gigi
August 9, 2005, 7:42pm
21
Hee…Me neither, but I’m dead serious when I say I am unable to look in a mirror and say “Candyman” five times. :eek:
gigi
August 9, 2005, 7:44pm
22
“You’re going to die.”
“Stop the medical mumbo-jumbo, doc, give it to me straight.”
/clumsy paraphrase of hilarious WN sequence
duffer
August 9, 2005, 10:55pm
23
Ahhh! The Candyman chant. My friends and I wasted so many hours in a dark room when we were kids trying to get it to work. Good Times.
Did you ever get it to work?
What?
Damn. Your post made me go to the bathroom mirror and say Candyman 5 times. Needless to say, nothing happened–but I got a shiver after the fifth time.
NDP
August 10, 2005, 6:40am
26
I have to admit - way back when I was a Little Lacha, I watched an episode of Leonard Nimoy’s In Search Of, and it featured EVP, and it spooked the holy hell out of me! Thus, so did the movie. I don’t know if I buy into the paranormal as presented by their “documentary,” but it really brought back an eight-year-old’s fear pretty damned quickly. After the first “whisper,” I was sorry I rented the fucking thing.
<---- me!
Revtim:
I totally do NOT buy into this paranormal stuff, or any other paranormal explanations for that matter. But you know what? EVP freaks me out still. No idea why.
It’s likely that ‘White Noise’, as stupid as it looks to most people, would scare me too damn much for me to watch it. And I am a “veteran” of watching the scariest movies ever made.
There’s just something about EVP that gets under my skin.
EVP doesn’t bother me. Basically, if you listen to static and let your imagination run wild, you can hear anything. On the other hand, numbers stations are phenomena that are a bit more unnerving to me (especially in these paranoid times). Now this would be a subject for a good thriller.
I certainly agree it wasn’t a genuine haunted house.
But I don’t believe I’ve ever heard that the Lutz family admitted it was a hoax. Are you sure this is so?
Revtim
August 10, 2005, 3:39pm
28
I heard it was Lutz’ lawyer who admitted it was a hoax, not any of the Lutzes themselves.
Butch DeFeo’s lawyer, actually.
From Snopes
The truth behind The Amityville Horror was finally revealed when Butch DeFeo’s lawyer, William Weber, admitted that he, along with the Lutzes, “created this horror story over many bottles of wine.” The house was never really haunted; the horrific experiences they had claimed were simply made up. Jay Anson further embellished the tale for his book, and by the time the film’s screenwriters had adapted it, any grains of truth that might have been there were long gone. While the Lutzes profited handsomely from their story, Weber had planned to use the haunting to gain a new trial for his client. George Lutz reportedly still claims that the events are mostly true, but has offered no evidence to back up his claim.
The Snopes article details a number of factual problems with the Lutz’s story but I guess I was wrong that the Lutz’s themeslves have admitted it was a hoax.
ouryL
August 11, 2005, 9:42pm
30
My radio is haunted too. Through the static I can hear someone, it ain’t too clear, called Lush Lintball talking bout literal bisons in the zoos.