Haunting in New
York – Pitch Notes
(REVISED 5/5/09)
By Sean Hood
I’ve tracked the story on three
levels:
1. BLACK – Mother/Boyfriend’s
story
Here I track the
beats as seen in documentary (with some adjustments). All the key story points
are there so that the “based on a true story” premise is intact. Our location,
the Hudson River Valley,
is the setting for some of America’s
most famous and authentic tales of possession.
2. GREEN – Middle sister, Krista’s, story.
The movie will be told through
eyes of the middle sister, Krista (15). This is material that I have created
myself. The family is a tightly knit group of women (A mother and three
daughters… a bit like “Little Women”) who support each other physically and
emotionally in dire financial circumstances. The deadbeat father deserted them
years earlier; he had been unable to handle the challenges of caring for a
child with special needs.
Chris,
the boyfriend, is (at first) a male intruder into this family of women/girls.
Krista doesn’t trust him. This male intruder is mirrored by the supernatural
demon, who is also threatening male figure invading the family unit. Ultimately
the “real world” story is about Krista learning to trust and accept Chris and a
father figure, and the “supernatural” story is about Krista driving out the
perverse and violent demon (who represents her fears.)
3. RED – Supernatural Story.
This is a mythology and history
surrounding the demon that I have researched to answer the questions. What is this
demon? What is its history? What does it want? Why now? Why this family? What’s
going to happen if the demon wins… especially to Krista?
The goal here is to make sure that
the stakes are clearly life and death.
Act One:
- For three years, Dawn (36) and
daughters (Julie (18), Krista (15), Sophie(10) have lived alone and
struggled. Julie, mentally disabled, can sense unseen angels. Julie is
regarded both the family and the community as spiritually gifted, and is
given special attention.
Julie, besides
being strikingly beautiful, has a special talent – one that makes her a savant.
Although she cannot walk or speak, she makes line drawings of the entities she
sees. When Julie draws, she seems to be in a kind of trance and she hardly
looks at the paper. Her hand scribbles randomly on page after page, like
someone producing “automatic writing,” and she seems to have no conscious
awareness of what she is doing. After filling dozens of sheets with chaotic lines,
she begins producing eerie images of figures and faces.
This
talent has made Julie a celebrity in the family’s church, and she is the
favorite of their local priest, Father Boyd (the priest who will visit in the
third act.)
By
contrast, Dawn asks Father Boyd to have a stern talk with Krista, the “problem
child” between the angelic oldest, Julie, and the precocious youngest, Sophie.
Krista has the reputation for acting out, rebelling against male authority
figures and lying.
Krista is
jealous of the special attention that is given to her older sister, and resentful
that she has to care for her, feed her and bathe her, sleep in the same room as
her, and baby-sit her while her mother goes out on dates with her new
boyfriend, Chris (45).
A key
image is the disgruntled Krista pushing Julie around in a wheelchair. Every day,
resentful and bored to tears, Krista has to take her sister out to the ruins of an abandoned factory, where Julie spends
hours making her mysterious drawings.
- The mother brings home Chris to meet
the kids. Sophie likes him; Julie seems to trust him, but Krista is
standoffish.
In fact,
Krista hates Chris, and doesn’t want her mother to date him. To her, he seems
creepy and oafish – trying to hard to ingratiate himself, and acting as if he
is a member of the family.
While
pushing Julie around the ruins of the old factory Krista gets fed up. Her
sister is being stubborn and obsessive, drawing the figure of a boy over and
over again, crying and latching the wheelchair brake whenever Krista tries to
take her home. Finally Krista looses her temper and yells, “I wish you were
dead!”
To Krista’s mortification, she realizes she has been overheard. Eric, a blond
haired boy a little older than her, looks both cute and ordinary as he cuts
through the lot. He’s the one her sister has been drawing - a real person for
once.
He waves at Krista, smiles sheepishly, and
walks off into the fading light.
- Chris moves in. Sophie and Julie like
him, but Krista doesn’t. Chris feels the presence of “entities” in the
house.
She mocks
Chris’s “psychic” sensibilities, and thinks he is making it up to manipulate
her mother, who believes in the supernatural. Krista and her mother fight over
it. Krista feels neglected, misunderstood and bitter.
