Monday, September 7, 2015

13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist1
Before there was Paranormal Activity 15 and Insidious 12,there was Poltergeist—the classic horror movie set in the suburbs starring unknown actors who could have been your neighbors. But this movie was so much more than a collection of timeless scares and crawling meat; it was a model example of practical magic. So let's celebrate this horror staple with a list of surprising facts that you may now know about the TV people.

1. One-Shot Chair Scene

How did those kitchen chairs stack up so quickly? Was there a cut while Mrs. Freelig was rooting around in the kitchen? Nope. The whole thing was done in one shot. When the camera pans away and back into the kitchen, a collection of crew members speedily replaced the loose kitchen chairs with an already preassembled pyramid of chairs. Voila, creepshow!

13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

2. Spielberg Hands

That shot of the paranormal investigator Marty ripping his own melting face off had a lot riding on it. Intead of putting makeup on the actor Martin Casella, the FX crew built a whole lifelike bust of the actor. But the production had only one bust to rip apart. Feeling the pressure Casella, asked Steven Spielberg to step in and rip the face flesh to bits. So the hands you see in the film belong to Spielberg.
13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

3. Fish Tank Lights

The closet that was the opening to the other world and housed all the glowing, blue spectral light was dubbed by Spielberg as the most difficult scene lighting-wise. They used strobes lights, a Las Vegas spotlight, smoke machines, four large wind machines, and even a couple of fish tanks were put in front of the beams to give the light a ghostly presence.
13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

4. "The Beast" was the villain set up for Poltergeist II and Poltergeist III

Were you confused by the random importance of the Reverend Henry Kane in the second and third Poltergeist installments? Well be confused no longer! Kane was always in the first movie (or so the creators behind the following films insist). "The beast" that appears in front of Carol Anne's room and in the closet is actually a spooky variation of Kane, who later becomes the number one menace in both Poltergeist 2 and 3. So you see they totally didn't just pull that villain of their ass. *Cough Cough*
13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

5. Babies Having Babies

When Steve Freeling (Craig T. Nelson) is meeting with the paranormal investigators for the first time, he lists off the names and ages of his family. He mentions that his wife, Diane Freeling, was 32 and that their eldest Dana is 16. That would make Diane only 16 when she gave birth. Insert Teen Mom joke here.
13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

6. Evil Tree

The evil tree that attacked Robbie Feeling was allegedly inspired by another very real tree that Spielberg was terrified of as a child. And according to the actor who played Robbie (Oilver Robbins) the scene where the tree beasts swallows up the little boy was actually shot in reverse. Instead of being swallowed up, he was spit out. The footage looked better this way.

13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

7. Climbing Up The Walls

Just when everything appears to be settling down for the Freeling Family, the ghosts strike, ripping poor Diane Freeling off of her bed and rolling her up the walls and across the ceiling in her bedroom. It's pretty horrific, not just for the suggestive ghost play pawing at her shirt, but for the horrendous thumping and sliding of helpless, actress JoBeth all over her bedroom. This scene was achieved by attaching a static camera onto a rotating set. Actress JoBeth Williams had to time her rolls with the movement of the giant set. It was actually a pretty huge undertaking for a fairly short scene in the finished film. Still looked amazing.

13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

8. Practical Hell Mouth

Industrial Light And Magic created a GIANT practical hell mouth inside Carol Anne's closet. In order to erect the giant, pulsing, pink wormhole, they had to build the whole set from scratch. It's pretty amazing. And again, wasn't really in that much of the movie... but LOOK AT IT!
13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

9. Goodbye House!

A 6-foot model scale of the Freeling home was constructed for the fantastic end shot of the suburban home being sucked into nothingness. The scale took four months to create. After crafting many ways to implode the family home, the FX crew decided that the best way to destroy this dwelling was by threading thick cables through the model and to simply pull it into a funnel attached to a high powered vacuum.
After the model destruction shot was completed, it then took two months of additional FX work to perfect the effect.
13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist

