Skip to main content

New top story from Time: What to Know About the Real-Life Inspiration Behind Netflix’s Things Heard & Seen

https://ift.tt/3t2nRRk

Within the first few minutes of the new Netflix film Things Heard & Seen, it’s clear something has gone very wrong. A man (James Norton) is seen pulling into the garage of an old home in the countryside. As he cuts the ignition on his car, a red droplet appears from above, falling onto his dashboard. He exits the car, looks up, sees liquid seeping through the floorboards and rushes inside the house, where a young girl is expectantly waiting for him. He scoops her up in his arms, and begins to run.

What happened in that house? That question is at the center of Things Heard & Seen, which then rewinds to the previous spring and unpacks all that led up to this mysterious moment. The ‘80s-set thriller, which drops on the streaming platform on April 29, follows a young family—Catherine Clare (Amanda Seyfried), her husband George (Norton) and their daughter Franny (Ana Sophia Heger)—as they relocate from Manhattan to the Hudson Valley north of the city, where George has just landed a teaching position at a nearby college. The Clares move into an old dairy farm with a complicated history—one that George failed to mention to his wife when they purchased it.

From there, things get messy. George is quick to start building their new lives around his art history career while Catherine feels increasingly cut off from the rest of the world. In the house, she begins to notice strange and creepy artifacts, which leads her on a journey to figure out the property’s past and the brutalities that took place there. The movie is based on Elizabeth Brundage’s 2016 book All Things Cease to Appear and is directed by the married filmmaker team Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini. In an interview with Netflix, Springer Berman said that she was drawn to the story because of Brundage’s ability to depict the realities of a marriage alongside the supernatural elements of the farm house. “It was creepy and frightening and engaging and also beautifully written and extremely literary with beautiful character descriptions,” she said. “It looked in a very honest way at the terror and the beauty of a marriage.”

Here’s what you need to know about the origins of Things Heard & Seen, from Brundage’s novel to the real-life murder that inspired the story.

(Spoilers ahead for All Things Cease to Appear and Things Heard & Seen)

What to know about All Things Cease to Appear

While both the book and movie have the same premise, there are key differences in their structures. The novel begins on more explicit terms: Catherine is dead, George has just arrived on his neighbor’s doorstep with Franny in tow, and he becomes the primary suspect in her murder. Brundage introduces flashbacks that reveal the fissures in the Clares’ marriage—a tension that isn’t made clear in the film until later on. Brundage flips between timelines as she unveils the tragedies that came before them in the house they moved into in upstate New York.

Things Heard & Seen
Anna Kooris/NETFLIX—© NETFLIX, Inc.Amanda Seyfried as the increasingly isolated Catherine Clare in ‘Things Heard & Seen’

When the book debuted in 2016, Brundage was praised for elevating a standard thriller plot into something more. TIME’s review of the book applauded the author’s literary skills: “Brundage’s language is the real draw, with her vivid portraits of spouses on opposite sides of a brutal abyss.” In his review for The Wall Street Journal, Tom Nolan appreciated how the book was not easily categorized. “Is the book a ‘police procedural?’ In part. A ‘gothic mystery?’ Incidentally. A novel of ‘psychological suspense?’ In spades,” Nolan wrote.

Beyond providing more concrete details in the beginning of the narrative, Brundage also includes more context about the history of the home as well as the impact of Catherine’s murder on her daughter’s life. The last section of All Things Cease to Appear is set decades in the future, in 2004, where Franny is a third-year surgical resident going through the motions. She receives a phone call that she has to return home because the farm has finally been sold. “When she was a child her questions were ignored, and even now, as an adult they’ve never been answered,” Brundage wrote. “Nobody on her father’s side talks about her mother.” By the novel’s end, Franny is left longing for the mother she never got to know and is disturbed by how much she doesn’t remember about the life they once shared together.

The book is loosely based on a true story

The inspiration for All Things Cease to Appear comes from the time Brundage spent living in upstate New York with her young family. Her husband had recently joined a local medical practice and she happened upon an old home for rent, which she was so struck by that the family decided to sign a lease, according to Brundage’s website. But they soon “discovered that we were not alone” when Brundage’s daughters, at just three and six years old, began telling stories about ghosts that lived in the house, specifically three girls who died in a fire there. “They knew details that seemed beyond their ability to fabricate, including the names of the ghosts, and historic details about an old mill down the road with tainted water,” Brundage wrote. “One night, my youngest was literally laughing at something that seemed to be moving around the room. She pointed at it, giggling, I couldn’t see it. But I could feel it, I just knew.”