Krista is
furious about this strange man invading the family’s private space and acting
like a father figure. His stuff clutters the bathroom. He leaves messes in the
kitchen. His furniture, wall hangings, and other junk are painfully mismatched
and unstylish. Her mother scolds her Krista “parading around the house” in just
a t-shirt and boxers, as she has done all her life. Krista is outraged.
So,
Krista is rebellious and rude to Chris.
That night,
Krista has a “night-mare.” Wandering through the dark house, she hears heavy
thuds and feral breathing. In the hallway, she is assaulted by a large black
horse. The beast kicks and bucks in a frenzy. When
she wakes up with a scream, she finds her sister awake too, with a
shell-shocked expression as if she has seen something terrifying as well. Then
Krista sees…
In the
doorway, in dark silhouette, Chris is standing there watching the two girls
sleep. Krista is spooked by his presence in the room.
The next
morning, she complains to her mother, but her mother brushes her off. Julie was
moaning in her sleep, and Chris went in to the room to see if she was all
right. It was nothing more than that.
Krista
meets Eric on her daily walk. She notices Eric staring at her beautiful sister
(why do boys ALWAYS gawk at her that way?). Krista will be pretty too, someday,
but she’s in an awkward stage. She works
hard to keep Eric’s attention.
Eric agrees
that Chris seems creepy, and perhaps even dangerous. Krista invites Eric to the
house, but tells him they have to keep him secret from her mother, who doesn’t
want her “dating.” That night, Krista watches Chris suspiciously.
Meanwhile, Julie
draws picture of demonic horses.
- The
mother wakes up to find the house a mess. She asks the youngest, Sophie,
who did it. Sophie says a “boy with yellow hair.”
In the
previous scene, Krista sneaks Eric into the house at night. This time, when
Eric seems smitten with Julie, Krista goes to great lengths to distract him.
Her dependant sister becomes her rival for Eric’s attention.
They make
a mess together and are caught by Sophie. In order not to get into trouble for
sneaking a boy into the house, Krista convinces Sophie that she didn’t see a
real boy, she saw a ghost.
- The whole family sees Eric through the
window.
Krista
tries desperately to stifle laughter as Chris and her mother run outside to
investigate the “ghost.” She knows it’s just her friend from the neighborhood.
Through
her bedroom wall, Krista hears Chris talk about his fears of evil spirits.
Later that
night, Eric spies on Krista through a window as she undresses. She knows he’s
there, but innocently, she finds his attention exciting. That night the two of
them decide to use Chris’s superstitions against him, and scare him away from
the house and her family.
We see the
mute older sister’s, Julie’s growing anxiety and dismay, as if she can see forces
gathering that her sister Krista is unaware of. In particular, she seems
terrified of Krista’s new friend Eric. Eric smiles at Julie ominously…
… and puts
a finger to his lips as if to say “Hush, it’s our little secret.”
Act Two:
- The mother, Dawn, and her boyfriend,
Chris, try to contact the spirit world. Krista spies on them as they do
it. Chris is terrified when the spirit seems to speak.
With Eric
encouraging her, Krista plays pranks on her mother and Chris as they work the
Ouija board. Hiding in the basement with him, she makes the lights flicker, she
taps and scratches on the floorboards like a spirit.
However,
the Ouiji board DOES spell out a name “Eric.” And then it spells out a cryptic
message:
ERIC IS DOOR
Krista is
unsettled. How is it that the Ouiji board spelled out “Eric.” And, why is Julie
so anxious whenever Eric is around, drawing stranger and stranger pictures.
- The mother
finds a white handprint and a cryptic message on the basement door.
Again, Eric
encourages Krista to play a prank. With some white paint, she makes a handprint
on the wall and under it she writes another cryptic message that Eric tells
her…
ICE DOOR SIR
Krista laughs heartily as she eavesdrops on Chris and her
mother trying to decipher this nonsense message. When they ask her if she did
it, Krista claims to know nothing about it.
- They call a psychic and spread baby
powder on the basement floor to see if it is really a spirit or whether
Krista or Sophie is playing a prank.
Again,
Krista invites Eric in the house through the basement window, in secret. She
uses a dust-buster vacuum up a path to the center of the powder. Eric
encourages her to write another nonsense message for them to decipher:
DOC O’RE IRIS
Then the cover up the path by squirting new baby powder over
the trail.
The next
morning Chris and Dawn see the writing, and Krista can barely keep a straight
face when the gullible Chris says ominously, “No human being could have written
that message without disturbing the powder.”