10. Dr. Fantasy And Friends

At the Holiday Inn where the Freelings take, refuge the sign welcomes "Dr. Fantasy & Friends." Dr. Fantasy is Poltergeist producer Frank Marshall's magician stage name. And sometimes Dr. Fantasy performs special magic shows for the crew at the end of whatever film he's working on.
13 things you didn't know about Poltergeist2

11. Who really directed Poltergeist?

If you believe the credits, Poltergeist was co-written and produced by Steven Spielberg and directed by Tobe Hooper. However, the cast and crew has been telling a much different story since the film's production. Speculation got so intense that the DGA led an inquiry after the The LA Times printed a story on May 24, 1982 implying that Spielberg was the real director. Stocked with quotes from the cast on who was running what, Spielberg outright states that he wasn't the director and didn't want to be the director (because he was too busy working on ET). But that didn't stop him from altering a large percentage of the shots, storyboarding the entire movie, editing, and being a large presence on set almost every day.
On the 25th anniversary Hooper told the A.V. Club that the whole thing was just a giant misunderstanding brought on by the LA Times.
AV Club: History has shifted some of the credit toward Spielberg. Can you set the record straight on that?
TH: I've kind of talked that one to death, really. I've been asked that so many times that I feel the record should be straight already. The genesis of it came from an article in The L.A. Times: When we were shooting the practical location on the house, the first two weeks of filming were exterior, so I had second-unit shots that had to be picked up in the front of the house. I was in the back of the house shooting Robbie [actor Oliver Robins] and the tree, looking down at the burial of the little tweety bird, so Steven was picking those shots up for me. The L.A. Times arrived on the set and printed something like, "We don't know who's directing the picture." The moment they got there, Steven was shooting the shot of the little race cars, and from there the damn thing blossomed on its own and started becoming its own legend. Really, that is my knowledge of it, because I was making the movie and then I started hearing all this stuff after it was finished. I really can't set the record much straighter than that, because Steven did write the screenplay and there are other credits on there, but it came down to Steven and myself sitting at his house....
However, that same year Zelda Rubinstein told Ain't It Cool News (in a less than flattering manner) that Hooper wasn't the one calling the shots. So your guess is as good as ours. Actors Oilver Robbins and Martin Casella disagree. That being said, we can't imagine it would be easy to direct a movie Spielberg wanted, but couldn't have (due to contractual restraints)—especially when he's still a major part of the film.

12. The Skeletons Were Real?

JoBeth Williams' admitted on VH1's "I Love The 80s" that the skeletons that attacked her on set were, in fact, real skeletons. This was allegedly backed by makeup artists Craig Reardon who commented that real corpses were cheaper to purchase than plastic ones back in the day. However the actual quote from Reardon seems to be lost in the ether. So we're not so sure about its authenticity.
That being said, perhaps Williams was referring to the real skeletons used on Poltergeist II. In E! True Hollywood Story: The Poltergeist Curse the screenwriter for the sequel admitted that they let actor Will Sampson after on set hours to perform a blessing upon discovering that the corpses they were using on set were not dummies, but real skeletons.

13. The Poltergeist Curse

Unfortunately, the real-life skeleton rumor also led to another much-whispered-about bit of Poltergeist gossip, the Poltergeist curse. Many actors who worked on this film died tragically. The franchise star Heather O'Rourke, who played Carol Anne, died just before the release of the third film. The actress who played her older sister in the first movie (Dominique Dunne) was murdered by her ex-boyfriend after the first movie was released. The man who played Kane (Julian Beck) died of cancer while shooting the second film, as did the foil to the evil Kane, Will Sampson. All very tragic, but likely just sad stories that surround a popular horror franchise and nothing more.
Ok what did we miss? Can anyone actually prove that ET and Poltergeist were filmed in the same neighborhood? Or that there is an ET poster on the wall in Carol Anne's room?Because we, sadly, couldn't back those up. In the meantime, here is an amazing documentary created by Frank Marshall. It is criminally unavailable in high-res and was created for a TV special after the original Poltergeist was released and blew the doors of the horror world. It's pretty fantastic (and where we pulled a lot of our facts from).





