Youngest Child Abducted by "Poltergeist"
Starring Sam Rockwell, Rosemarie DeWitt and Jared
Harris, “Poltergeist” is the story of an ordinary family dealing with
extraordinary circumstances. Set in America’s nondescript suburbs, a young
family-of-five move into a new home only to find it possessed by angry
poltergeists. When these angry spirits abduct their youngest daughter, Madison,
they recruit a team of scientists and psychics – including a clairvoyant reality
star to get her back.
This
year’s “Poltergeist” and the 1982 original give audiences a rollercoaster ride
of thrills and fright with a story about the abduction of a family’s youngest
child by supernatural and increasingly hostile forces. The rest of the clan
then wages a gruelling battle to get her back safely. But the new film updates the story’s perspective, place and characters.
Unlike the original “Poltergeist,” which was
set in a comfortable economic time during the 1980s, this film is situated in
the rapidly fading, disenfranchised American ideal we know as suburbia. A
rundown, cookie-cutter community of three-bedroom homes, unkempt yards and
chain link fences in an Illinois neighborhood sets the scene for the
unsuspecting protagonists, the Bowen family.
It reminds audiences that life in suburbia can sometimes be a long way
from comfort and safety.
It
is the children who first notice that something is off about the house, even
before the Bowens take ownership.
Griffin, the middle child, catches his younger sister Maddy having a
conversation with an unseen…something…in what will soon be her bedroom
closet. By the time the family moves
into their new home, the stage is set for the discovery of otherworldly forces.
It
makes sense that Maddy and Griffin are the first to experience these forces,
says blockbuster filmmaker Sam Raimi who produces Poltergeist, because children
are usually “more open to new situations and using their imaginations. So our
child characters were more likely to perceive these supernatural entities that
invade their home. Adults don’t tune
into new ‘frequencies’ as easily as kids do.”
Maddy,
the youngest and most susceptible child, loves the house thanks to her new
“imaginary” friends in the closet.
Griffin is a shy, introverted and easily frightened kid who likes the
idea of moving until he learns his room is in the creepy, secluded attic – and
begins thinking that a nearby tree is threatening him.
Kennedi
Clements plays Maddy, the poltergeist’s main target. “Finding Kennedi resulted from an exhaustive
search of children from around the world because, says director Gil Kenan, “she
has soulfulness, brightness, and sense of humor that's easy to love. This is important because in the short time
we spend with Maddy we need to fall in love with her, to experience the sense
of loss and heartbreak that her family feels when she's taken. “Kennedi plays an absolutely fearless Maddy,”
Kenan continues. “She's the one who,
when confronted with voices from the TV or the closet, answers back with wide
eyes. Maddy doesn't doubt and she's not afraid, and that fearlessness makes her
vulnerable.”
“Poltergeist”
opens June 24 in cinemas from 20th Century Fox to be distributed by
Warner Bros.
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