- The psychic comes to the house and
sees “Iris” drawn in the powder. Her chirpy, confident demeanor melts and
her face turns white. Fleeing the house, she says she can’t help them
because “Iris” is her daughter’s name.
Krista is
disturbed by the coincidence… like the coincidence with the Ouija board. But it
had to be a coincidence. The words were just nonsense.
Julie is
acting stranger. She screams and cries when Eric appears in the house. Krista
hates that taking care of her sister means never having a moment alone with
him. Krista admits to Eric the first time in her life, she wishes her sister
wasn’t around to burden her. Eric jokes, why don’t you kill her?
The joke
hits a raw nerve, and Krista throws Eric out of the house.
- The mother, Dawn, has dreams of “Eric.”
The demon tells her, “You can’t help her. She is mine.” The mother assumes
he means Julie.
Both Chris and Dawn become concerned about Julie, who is behaving
strangely, as if terrified by things only she can see.
This only
makes Krista more and more angry. How typical, that they are so worried about
Julie and couldn’t care less about her. Krista gets even more furious with her
sister because Julie screams in fright every time Krista tries to let Eric in
the house… almost getting her caught.
Eric
stops coming to the house and Krista blames her sister. Once again, tending to
her sister is ruining her life. Both her mother and Chris scold Krista for her
moodiness and selfishness. Once again, Krista feels jealous and misunderstood.
- Sophie, the youngest, sees visions of Eric.
She sees faces coming out of the wall. She can’t sleep. Anxiety makes her
cry all the time. No one can get her to stop crying.
Krista
worries that Eric is sneaking in the house without her knowledge or consent and
scaring both her sisters. It spooks her.
Late at
night, Krista wakes up to see her sister writhing strangely in the other bed –
her lips moving silently as if she were speaking in tongues. Then Krista’s own
bed begins to vibrate and shake, as if possessed.
Hearing a
horse thrash and snort, she realizes some beast is under her bed. When she
looks down and pulls back the sheet Eric looks up at her with a twisted demonic
grin. “You don’t know what’s really going on, do you?”
Krista
screams! Chris runs in the room and flips on the light. He tells her she was
having a nightmare, but to Krista, it seemed all too real.
- The mother, Dawn, finds more messages
burned into the floor of Sophie’s bedroom. Again Sophie won’t stop crying.
Only Julie seems to be able to sooth the youngest sister and calm her
down.
The words
burned into the floor read:
OR SO I CRIED
The mother is terrified this is another cryptic message
from the ghost. Sophie, who is a tattle-tail, says she saw Krista and her
“boyfriend” burning in the message. Sophie accuses Krista of the other pranks
as well.
Krista and her mother fight. Finally Krista admits to the
paint and the powder, but says she didn’t burn the letters into the floor. Her
mother is furious. Krista lies so much that it’s impossible for her mother to
know what to believe.
Midpoint:
- The mother, Dawn, and Krista find
Chris sitting in the basement. Chris is possessed. Eric, speaking through
Chris, says, “You don’t realize what’s going on do you? She is mine.”
Words from their nightmares.
Mother,
scared for Julie’s safety, moves herself and her three daughters out of the
house. Chris comes back to himself with no knowledge of what happened to him.
Revelation:
Krista and her mother find Julie sitting in her wheelchair, staring at Eric.
When Krista’s mother says she doesn’t see anyone there, Krista realizes that
the blonde hair boy is not a real person. He’s a real spirit... a demon.
- Paranormal Investigators arrive. They
all adamantly agree the house is haunted by a spirit let in by the Ouija
board. And that Julie is the focus of the paranormal activity. Ironically,
these “experts” are all dead wrong.
To Krista,
the investigators seem like charlatans. But no one will listen to her.
Krista does
her own investigations. Discovering that the abandoned 19th century
factory where she first met Eric. The factory used child labor – girls aged
9-16 who were taken from their families and forced to work 16 hour days, and
sometimes forced to do even worse. Many children died there… by suicide.
Krista
takes Julie in her wheelchair back to the factory ruins, hoping to confront
Eric. Julie manages to say a single word, “Angels,” and she points.
Krista sees
terrifying glimpses of the girls who died in the factory. Blue-skinned wraiths
in dirty shifts, they have slashed arms or bandaged wrists.
- At the house, a paranormal
investigator claims to see a drop of “ectoplasm.”