  • Even after all these years, Poltergeist still holds up as a fucking scary movie. I'd love to show it to my kids, but there's no way they're old enough.
  • hohum123Meredith Woerner
    I watched Poltergeist in giant empty movie theater when I was 10. I didn't sleep for weeks. Years later I had the privilege of shooting Mark Victor's daughter's wedding. I told him that he ruined my childhood.
  • Derr BearMeredith Woerner
    Hits me in the nostalgia bone. I'm still afraid to watch this movie, even today. Has anyone in my situation re-watched it recently? Does it still hold up despite the old age?
  • RustyTheRobotMeredith Woerner
    Still one of my favorite childhood films. Me and my siblings would watch it on cold rainy days in the fall. There are so many memorable scenes. "Before after. Before after."
  • heimaeyMeredith Woerner
    My parents took me to see this and I thought it was the coolest. This wasn't so much scary as it was fascinating and thrilling. The Exorcist - that was horrifying.
  • We had "a bad kid" in our neighborhood when I was a little kid. His name was Damian (no, really!) and he showed this movie to me on tv when I was five years old.
    Scarred for life.
    Just last night (I'm 37), I had to re-shut the closet door that seemed mysteriously opened. Then checked four more times before bed.
  • madwriterMeredith Woerner
    I give major props to Poltergeist for it's practical effects. More movies should look to using practical effects instead of flipping that digital switch.
  • SupermelonMeredith Woerner
    Regarding Steven Spielberg, directing or no, according to his editor Michael Kahn, Steven ending shoot a lot stuff for the movie...
    here...form 15:40




    • OmegaMandrakeMeredith Woerner
      Even if Tobe Hooper "really" directed Poltergeist, this was Spielberg's film. From what I've read, it seems Hooper had about as much, or less, influence on the final product than Irvin Kershner had on The Empire Strikes Back, i.e., a guy to come in and dutifully execute the creator/producer's vision. And I don't think Lucas was on set working with the actors nearly as much on ESB as Spielberg was on Poltergeist. Another point - watch Close Encounters (or E.T. for that matter) and the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre, then Poltergeist. Which two seem like they were made by the same guy? Hollywood certainly didn't think it was Hooper's movie - despite it's success, Hooper wasn't given another opportunity to direct another big Hollywood move. Ever.
    • dpeifMeredith Woerner
      In the TNT Monstervision with Joe Bob Briggs version of Poltergeist, Joe Bob says that the controversy about Hooper/Spielberg got so inflamed during post-production that Spielberg actually took out a full page ad in the LA Times talking about the project and how "happy he was with Hooper's direction".

      I'm not sure if it's true or not, but worth mentioning if it is.
    • Angrier GeekMeredith Woerner
      "However, that same year Zelda Rubinstein told Ain't It Cool News (in a less than flattering manner) that Hooper wasn't the one calling the shots."
      I don't think it's any great disservice to Hooper to point this out. This is actually fairly common when you have a heavyweight producer or even actor. It's your movie up until the point where the producer says it's not. Ask Michael Lehman about Hudson Hawk he was the director, but there's no doubt Bruce Willis (at the peak of his fame) was calling the shots.



      • When Steve Freeling (Craig T. Nelson) is meeting with the paranormal investigators for the first time, he lists off the names and ages of his family. He mentions that his wife, Diane Freeling, was 32 and that their eldest Dana is 16. That would make Diane only 16 when she gave birth. Insert Teen Mom joke here.