THINGS HEARD AND SEEN
Anna Kooris/NETFLIX—© NETFLIX, Inc.James Norton as George Clare and Amanda Seyfried as Catherine Clare in ‘Things Heard & Seen’

After moving in, a neighbor warned Brundage that the house was haunted and its last owner moved away as a result. “On Halloween, I turned on my computer and the printer started printing out a skeleton head made up of the word Boo. This was before the Internet—the only thing running through the computer was electricity,” Brundage said in an interview with Mom Advice. As spooky instances began to mount, the author found herself reconsidering how she thought about ghosts. “Unlike the usual stuff of horror movies, the experience sort of opened me up to the possibilities of ghosts as haunted souls rather than monstrous forces of evil,” she told the Book Trail in 2016.

Those experiences ended up shaping All Things Cease to Appear, which was also inspired by the 1982 murder of Cathleen Krauseneck, a woman who was found dead in her bedroom with an ax in her head while her 3-year-old daughter was alive elsewhere in the house. Brundage recently told Democrat & Chronicle that the disturbing details of the killing stuck with her: “The thing that really motivated me to explore the (homicide) case as the potential architecture for a book were those long hours that this little girl was alone with her mother.”

Making the movie

Directors Springer Berman and Pulcini, who also wrote the screenplay, have a home in the Hudson Valley, and shot the movie there in 2019. “We love the landscape and the history and we are big fans of the Hudson River school of artists,” Pulcini told the Journal News, referring to the group of American landscape painters from the 19th century. “I mean, it is something that we always talked about, what type of movie would we film here.” The rural landscape provides an eerie backdrop for Things Heard & Seen, which joins a slate of movies and television shows filmed in the region, including parts of the HBO miniseries The Undoing and John Krasinski’s 2018 film A Quiet Place.

Things Heard & Seen
Anna Kooris/NETFLIX—© 2020 Netflix, Inc.In ‘Things Heard & Seen,’ Catherine (Amanda Seyfried) discovers the history of her haunted home

What also stood out to the filmmakers in adapting the book was the feminist bent of the story. Like many stories in classic literature, this one is centered on an isolated woman who is believed by nobody when she expresses concern over the haunted happenings inside her home. “A lot of those books were about female power and the suppression of female power,” Pulcini said. “This was similar, but kind of turned on its head—the supernatural, the house. It has a lot of those Gothic elements you see in Turn of the Screw, but it also did something different, something that I had never seen. It covered new territory.”

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Raksha Bandhan 2020

Raksha Bandhan 2020 is going to be celebrated in India according to the lunar calendar month of Shravan which is August 3 this year. During the celebration women tie a variety of Rakhi on the wrist of their brothers with a wish to keep all misfortune, distress, evils away from their brothers. In return, brothers promise them for protection and to stand by her in every circumstance. During the rituals, brother offers some gifts to their sisters as a customary gesture. Raksha Bandhan is a very important festival in India. During the festival, sisters who resides far away from their brothers send them Raksha Bandhan quotes to brother through SMS or any other electronic medium. Similarly, brothers sent to their sisters Raksha Bandhan quotes to sister through these media to express their good wishes and well beings for their sisters. In this festival, Raksha Bandhan Quotes, Raksha Bandhan Images, Raksha Bandhan greetings typically trends on all social media platforms. People sen...

New top story from Time: 11 Moments From Asian American History That You Should Know

https://ift.tt/330kaRq More than 30 years after President George H.W. Bush signed a law that designated May 1990 as the first Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month , much of Asian American history remains unknown to many Americans—including many Asian Americans themselves. Often the Asian-American history taught in classrooms is limited to a few milestones like the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and the incarceration of people of Japanese descent during World War II, and that abridged version rarely includes the nearly 50 other ethnic groups that make up the fastest-growing racial and ethnic group in the U.S. in the first two decades of the 21st century . To many, the resulting lack of awareness was highlighted after the March 16 Atlanta spa shootings that left six women of Asian descent dead. The killings fit into a larger trend of violence against Asians failing to be seen or charged as a hate crime , even as leaders lamented that “racist attacks [are]… no...