In contrast, in the hotel room,
Krista a REAL supernatural experience.
While
bathing her sister, Julie, the lights in the bathroom flicker and the walls
seems to bulge. Suddenly, Julie’s body begins to shiver and shake. Julie SPEAKS
in Eric’s voice, taunting Krista about her jealousy and bitterness.
The demon has followed her. It’s not just at the house.
Suddenly
Julie’s body writhes and convulses in the water, snorting and bucking like an
animal. To Krista’s horror, her sister seems to change into Eric.
Krista
screams and pushes Eric face into the water. The voices in her head and visions
dissipate, and only just in time does Krista come back to “reality” and realize
that she has almost drown her own sister.
Krista
cries. She tries to apologize, but Julie is now terrified of her, and won’t let
her touch her. Krista is horrified by what she has almost done.
- While the family stays in two motel
rooms, the paranormal experts work at the house. Another is pushed down
the stairs. However, none of the recording devices reveal anything. They
all agree that the house needs an exorcism.
However, their cameras and microphones pick up no hard evidence.
Krista
knows that these investigators are fakers. A creak of a floorboard or a slip
down the stairs is nothing compared to what she is experiencing.
Yet she
is sullen and withdrawn. She can hear Eric’s voice echoing inside her head. She
experiences black outs, and she can’t remember things she did or said. She
tries to reach out to Father Boyd, but finds she can’t say what she wants to
say, as if some force is blocking her from speaking. She can’t will herself to
enter the church itself, as if she is at war with herself.
More and
more, Krista is afraid of what she might do if she loses control
Ironically,
it is only Chris who senses something is truly wrong with Krista. When she
refuses to talk to him directly about it, he pokes through the hotel room and
finds piles of books Krista has taken out from the library…
… the
books are about possessions in the Hudson
River Valley.
In story after story, Krista has underlined instances of demonic possession, by
a half-horse and half-human demon, one who preys on girls and disrupts and
destroys families.
In one
illustrated story from the 18th century, a girl kills her father
with a shovel, screaming, “I wish you were dead!” In another, a sleeping girl
is visited by a horse demon “night mare.” In another story, the girls working
in a factory are possessed and driven to suicide.
Elsewhere,
Krista pushes her sister along in her wheelchair on their daily outing. Krista
seems entranced almost as if she is sleepwalking, and Julie seems to be getting
more and more anxious. Suddenly Krista pushes Julie’s wheelchair to the edge of
the sidewalk. In the road, trucks and taxis zip by at high speeds.
Julie seems
to sense that her sister is contemplating PUSHING HER into the deadly, on-coming
traffic. For several excruciating moments Krista rocks the wheelchair back and
forth until…
Julie
reaches out and touches her sister’s hand. Julie whispers the only word she can
say out loud, “Angels.” Krista seems to “wake up” and realize what she was about
to do. Krista pulls the wheelchair back to safety and she bursts into tears.
- A clairvoyant is brought into the
house. She feels there is just one demon in the house taking many forms. In
Julie’s bedroom, the clairvoyant is momentarily possessed by the spirit
and thrown to the ground.
Krista
realizes that these “psychics” and “experts” have no idea what is really
happening. They can’t see Eric even when he is standing right next to them. They
are of no help to her.
Her
mother believes these “experts.” Her sister, Julie, is in her own world drawing
page after page of static straight lines, like a television stuck on white
noise. Even when the pad and marker are taken away from her, Julies hands move
frantically in her lap, drawing on air.
Krista is
completely alone.
Playing
with a Scrabble game in the motel room, Krista looks over all the non-sense
messages that Eric left them…
ERIC IS DOOR
DOC O’RE IRIS
OR SO I CRIED
She rearranges the scrabble tiles realizing that each message
is an anagram for the other. She uses the same tiles to form other words…
DISCO ERROR I
More nonsense phrases, until she falls into an trance, and
her fingers spell out…
SORRICIDE
The hidden message. That has been Eric’s goal all along: to
seduce her, possess her, and manipulate her jealousy and anger to get her to…
Kill her sister.
Later,
Krista wanders like a sleepwalker into Chris’s hotel room. When she reaches his bed, she whispers as if
only half-awake.
She begs
him to take care of her family, and tells him NOT to trust her or anything she
says. She is “not herself.” She is bad in her core. She begs him to take care
of her mother and sisters.
