An American Haunting (Unrated Edition)

by Freestyle Releasing

$14.98
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Average Rating: * * half star - -
Sales Rank:28375 (lower is better)
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Director:Courtney Solomon
Release Date:2006-10-24
Label:Freestyle Releasing
UPC:012236201410
Binding:DVD
Published By:Freestyle Releasing
ASIN:B000HC2LFI
Category:DVD

Actors and Actresses

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Product Description

Based on true events. Between the years 1818-1820 the bell family of red river tn was visited by an unknown presence that haunted the family & eventually ended up causing the death of one of its members. It was not until a manuscript was found in 1998 that the horrifying answer to what caused this was unveiled Studio: Lions Gate Home Ent. Release Date: 02/05/2008 Starring: Donald Sutherland James Darcy Run time: 91 minutes Rating: Ur
Amazon.com

With its brisk 83-minute running time, An American Haunting is compact enough to be recommended as an occasionally spooky sampling of historical horror. Based on Brent Monahan's novel The Bell Witch: An American Haunting, which in turn was inspired by the only known case (from 1818-20) in which the U.S. government officially acknowledged a death by supernatural forces, writer-director Courtney Solomon's film is a well-crafted 19th-century case study involving Tennessee land-owner John Bell (Donald Sutherland), his worried wife Lucy (Sissy Spacek), and the terrifying abuse of their daughter Betsy (Rachel Hurd-Wood) by a malicious poltergeist. Intensified by excessive sound effects and a nerve-jangling score, these nightly hauntings won't scare anyone who's seen The Exorcist, and they grow increasingly repetitious even as Spacek and Sutherland make the most of their underwritten roles. Solomon (who previously brought Dungeons and Dragons to the big screen) seems more interested in visceral terror than fleshing out the details of this interesting story of dark secrets and child abuse, and his over-used bag of tricks includes time-lapse footage, flashes of negative images, black-and-white (to signal an imminent haunting), and a variety of physical effects designed to keep your adrenaline flowing. It works, to a point (although the present-day framing scenes are completely unnecessary), and An American Haunting makes a good double-feature with The Exorcism of Emily Rose, a far better film with similar subject matter. This good-looking, bleakly moody fright-fest is also noteworthy as the next-to-last screen credit for Adrian Biddle, the esteemed cinematographer of such high-profile hits as Aliens, Thelma & Louise, The Mummy, and V for Vendetta, the latter completed just prior to Biddle's fatal heart attack in December 2005.--Jeff Shannon

Customer Reviews

Great start, lame finish. - Reviewed on 2008-11-06
* *

Unfortunately, this video is a typical case of the industry's determination to turn every story into a sexually-repressed nightmare. Historically, BTW, Tennessee did not admit to any ghostly crime on this isssue; that is pure fabrication on the part of the movie studio. The Bell Witch is a mystery, for sure, but not along he lines of what is recounted here.

The performances are decent, Spacek and Sutherland particularly turning in strong performances. I found the dialogue appropriate to the period, as were the sets. As mentioned in a previous post, the special FX were kept to a minimum to enhance the level of suspense. But....

The crime at the root of the mystery is totally ludicrous (except in the perverse mindset of Hollywood). While the traditional parapsychological explanation of poltergeists (the category under which the Bell Witch incident is generally listed) is tentatively maintained, the incestuous catalyst behind angst-ridden pubescent trauma is the typically disgusting stuff of the way the lascivious work in movies today. Doubtless there is a self-congratulatory sense here of "ground-breaking" and "maverick" attitude with this film. (Hey, they even get to to slam those with religious worldviews as hypocrites. Whoa, how bold! Puleeze....) In the end, it's just so old.

Again, the beginning was very good. This only makes the ending just that much more disappointing. Just once, I'd like to enjoy a ghost movie that doesn't end up a slasher fest or sexually obsessed.

There is actually one movie I've seen that is good in this regard: "The Orphanage". Very eerie and tragic, but not without a bit of hope. Check that out instead.
Great Movie - Reviewed on 2008-11-02
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1 customer found this review not to be helpful.
I would love to go visit this place. I think its a great movie, i loved it, it had very haunting effects, and it was amazing to see the past was also repeating inthe present.
such potential... - Reviewed on 2008-10-08
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1 customer found this review helpful, 1 did not.

This movie had such potential...

However it dropped the ball. Not only was it slow moving but the ending was't worth sitting through the entire movie.
The most original proposal about elusive suspense in this decade! - Reviewed on 2008-09-19
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1 customer found this review helpful, 1 did not.

The ancestral horror for the unknown has always been an effective formula, used over and over since the cinema emerged.

What I most liked about this film was precisely the essential factor which differentiates it from other similar films around this well known issue. The director makes use of the camera and a fabulous illumination to create the required atmosphere in which shadows and darkness convey the spectator to contribute unconsciously of the beating tension that features it. To recreate this atmosphere means to be well conscious about the importance of the basic devices employed by the German Expressionism, the basic factor who made of Alfred Hitchcock and Jacques Tourneur the supreme exponents of the suspense along more than three decades. And finally we have to recognize the not so hidden homage to other three emblematic films of the seventies: "The Exorcist", "Don't look now" and "The omen."

A full rounded script as well as an excellent cast permits the movie goes further the average over so many other projects of major budget and promotion that simply ignored the basic premises of a suspense film.

Bravo!

One word...crap - Reviewed on 2008-09-19
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1 customer found this review helpful, 1 did not.

What I disliked about this film was the fact that it was turned from a movie about a haunting into a movie about child abuse. Not what I was expecting and not what I wanted to see.
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