New top story from Time: Motherhood Could Have Cost Olympian Allyson Felix. She Wouldn’t Let It

https://ift.tt/3hKEVYd Allyson Felix can still hear the screams. In late 2018, the six-time Olympic gold medalist was sitting in the neonatal intensive-care unit of a hospital outside Detroit, watching her weeks-old daughter fight for her life. Camryn, born premature at 32 weeks, was hooked up to monitors; an alarm would go off when doctors needed to stimulate her breathing. But as frightening as those alarms were, it’s the screaming from a mother in another area of the NICU that still haunts Felix: piercing howls that wouldn’t stop. Nurses rushed to close Felix’s doors. She still doesn’t know what happened to that mother’s baby, but she couldn’t help but imagine the worst. And this, she thought to herself, could happen to Cammy. [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] Up to this point, Felix had planned to return to the track and add to her record-setting medal haul. But in that moment, the most decorated American female track-and-field Olympian of all time could not have felt far...

New top story from Time: How Spirited Away Changed Animation Forever

https://ift.tt/3xVoGP5 Twenty years ago, on July 20, 2001, a film that would become one of the most celebrated animated movies of all time hit theaters in Japan. Directed by Hayao Miyazaki and produced by Studio Ghibli, Sen to Chihiro no Kamikakushi, titled Spirited Away in English, would leave an indelible mark on animation in the 21st century. The movie arrived at a time when animation was widely perceived as a genre solely for children, and when cultural differences often became barriers to the global distribution of animated works. Spirited Away shattered preconceived notions about the art form and also proved that, as a film created in Japanese with elements of Japanese folklore central to its core, it could resonate deeply with audiences around the world. [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] The story follows an ordinary 10-year-old girl, Chihiro, as she arrives at a deserted theme park that turns out to be a realm of gods and spirits. After an overeating incident ...

1 killed, 2 injured as clash erupts in UP's Firozabad https://ift.tt/3kAfDML

One person was killed, while two others were injured after a clash erupted in Uttar Pradesh on Tuesday. Commenting on the incident, SP Sachindra Patel said the clash was reported from Firozabad's Dakshin area, where an e-rickshaw driver and a bangle godown owner entered into an altercation when the bangles carried by the driver got damaged. Later, the e-rickshaw driver called some of his associates at the spot. 

PM Modi remembers Major Dhyan Chand on National Sports Day https://ift.tt/3hFXX0y

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid his tribute to hockey legend Major Dhyan Chand on his 115th birth anniversary. The occasion is celebrated as National Sports Day in the country. 

Amit Shah to visit West Bengal as BJP, TMC cross swords after attack on Nadda's convoy https://ift.tt/3gzz9Yq

Senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader and Union Home Minister Amit Shah is likely to visit West Bengal later this month. It will be Shah’s second visit to the poll-bound state within a month. 

FOX NEWS: Mom accidentally walks by daughter’s Zoom call naked, recalls story in hilarious Facebook video: 'Humiliating'

Mom accidentally walks by daughter’s Zoom call naked, recalls story in hilarious Facebook video: 'Humiliating' This first-grade class got quite the eyeful. via FOX NEWS https://ift.tt/3gw5HCs

New top story from Time: The 5 Best New TV Shows Our Critic Watched in May 2021

https://ift.tt/2RRfMSR Finally: the sun is shining , the weather is warming, COVID-era regulations are relaxing as infection rates plummet and vaccination numbers (slowly) keep ticking upward. It may not be time to hang the “mission accomplished” banner—is it ever time to hang such a banner?—but as immunity sets in, May 2021 has seen America’s masked, distanced millions begin to venture out of our living rooms and back to some semblance of in-person social life. So, of course, this is the month that the TV gods chose to deliver the year’s biggest and best selection of new programming to date. Isn’t that always the way? [time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”] It was a struggle to narrow down the list to just five highlights. I also suggest checking out Starz’s Run the World , Apple TV+’s 1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything , Showtime’s Ziwe and HBO’s rebooted In Treatment . For even more recommendations, here are my favorite new and returning shows of the year so far. ...

FOX NEWS: Gorillas find snake in Disney World's Animal Kingdom exhibit in viral video Even gorillas don’t know how to react to snakes.

Gorillas find snake in Disney World's Animal Kingdom exhibit in viral video Even gorillas don’t know how to react to snakes. via FOX NEWS https://ift.tt/3A0GVUy