“And you
too,” offers Chris, but Krista shakes her head. She won’t say more.
Act Three:
- After Chris and Dawn go to the Church,
Father Boyd explains that Julie cannot be possessed because she cannot choose
between good and evil.
Dawn, the
mother, believes the all investigators – that the possession in centered on
Julie and the house. Friends and neighbors gather round Dawn for support.
But Chris
is the only one who suspects that if could be Krista who is really in danger.
Krista CAN choose between good and evil. What if she is the one who is really
possessed?
Julie senses
her sister is in danger, but she cannot speak to tell anyone. In a reversal of
rolls, it is Julie who is now caring for her younger sister, trying to protect
her emotionally from the angels and demons depicted in her drawings.
But when
Krista blacks out… and then finds herself holding a pair of scissors like a
dagger over her sister’s throat, Krista concludes that she can no longer trust
herself.
Julie
resists when her mother takes her and the youngest sister to the house to encourage the demon to appear, as the
“experts” have instructed. Krista herself, is nowhere to be found.
- Father Boyd, who is really just
humoring the family, performs a minor exorcism on the house – reading a
prayer and performing a blessing. Julie seems oppressed as he does it. She
is surrounded by family, friends and psychic experts who all thing she is
the focus of the possession.
Julie
rocks back and forth, as the “exorcism” gets more and more intense. The house
rattles and shakes as if some gigantic beast were moving through it. Father
Boyd begins to realize that there really is a demon present.
Suddenly
Julie utters a word out loud, “Angels.”
All
present gasp in shock as she stands up…
… and walks! She chants to herself, as
reciting a prayer or an invocation, “Angels. Angels. Angels…” And moves her
hand wildly in the air as if drawing.
Chris
gives Julie a marker, and the girl begins drawing in wide arcing strokes across
a blank wall. “What is it? What is she drawing?” cries the mother.
Chris
recognizes the familiar outline of smokestacks. “It’s the factory.” As if sensing
something, he bolt outs out of the house.
On the
factory grounds, Krista returns to the exact place in the factory where she
first met Eric. With his voice taunting her she takes out a razor. She plans to kill herself in order
to keep herself from harming her sister or any other member of the family.
Back at
the house, as the priest continues the prayer. Glass shatters, floorboards
crack with the noise of feral snorts and thundering hooves. Father Boyd’s
prayers become a full blown exorcism.
In front
of her drawing of the factory, Julie draws figures…
… girls…
the girls who worked at the factory.
Girls
with wings.
At the
factory itself, Chris walks through the junkyard and finds Krista kneeling as
if before and altar, and holding the razor to her wrist.
In front of her Eric, the demon laughs at her
and encourages her to do it. Either way, he wins.
All Chris
sees is Krista screaming at some invisible entity. He calls out to her. He
tells her he believes her. He knows she’s the one who needs help. He begs her
to trust her family… to let her family help her… she doesn’t have to face it
alone.
The razor
presses down on her wrist
At the
house, Julie continues to chant, “Angels, angels, angels…” in synch with the
booming voice of the priest casting the demon out. Her drawing is finished.
And as if
by some mystical synchronicity, Krista hesitates from slashing her wrists. She
too begins to chant, “Angels, angels, angels…”
CLIMAX: In
a frightening and visually stunning set piece, apparitions appear - all the
spirits of girls who killed themselves in the infernal factory. These are “the
angels” that Julie has been seeing and drawing throughout the movie. A circle
of these grim specters surrounds them.
Child Labor in Factories
And as
Krista watches, and we intercut the voice of the exorcist at the house.
The Angels fall upon Eric and tear him apart with their bare
hands.
- At the house the exorcism concludes
and here are three booms and the “weight” on the house seems to lift.
Chris
takes Krista in his arms like a child. As he carries her back to the house the
clouds burst and they and covered in a cleansing rain.
- Chris is accepted into the family.
Dawn and Chris are married.
Surrounded by colorful images of
smiling saints, Krista and her sisters are bridesmaids in a traditional church
wedding.
At the reception the family circle
is complete again. Chris and Dawn dance with the littlest sister Sophie. Julie
draws humorous caricatures of the guests. Krista is happy but even as she eats
the wedding cake, she is haunted by whispering voices.
Read the parent article about treatments and beat sheets on Genre Hacks:
Writing The Feature Script: Week Three - The Treatment
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