLave
    • Grover_Standpipe
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      Well, yeah, I mean the original production of Cleopatra came out in 1917, so I wouldn’t expect any of them to still be alive.
      Grover_Standpipe
      • Godrulz
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        Thank you, Captain Oblivious.
        Godrulz
      • HabanaJoe
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        Actually, Hillary and Pelosi had bit parts in the original.
        HabanaJoe
  • MN NICE
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    Better take a closer look at Spielberg… He’s certainly lived a cursed life…
    MN NICE
  • Cavallo
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    I’m not going to get my hopes up that the reboot will be a better told story. Just seems like they wanted to use more modern special effects. If the acting, direction, and plot are not up to snuff, then the movie will suck.
    Look at what George Lucas did.
    Cavallo
  • symphonic
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    does anyone else think this is a stupid story?
    symphonic
    • [Suspended User]
      -
      not as stupid as a guy who put a rock into a hat and came up with the BOM
      [Suspended User]
    • blinknight
      -
      Horror movies from that era aren’t exactly known for their good stories, and typically contain silly impossibilities or scenarios that require suspension of disbelief. Even modern horror movies are good for this…
      A recent movie, I don’t even know which one to pick because this is something they all manage to do…
      Somebody gets murdered by an axe, knife, hook, whatever… No blood and bodies get moved to impossible places with nobody seeing them? Really?
      blinknight
  • Fatheroftwo
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    Ancient Egyptians believed in the curse of the Mummy too..
    Fatheroftwo
  • Sweetsrbad4me
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    Spiritual oppression in connection with a franchise about demonic activity? Never saw it coming!
    Sweetsrbad4me
  • WorldWildWalker
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    What was great about Poltergeist it was scary as hell at the time, and no one dies in the movie!
    WorldWildWalker
    • Grover_Standpipe
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      It’s not all that scary if you know before it starts that nobody is going to die, so you just pretty much ruined it for any younger readers who might not have seen it yet.
      Grover_Standpipe
      Show Conversation (2)
  • ProV1
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    Goog, Satan……
    .
    .
    .
    ProV1
    • ProV1
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      Play with Satan, ‘play’ with what goes with it….
      …..
      ….. .
      ProV1
    • Grover_Standpipe
      -
      You this wasn’t the only horror movie that anybody ever made, right? There have actually been lots of them, and other than this one, they seem to have roughly the same survival rate as any other kind of movie.
      Grover_Standpipe
  • Keres
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    My experience with movies like this is,……..if you see the trailer, you’ve probably seen the best [scariest] parts of the movie. The rest will probably be boring dialogue.
    Keres
  • Spqr1
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    How about a real cursed film? MANY people who worked on “The Conqueror” died of cancer from radiation as they were close to nuke testing in New Mexico. Similar to “Stalker,” filmed near one of the most polluted areas of the old USSR.
    Spqr1
    • Grover_Standpipe
      -
      Yes, John Wayne starred in the Conqueror and died just 23 years later at the tender age of 72 of lung cancer for which medical science could offer no other explanation except for the six packs of cigarettes a day he smoked.
      Grover_Standpipe
    • RJJinGadsden
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      Then, there is that one movie with the greatest curse, Ishtar.
      RJJinGadsden
      Show Conversation (1)
  • @JoeyJ1775
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    Most of those failures could’ve been prevented if they weren’t such heavy drug users. Ax death and death by bf could’ve been prevented. Some lazy ass curses indeed.
    @JoeyJ1775
  • [Suspended User]
    -
    The new story takes place in Utah , the Latter Day Saints provided the zombies
    [Suspended User]
  • A Patriot
    -
    There is a curse and the USofA has it antisemitism. BO has made a deal with satanic Iran.
    A Patriot
  • Gotztheironhand
    -
    That’s nothing, google the Omen curse. Nothing beats the part where the guy who designed a scene where a person dies by being decapitated in a car crash actually gets in a car crash on Friday the thirteenth and sees the woman traveling with him torn in half in front of a sign that reads “Ommen, 66.6 km” There’s more than that, but that has to be the most eerie part. Maybe people shouldn’t make films about the devil, just putting that out there.
    Gotztheironhand
  • DZ-015
    -
    Is the reboot going to repeat the most egregious error in the first film? The original had a scene in which the difference between a haunting and a poltergeist was explained. Basically the former involved a location, while the latter involved a person, generally a young teenage girl. The first film ended up misnamed, because the problem was that the family home was built on top of a cemetery, so it was a haunting rather than a poltergeist event. Obviously they won’t be changing the title, but as soon as I saw the subdivision with only one big, creepy looking tree, which happened to be right outside the family’s window, it wan’t too hard to figure out that it would play a role of its own. To be successful, the remake should be more subtle and less inconsistent.
    DZ-015
    • myrwo6
      -
      I thought a poltergeist was just a pissed off ghost. Id be angry too if I was a ghost in my own house. I’d want to travel around. See the world. Maybe listen in on private conversations or hang around in a womens locker room.
      myrwo6
  • Royce_the_Arctic_Fox
    -
    The deaths were probably a coqincidence. Please dont get hystarical or superstisious on us.
    Royce_the_Arctic_Fox
  • LettuceRebel
    -
    Please no more retreads. We have enough in Washington already.
    LettuceRebel
  • Metalstr8jckt
    -
    Ooooooooh scary. I knew an artist in Denver in the 80′s named Leslie Atkinson who kept a real skeleton and coffin in the back of her studio for ‘inspiration’ etc.
    Yeah she hinted around that her son was at camp one weekend and wanted me to ‘do her’ but I decided she may have been a little too skanky and refrained. Probably saved myself a clap visit to the Doc.
    Metalstr8jckt
  • CulperGang
    -
    The NWO or Illuminati call it what you want, is getting rid of the useful idiots in the media and Hollyweird, they served their purpose. It is not a curse it is pure murder.
    CulperGang
  • huffdaddy
    -
    A curse is the belief in a supernatural cause for bad events. All the tragedies linked to the movie franchise were explainable as accidents or natural illnesses. Some see a curse, others just see a collection of tragic illness or accidents. I don’t believe in curses or any supernatural forces.
    huffdaddy
    • JGraham III
      -
      A curse is composed of words, just as a blessing is composed of words. The spirit realm responds to words, and the things that come out of our mouths empower them to act, whether the good guys or the bad guys. The cartoon image of the angel on one shoulder and the devil on the other is far more accurate than most realize. And for the record, the existence of the spirit realm is not dependent upon someone accepting that it is there. Primitive people may not believe in gravity either but would be just as dead from walking off a cliff.
      JGraham III