The Amityville Horror (1979)

The Amityville Horror Poster

George Lutz and his wife Kathleen move into their Long Island dream house with their children only for their lives to be turned into a hellish nightmare. The legacy of a murder committed in the house gradually affects the family and a priest is brought in to try and exorcise the demonic presence from their home.

Intro to "The Amityville Horror"
"The Amityville Horror" is a supernatural horror film directed by Stuart Rosenberg, launched in 1979. It is an adaptation of Jay Anson's 1977 book of the very same name, which is declared to be based on the true experiences of the Lutz household. The film chronicles the frightening experiences of the Lutz family after they move into a relatively picturesque home in Amityville, New York, which they quickly find out has a dark and sinister past.

Plot Summary
The story starts with the Lutz family - George and Kathy, together with their 3 children - moving into their brand-new house in Amityville. They are able to pay for the big home due to the fact that it has been priced well below the marketplace rate, a truth that is quickly described by the history of the home. The real estate representative informs them that the previous owner of the house killed his whole household in there, declaring to have actually been affected by demonic voices.

Regardless of understanding your home's history, the Lutzes decide to buy and move in, looking for to start a fresh chapter of their lives. Almost instantly, weird events start to take place, including nasty odors, cold areas, and unusual noises. George begins to go through character changes; he ends up being irritable, sickly, and consumed with the home's fireplace, feeling an abnormal cold that won't abate.

Kathy, driven by her maternal impulses and concern for her household's security, begins investigating the home's past, finding that the house was developed on the site where a Shinnecock Indian chief was tortured and housed evil spirits. The home likewise served as a pre-Colonial devil-worshiping website.

Spiritual and Psychological Decay
As time advances, the family is subjected to gradually troubling supernatural events. They see unusual voices and glaring red eyes peering at them in the night. Their daughter ends up being friends with a fictional good friend, Jodie, who seems to be linked to your house's dark history.

George's psychological state continues to degrade as he ends up being abusive and even considers eliminating his household, imitating the acts of the previous owner. The family's priest, Father Delaney, tries to bless the house however is repelled by an unseen force that leaves him sick and traumatized. In spite of his efforts to help and alert the household, his words go mostly unheeded.

Climactic Hauntings
The scenario intensifies to a climax when the Lutzes experience a horrific night filled with demonic voices and entities. With levitation, George's lost control, and visions of your house's dark history replaying, they decide that it's time to desert your home less than a month after relocating.

Conclusion and Legacy
The family leaves in the middle of the night, leaving their ownerships behind, too frightened to continue residing in your house after an extreme 28 days of haunting. The events withstood by the Lutz household end up being a popular story, and they wait their claims even when confronted with apprehension and allegations of it being a hoax.

"The Amityville Horror" found considerable industrial success and has left a sticking around influence on the horror category. It's renowned for its chilling environment, setting a standard for many haunted home stories that followed. The original film spawned a franchise, consisting of sequels, prequels, and a remake in 2005, although none quite captured the extreme shock of the 1979 motion picture. Whether taken as truth, fiction, or somewhere in-between, "The Amityville Horror" stays a long-lasting tale in scary movie theater, continuing to captivate and chill audiences decades after its release.

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