        IIRC the backstory for Steve was that he was an all-American A student who was going to college on an athletics scholarship when he got Diane pregnant in high school. They got married in their teens, and he ended up getting a job with the developers who built Cuesta Verde. (Being a father likely also got him an exemption from the draft.) Since he was very smart and driven, he ended up getting promoted pretty quickly, advancing from construction work to a desk job as a realtor by his 20s.
        It's implied that Dana herself is already sexually active, and may even be pregnant — there's a scene where we see her eating pickles and ice cream (all in a PG-rated summer flick). The early '80s were really another era altogether — even by the end of the decade they seemed like a million years in the past.
        • OK I'm well aware of the holiday inn gag where Dana says "oh I know that place" but where is she seen eating pickles and ice cream? I saw her eating cereal?
        • Early on, when the family is having breakfast. Blink and you'll miss it:
          Though I've also heard that the food in the bowl is potato salad and not ice cream.
        • heimaeyMeredith Woerner
          Interesting. I've seen this movie a million times and never caught this. Also, there's one scene where the mother catches Dana admitting to having sex. Sort of. When they mention the motel Dana says "Oh yeah" fondly like she's been there with a boy and then JoBeth stares her down. Very cool little sub-plot going on here.
      • TashaX23Meredith Woerner
        E.T. was filmed in Tujunga, CA. In Charlie's Angels, when Drew Barrymore falls down the hill, she is seen outside of the same house.
      • I think that it has been pretty well established that practical for the bulk of the effect, plus CGI cleanup and detail work is the way to go.
        I love the incredulous "And it was only on screen for a few seconds!" comments...
        1) There simply was no other way to do this stuff, you couldn't just farm it out to a digital effects company. You had to figure it out... in camera!
        2) Isn't that true of most effects? CG might have made more things possible, but it still takes a lot of work to make it look good - and usually for only a few seconds of screen time.
        • I think it's more props to the commitment to make the script come to life, and not cut corners. This was not a massively budgeted film, they easily could have taken out the ceiling gag, it wasn't a corner stone of the movie. But they didn't because they didn't want to. And I think that's awesome. That would NEVER happen today.

Poltergeist (film series) Wikipedia entry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Poltergeist
Poltergeist Filmlogo.png
Creator
Original work Poltergeist
Films and television
Films
Television series
Poltergeist is an American horror film series distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer during the 1980s. The original trilogy revolves around the members of the Freeling family, who are stalked and terrorized by a group of ghosts that are attracted to the youngest daughter, Carol Anne. The original film was co-written and produced by Steven Spielberg. The Poltergeist films collected a total of approximately $132 million at the United States box office.
MGM and 20th Century Fox co-financed a "revisionist" reboot of the series, which was released in May 2015.[1]

Contents

Films

Poltergeist is the original film in the trilogy, directed by Tobe Hooper and co-written by Steven Spielberg and released on June 4, 1982. The story focuses on the Freeling family, which consists of Steven (Craig T. Nelson); Diane (JoBeth Williams); Dana (Dominique Dunne); Robbie (Oliver Robins) and Carol Anne (Heather O'Rourke), who live in a California housing development called Cuesta Verde, only it is eventually haunted by ghosts. The ghosts communicate only with Carol Anne through the family's television set, and are under the control of a demon known as the "Beast." The ghosts, attracted to Carol Anne's life force and believing she will help lead them into the "Light", abduct her through her bedroom closet, which acts as a portal to their dimension. Most of the film involves the efforts to rescue her on the part of her family, a group of parapsychologists and a spiritual medium named Tangina Barrons (Zelda Rubinstein). Carol Anne is eventually retrieved from the other side and, following a second attack by the Beast that reveals the ghosts had originated from an improperly relocated cemetery underneath the neighborhood, the family flees Cuesta Verde, while the house caves in on itself and is sucked into another dimension.[2]
The first sequel, Poltergeist II: The Other Side, directed by Brian Gibson and released on May 23, 1986, is set a year following the events in Poltergeist and offers an alternate explanation of the ghosts' origin. The film also develops the identity and backstory of the Beast, who had lived during the 19th century as a religious zealot named Reverend Henry Kane (Julian Beck). Kane was the leader of a utopian cult, who in anticipation of the end of the world, had sealed themselves in an underground cavern located directly below what later became the Freelings' property. Kane is anxious to possess Carol Anne in order to continue manipulating his followers after death. The ghosts follow and attack the Freelings at their current household. Aided by an American Indian shaman named Taylor (Will Sampson), the Freelings manage to escape from Kane and his followers a second time.[2][3]
The final film in the original trilogy, Poltergeist III, was directed and co-written by Gary Sherman and released on June 10, 1988. In order to protect Carol Anne, the Freelings have sent her to temporarily live with her skeptic relatives, Pat and Bruce Gardner (Nancy Allen and Tom Skerritt) and their daughter Donna (Lara Flynn Boyle), who reside in a Chicago skyscraper. However, Carol Anne's recollection of her experiences during her psychiatric sessions enable Kane and his followers to locate her and make contact through the building's ubiquitous mirrors.[2][4] After the ghosts abduct Carol Anne, then Donna, her boyfriend Scott (Kipley Wentz), Pat, and Bruce enlist the help of Tangina to retrieve them, who eventually sacrifices herself to save the family by escorting Kane into the Light.
The remake of the first film, Poltergeist, was directed by Gil Kenan and released on May 22, 2015. It centers on a family struggling to make ends meet and relocates to a suburban home and, like the original, the youngest daughter is kidnapped by spirits that possess the house. Sam Rockwell and Rosemarie DeWitt star as the married couple, Kennedi Clements plays the daughter, and Jared Harris plays the host of a paranormal-themed TV show who comes to the aid of the family.

