An American Haunting
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An American Haunting | |
---|---|
Directed by | Courtney Solomon |
Produced by | Christopher Milburn Andre Rouleau Courtney Solomon |
Written by | Courtney Solomon |
Starring | Donald Sutherland Sissy Spacek James D'Arcy Rachel Hurd-Wood |
Music by | Caine Davidson |
Cinematography | Adrian Biddle |
Distributed by | Freestyle Releasing |
Release date(s) | May 5, 2006 |
Running time | 90 min |
Language | English |
Budget | $14,000,000 |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
An American Haunting is a 2006 horror film written and directed by Courtney Solomon. It stars Donald Sutherland, Sissy Spacek, Rachel Hurd-Wood, and James D'Arcy. The film was previewed at the AFI Film Festival on November 5, 2005 and was released in U.S. theaters on May 5, 2006. The film had an earlier release in the U.K. on April 14. The movie was panned by critics[1][2] and audiences[3] and performed poorly at the box office.
The film is based on the novel The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, by Brent Monahan. The events in the novel are based on the legend of the Bell Witch. The film switches from the 19th Century to the 21st Century and features a side story about a recently divorced mother whose daughter is going through something like the same experience as Betsy Bell.
Tagline: Possession knows no bounds.
Contents |
[edit] Cast
- Donald Sutherland - John Bell
- Sissy Spacek - Lucy Bell
- James D'Arcy - Richard Powell
- Rachel Hurd-Wood - Betsy Bell / Entity Voice
- Matthew Marsh - James Johnston
- Thom Fell - John Bell Jr.
- Zoe Thorne - Theny Thorn
- Gaye Brown - Kathe Batts
- Sam Alexander - Joshua Gardner
- Miquel Brown - Chloe
- Vernon Dobtcheff - Elder #1
- Shauna Shim - Anky
- Madalina Stan - Ethereal Girl
- Philip Hurdwood - Partygoer (as Phillip Hurd-Wood)
- Vlad Cruceru - Richard Bell (aged 6)
[edit] Plot
The movie opens in present times with a young girl having a dream about being chased by something unseen through the forest and into her house. Her mother comes to wake her up and finds an old binder of letters from the 1800s, as well as an old porcelain doll. The letters are from a previous occupant of the house, warning the mother that if she is reading the letters, and noticing supernatural happenings, then the unthinkable has come to pass. The movie then switches to the 1800s, to a village that used to stand around the house, and we hear the story of the Bell Witch.
John Bell is taken to Church court, having been accused of stealing a woman's land. The church finds him guilty of charging her too much interest, but lets him go because 'the loss of his good name is punishment enough'. The offended woman, Kate Batts, who is infamous in the village over claims of witchery, tells him to enjoy his good health and the health of his family (especially his daughter's) while he can. The whole village thinks the woman is a witch, causing John Bell to be scared.
Soon after that, strange things start happening. John Bell sees a rabid black wolf that keeps disappearing, and his oldest daughter, Betsy, hears noises in her room, as if there was someone in it. She then starts hearing noises more frequently, and has terrible nightmares about a little girl in a red dress and an evil entity that always comes into her bedroom after everyone else is asleep.
At first everyone thinks they're just nightmares, but then the whole family sees Betsy suspended above the floor by unseen hands, and they watch as something seems to slap her across the face. John Bell thinks that Kate Batts has cursed him.
Betsy starts to look very sick in class, and her schoolmaster, Professor Richard Powell, who has an interest in her, notices. He learns of what the Bell's have been experiencing, and as an educated man, offers to stay the night at their house to dispel their fears. The haunting gets worse, and chairs, books, and people are blown and pulled around by some entity in the house. As they try to read from the Bible to scare it off, the Bible is thrown to the ground and the pages are ripped out and thrown into the air.
Soon the family finds blood on Betsy's dresses in the morning – it appears to be menstrual fluid. The hauntings become more violent, and Betsy is dragged up the stairs and around the house. John Bell begins to get sick, and he starts seeing ghosts as well. The mother begs Professor Powell to marry her daughter 'to protect her' and to take her away to live with him. He says that although he is smitten with Betsy, he cannot 'in all good conscience' marry her just to protect her.
John Bell begins to go insane, and goes to Kate Batts' house and asks her to kill him. She holds the pistol to his head, cocks it, and hands it back to him, saying "I didn't curse you, you cursed yourself." John stumbles into the forest, falls to his knees, holds the gun to his head, and pulls the trigger. The hammer clicks, but the gun doesn't fire. He re-cocks the gun, and tries again. The gun still won't fire. He realises that the spirit haunting his house won't allow him to commit suicide.
There is blood on Betsy's dress again, and John Bell has become even more ill. Betsy finally has a revelation: the attacks she suffers from are caused by a being who was born out of her innocence – i.e. herself – and the reason for them was for her to "remember". She needed to remember that the true cause of her pain was that her father has sexually abused her. Lucy, Betsy's mother, is given the same revelation while sitting on the house's porch, as she had witnessed the assault herself. Both had apparently forgotten the incident, in order not to relive the pain it caused.
John Bell is coughing in bed, and we see a girl's hand pour cough medicine into a spoon and bring it to his mouth. He takes the medicine and begins to choke, and then dies. The girl who gave him the medicine is Betsy; her mother is sitting in a rocking chair watching as Betsy poisons her father. We see Betsy at her father's grave, and hear the narrator say that Betsy was never haunted from that point forward.
The story then returns to present day, where the young girl's mother has been reading the journal. As she finishes reading, her daughter comes to her telling that her father (who was divorced from her mother) had come to take her for a weekend stay with him. She sends her daughter to her ex-husband who was waiting outside. Returning to her house, Betsy's apparition (wearing a white dress which has a blood stain on her crotch) suddenly appears in front of her and says "Help her!" in a ghostly voice. The apparition disappears right away. Shocked for a couple of seconds, the mother suddenly realizes that Betsy was trying to warn her that something was amiss between her daughter and her ex-husband.
Instantly, she runs out of her house, only to catch a glimpse of her daughter's worried face as she and her father drive away in his car. It seems clear that her daughter was fearfully sure that she was in for another sexual molestation by her father.
[edit] Inconsistencies with legend
While modern research and even some earlier accounts of the legend seem to suggest that the poltergeist only referred to itself as Kate Batts, as she may have outlived John Bell, there have never been any accounts of Betsy Bell creating the Bell Witch to protect herself.
The film also ignores the tradition that the spirit eventually transitioned from being a poltergeist, a spirit which cannot communicate through speaking, to an unmanifested spirit who spoke to the family often.
The allegations of John Bell's sexual abuse and subsequent death are new additions to the story. The movie adds and subtracts many things from the traditional legend of the Bell Witch. For instance, the movie ends with the idea that Betsy created the Witch to protect herself from her father's abuses, while the traditional legend tells that the family still believed that the witch was Kate Batts. Though it cannot be ruled out because abuse may have been too delicate a topic during the time period, this may have been invented to explain why the poltergeist seemed to warm to other members of the Bell family.
John Bell's actual death in legend has traditionally been the fault of the poltergeist, Kate Batts or otherwise. In the film, a muddled turn of events seems to instead suggest that Betsy is responsible for John's death, and that his wife is complicit in the act.
[edit] Critical Reception
The movie was panned by critics,[1][2] with the review–tallying website Rotten Tomatoes reporting that few critics' reviews for the movie were positive as shown by a 3.6/10 rating.
[edit] References
- ^ An American Haunting - Movie Reviews, Trailers, Pictures - Rotten Tomatoes
- ^ American Haunting, An (2006): Reviews