Poltergeist
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Tobe Hooper
Jobeth Williams
Craig T. Nelson
Beatrice Straight
Heather O'rourke
Dominique Dunne
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
In her family's suburban home, ghosts begin communicating with five-year-old Carol Anne through the static on the television screen. At first the spirits seem to be friendly, but using the television as their portal to enter the house, they kidnap Carol Anne. As her desperate family tries to rescue the little girl, they are terrorized by the ghosts and their the demonic leader, The Beast.
Director
Tobe Hooper
Cast
Jobeth Williams
Craig T. Nelson
Beatrice Straight
Heather O'rourke
Dominique Dunne
Zelda Rubinstein
Jaimi Gendian
Sonny Landham
Allan Graf
Clair Leucart
Richard Broyles
Marty Casella
Joey Walsh
Noel Conlon
James Karen
Oliver Robins
Philip Stone
Craig Simmons
Virginia Kiser
Dana Gendian
Jeff Bannister
Michael L Mcmanus
William Vail
Richard Lawson
Dirk Blocker
Lou Perryman
Helen Baron
Crew
Jose Abel
Richard L Anderson
Charles Bailey
David Berry
Marty Brenneis
Kris Brown
John Bruno
Richard L Calkins
Martha Cargrill
Sean Casey
Bobby E Clark
Donald Clark
Samuel Comstock
Jay Davis
Charles Demuth
John Dunn
Richard Edlund
Judy Elkins
John Ellis
Jeannie Epper
Jane Feinberg
Mike Fenton
Rick Fichter
Richard Fields
Stephen Hunter Flick
Cindy Folkerson
Barbara Gallucci
Donna Garrett
Steve Gawley
Jerry Goldsmith
Michael Grais
Milt Gray
Kenneth Hall
Toby Heindel
Karl Herrmann
Robert Herron
Alan Howarth
Paul Huston
Jeff Jarvis
Jerry Jeffress
Martha Johnson
Dennis E Jones
Eddie Jones
Michael Kahn
Cheryal Kearney
James Keefer
Pat Kehoe
Kathleen Kennedy
Kim Knowlton
Neil Krepela
Ann Lambert
Dick Lasley
Kathryn Lenihan
Gary Leo
Matthew F. Leonetti
John Linder
Marci Liroff
Harry V Lojewski
Michael Mackenzie
Mark Mangini
Jeff Mann
Frank Marshall
Scott Marshall
Steve Maslow
Dennis Matsuda
Bill Matthews
Bruce V. Mcbroom
Christi Mccarthy
Marghe Mcmahon
Arthur Morton
Lisa Jean Mower
Bill Neil
Bruce Nicholson
Beth Nufer
Kevin O'connell
Ease Owyeung
Paula Paulson
Paul Pav
Dorothy Pearl
Gary Platek
Craig Raiche
Glenn Randall
Craig Reardon
Christopher Reynolds
Bruce Richardson
Arthur Rochester
Nilo Rodis-jamero
Bob Roe
John Roesch
Tom Rosseter
Joan Rowe
Michael Shannon
Felix Silla
Grant Smith
Thomas Smith
Buffy Snyder
David Sosalla
James Spencer
Steven Spielberg
Steven Spielberg
Steven Spielberg
Howard Stein
Mitch Suskin
Larry Tan
Marc Thorpe
Marion Tumen
Mark Vargo
Bill Varney
Jim Veilleux
Laurie Vermont
Edward S Verreaux
Mark Victor
Arthur Vitello
Toni-ann Walker
Chuck Waters
Beverly Webb
George Wilbur
Bess Wiley
Terry Windell
Mike Wood
Bob Yerkes
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Hosted Intro
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Score
Best Sound Effects Sound Editing
Best Visual Effects
Articles
Poltergeist
Poltergeist's plot exploits all the cliches of the haunted house genre with an F/X-heavy, video-centric twist. Craig T. Nelson, JoBeth Williams and their three kids (played by Dominique Dunne, Oliver Robins, and Heather O'Rourke) have the misfortune of moving into a new suburban home that happens to have been built on an ancient Indian burial ground. Eventually, the spirits are released, and they're not happy with the intrusion. It's not long before one of the children, innocent little Carol Anne (O'Rourke), gets pulled into the netherworld via a static-filled TV screen. The rest of the picture consists of creepy/violent occurrences while the house is put through the wringer by a mini clairvoyant (Zelda Rubinstein) and a parade of angry spirits. It may be slick and overproduced, but you're still guaranteed to get some well-earned shrieks out of it before it's over.