Cast and crew

Cast

The following table shows the cast members who played the primary characters in the film series.
Character Film
Poltergeist Poltergeist II: The Other Side Poltergeist III
Carol Anne Freeling Heather O'Rourke
Steven Freeling Craig T. Nelson
Diane Freeling JoBeth Williams
Dana Freeling Dominique Dunne
Robert Freeling Oliver Robins
Dr. Martha Lesh Beatrice Straight
Ryan Mitchell Richard Lawson
Dr. Marty Casey Martin Casella
Tangina Barrons Zelda Rubinstein
Jessica Wilson
Geraldine Fitzgerald
Taylor
Will Sampson
Bruce Gardner
Tom Skerritt
Pat Wilson-Gardner
Nancy Allen
Donna Gardner
Lara Flynn Boyle
Dr. Seaton
Richard Fire
Scott
Kipley Wentz
Reverend Henry Kane / "The Beast" (Mentioned only) Julian Beck Nobel Craig (Vomit Creature)1
Nathan Davis Corey Burton (Voiced)2
Note(s) 1. Henry Kane in his "Vomit Creature" incarnation is portrayed by Nobel Craig.
2. Though Henry Kane was portrayed by Nathan Davis, he was voiced by Corey Burton.
[5]

Crew

Crew/Detail Film
Poltergeist (1982) Poltergeist II: The Other Side Poltergeist III Poltergeist (2015)
Director Tobe Hooper Brian Gibson Gary Sherman Gil Kenan
Writer(s) Michael Grais
Steven Spielberg
Mark Victor
Michael Grais
Mark Victor
Gary Sherman
Brian Taggert
David Lindsay-Abaire
Producer(s) Frank Marshall
Steven Spielberg
Michael Grais
Mark Victor
Barry Bernardi Roy Lee
Sam Raimi
Robert Tapert
Composer Jerry Goldsmith Joe Renzetti Marc Streitenfeld
Cinematographer Matthew F. Leonetti Andrew Laszlo Alex Nepomniaschy Javier Aguirresarobe
Editor Michael Kahn Thom Noble
Bud S. Smith
M. Scott Smith
Ross Albert Jeff Betancourt
Bob Murawski
Running time 114 minutes 91 minutes 98 minutes 93 minutes

Reception

Box office performance

Film Release date (US) Budget Box office revenue Reference
United States Foreign Worldwide
Poltergeist (1982) June 4, 1982 $10.7 million $76,606,280 $45,099,739 $121,706,019 [6]
Poltergeist II: The Other Side May 23, 1986 $19 million $40,996,665 N/A $40,996,665 [6]
Poltergeist III June 10, 1988 $9.5 million $14,114,488 N/A $14,114,488 [6]
Poltergeist (2015) May 22, 2015 $35 million $46,827,570 $26,290,000 $73,117,570 [7]
Total $74.2 million $178,545,003 N/A $249,934,742
List indicator(s)
  • A dark grey cell indicates the information is not available for the film.

Critical response

Film Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic
Poltergeist (1982) 88% (56 reviews)[8] 79 (7 reviews)[9]
Poltergeist II: The Other Side 39% (18 reviews)[10] N/A
Poltergeist III 13% (16 reviews)[11] N/A
Poltergeist (2015) 33% (100 reviews)[12] 47 (27 reviews)[13]
Average 43% 63

Television

A spin-off television series, Poltergeist: The Legacy, ran from 1996 to 1999, though it does not have any connection to the films other than the title.[14]

The Poltergeist curse

The "Poltergeist curse" is a rumored curse attached to the Poltergeist trilogy and its crew, derived from the fact that four cast members died in the six years between the releases of the first and third films.[2][15] The rumor is often fueled by the fact that real skeletons were used as props in various scenes of Poltergeist and Poltergeist II: The Other Side.[16] The rumor and the surrounding deaths were explored in a 2002 episode of E! True Hollywood Story titled "Curse of Poltergeist".

See also

References


  • "MGM, Fox 2000 To Co-Finance & Distribute ‘Poltergeist’; Production To Start This Fall". Deadline Hollywood. June 20, 2013.

  • Lee, Joseph (4 September 2008). "A Bloody Good Time 9.04.08: Poltergeist Franchise Breakdown". 411mania.com. Retrieved 26 February 2011.

  • Kelhoffrr, Josh (23 June 2010). "They’re Back: The Story of the Inevitable Sequel". Poltergeist Online.

  • Kelhoffrr, Josh (23 June 2010). "Spirits in the City: The Third and Final Sequel". Poltergeist Online.

  • "Interview with the Voice of Kane". PoltergeistIII.com. Retrieved 27 February 2011.

  • "Box Office History for Poltergeist Movies". The-Numbers. Nash Information Services. Retrieved 26 February 2011.

  • "Poltergeist (2015)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 25, 2015.

  • "Poltergeist (1982)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved May 21, 2015.

  • "Poltergeist Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 22, 2015.

  • "Poltergeist II: The Other Side (1986)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved May 31, 2013.

  • "Poltergeist III (1988)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved May 22, 2015.

  • "Poltergeist (2015)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved May 22, 2015.

  • "Poltergeist Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 26, 2015.

  • Mackie, Drew (May 20, 2015). "20 Things You Might Not Know About the Original Poltergeist Trilogy". People. Time Inc. Archived from the original on May 21, 2015. Retrieved May 21, 2015.

  • Mikkelson, Barbara. "Poltergeist Deaths", Snopes.com, August 17, 2007

  • "Poltergeist & The Poltergeist Curse". Paranormal Entertainment. 26 December 2010. Retrieved 26 February 2011.

  • "Dominique Dunne, Actress, Dies After Being Choked", The New York Times, November 5, 1982

  • S. Freedman, "Julien Beck, 60, is Dead; Founded Living Theater", The New York Times, September 17, 1985

  • B. Folkart, "Role in Cuckoo's Nest; Will Sampson, Gentle Indian Giant, Dies," Los Angeles Times, June 4, 1987

  • Baker, Bob (May 26, 1988). "Suit Blames Doctors in Death of Young Actress". Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles, California, US: Tribune Company). p. 35. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237. Retrieved August 7, 2008.

  • "Heather O'Rourke, 12; Starred in 'Poltergeist'". The New York Times. February 3, 1988. Retrieved January 21, 2013.

    1. Folkart, Burt A. (February 2, 1988). "'Poltergeist' Star Heather O'Rourke Dies at Age of 12". Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles, California, US: Tribune Company). p. 3. ISSN 0458-3035. OCLC 3638237. Archived from the original on May 17, 2011. Retrieved May 17, 2011.