Tobe Hooper, who scared the bejeebies out of drive-in moviegoers with his nightmarish cult film, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974), was signed on to direct Poltergeist, although, if you think about it, Hooper's pitiless, blood-and-guts sensibility was hardly a good fit for Steven Spielberg. At this point in his career, and for several years thereafter, Spielberg had an often unfortunate penchant for getting cute and tossing magic dust in the air in his films. That certainly wouldn't work with a horror film, but there's no doubt that Poltergeist's bet-hedging commercial gloss is Spielberg's handiwork. The movie is actually more unnerving than truly horrifying.
No one has ever said exactly what Spielberg did or didn't film, but it's pretty obvious that he wasn't sitting in his producer's chair, thoughtfully smoking a pipe. The picture contains more than a few Spielbergian shots that sweep in at a low angle toward an awed character, and Williams even remembers Spielberg climbing into a swimming pool full of "corpses" with her while shooting the climactic scene. Viewers who are familiar with his work from the period won't have too much trouble finding other clues. In one particularly icky scene where a character hallucinates that he's tearing the flesh off his own face, that's actually Spielberg's hands doing the tearing!
Although they might look rickety by current standards, the special effects in Poltergeist were the film's major attraction when it was released (it ended up grossing a very respectable $40-million at the box office.) Richard Edlund, one of the original forces behind George Lucas' Industrial Light and Magic, created all those swirling ghosts and murderous trees. Today, Edlund is hailed by industry insiders as an F/X pioneer, and has taken home Oscars® for three different Star Wars films, as well as for Raiders of the Lost Ark. (His most recent work can be found in last year's bomb, The Stepford Wives, 2004).
Nelson and Williams, of course, have both enjoyed respectable careers in movies and television, with Nelson finding quite a high profile as the title character in the ABC sitcom Coach. There is, however, a genuinely tragic bent to the stories of two other Poltergeist cast members.
Just a few months after the picture's release, Dominique Dunne, who plays the eldest daughter in the haunted family, was killed by an enraged boyfriend. The pointless death of this promising young actress saddened movie fans across the country, and badly rattled members of the Los Angeles film community. In a twist worthy of a modern thriller, Dunne's killer would serve only three years behind bars before being released, a turn of events that her father, Dominic Dunne, a contributor to Vanity Fair magazine and other publications, would document in detail.
The other Poltergeist cast member who met an untimely demise is Heather O'Rourke. The tiny actress, whose character's supernatural predicament drove the original picture, went on to appear in two Poltergeist sequels, but unexpectedly died of an intestinal obstruction shortly after wrapping Poltergeist III (1988). That film is dedicated to her memory. (If you are interested in learning more about Poltergeist III, you might want to check out the Poltergeist III.com website.
Director: Tobe Hooper
Producers: Steven Spielberg, Frank Marshall
Screenplay: Steven Spielberg, Michael Grais, Mark Victor
Cinematographer: Matthew F. Leonetti
Editing: Michael Kahn
Music: Jerry Goldsmith
Production Design: James H. Spencer
Costumes: L.J. Mower
Cast: Craig T. Nelson (Steve), JoBeth Williams (Diane), Beatrice Straight (Dr. Lesh), Dominique Dunne (Dana), Oliver Robins (Robbie), Heather O'Rourke (Carol Anne), Zelda Rubinstein (Tangina), Martin Casella (Marty), Richard Lawson (Ryan), Michael McManus (Tuthill), James Karen (Teague).
C-115m. Letterboxed. Closed captioning.
by Paul Tatara
Poltergeist
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States June 1982
Released in United States Summer June 4, 1982
Released in USA on video.
Released in United States June 1982
Released in United States Summer June 4, 1982