    External links

    Friday, September 4, 2015

    Exclusive: “POLTERGEIST” (2015) Deleted Scene Offers Icky Eeriness

    , polterwife
    Although calling a remake “divisive” is essentially par for the course nowadays, few ever get to the point of discussion that POLTERGEIST (2015) had upon release in late May. Going off a film that is essential to the genre, POLTERGEIST (2015) was going to come under scrutiny in almost any scenario, even if the film sported strong performances and stronger than expected scares. Now, with the film gearing up for its home media release, FANGORIA is offering fans an exclusive ominous deleted scene from POLTERGEIST (2015), which you can see below!
    For anyone unfamiliar with the Sam Raimi-produced remake, here’s the official synopsis for POLTERGEIST (2015)…
    A family whose suburban home is haunted by evil forces must come together to rescue their youngest daughter after the apparitions take her captive.
    You can see more deleted scenes as well as an extended cut of Gil Kenan’s POLTERGEIST on September 29th when the film hits DVD/Blu-ray from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. However, the film is available Friday, September 4th on Digital HD and VOD, so if you haven’t caught up with the fright flick yet, tomorrow will be your chance to do so.

    ‘Poltergeist’ Blu-ray Rocks Alternate Ending and Extended Cut


    Poltergeist_2015
    Fox 2000 Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures present Poltergeist (read our review), from legendary filmmaker Sam Raimi (Spider-Man,” Evil Dead,” “The Grudge) and director Gil Kenan (Monster House), on Digital HD September 4th and on Blu-ray 3D, Blu-ray and DVD September 29th.
    Poltergeist contemporizes the 1982 classic about a family whose suburban home is haunted by evil forces. When terrifying apparitions escalate their attacks and hold the youngest daughter captive, the family must come together to rescue her before she disappears forever.
    Kenan directs from a screenplay by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer David Lindsay-Abaire. The film is produced by Raimi and Rob Tapert, p.g.a. (Evil Dead) via Ghost House Pictures, along with Roy Lee, p.g.a. (The Ring, The Grudge, The Departed). The film is executive produced by J.R. Young (The Grudge 3), Audrey Chon (Changeling), John Powers Middleton (The LEGO Movie), and Becki Cross Trujillo (Snitch).
    Poltergeist stars Sam Rockwell (Moon), Rosemarie DeWitt (Rachel Getting Married), Jared Harris (Mad Men) and Jane Adams (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind).
    Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray Special Features:
    Theatrical Cut in 3D
    Extended Cut
    Alternate Ending
    Gallery
    Theatrical Trailers
    Blu-ray Special Features:
    Extended Cut
    Alternate Ending
    Gallery
    Theatrical Trailers
    DVD Special Features:
    Alternate Ending
    Gallery
    Theatrical Trailers

    The ‘Poltergeist’ Tree Scene Gets Extended In This Exclusive Clip!


    Screen Shot 2015-09-02 at 4.23.46 PM
    Fox 2000 Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures present Poltergeist (read our review), from legendary filmmaker Sam Raimi (Spider-Man,” Evil Dead,” “The Grudge) and director Gil Kenan (Monster House), on Digital HD September 4th and on Blu-ray 3D, Blu-ray and DVD September 29th.
    Poltergeist contemporizes the 1982 classic about a family whose suburban home is haunted by evil forces. When terrifying apparitions escalate their attacks and hold the youngest daughter captive, the family must come together to rescue her before she disappears forever.
    Kenan directs from a screenplay by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer David Lindsay-Abaire. The film is produced by Raimi and Rob Tapert, p.g.a. (Evil Dead) via Ghost House Pictures, along with Roy Lee, p.g.a. (The Ring, The Grudge, The Departed). The film is executive produced by J.R. Young (The Grudge 3), Audrey Chon (Changeling), John Powers Middleton (The LEGO Movie), and Becki Cross Trujillo (Snitch).
    Poltergeist stars Sam Rockwell (Moon), Rosemarie DeWitt (Rachel Getting Married), Jared Harris (Mad Men) and Jane Adams (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind).


    Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray Special Features:
    Theatrical Cut in 3D
    Extended Cut
    Alternate Ending
    Gallery
    Theatrical Trailers
    Blu-ray Special Features:
    Extended Cut
    Alternate Ending
    Gallery
    Theatrical Trailers
    DVD Special Features:
    Alternate Ending
    Gallery
    Theatrical Trailers
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