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The Haunted Mansion (film)

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The Haunted Mansion
Image:Haunted mansion ver3.jpg
The movie cover for The Haunted Mansion.
Directed by Rob Minkoff
Produced by Andrew Gunn
Don Hahn
Written by David Berenbaum
Starring Eddie Murphy
Jennifer Tilly
Terence Stamp
Nathaniel Parker
Music by Mark Mancina
Cinematography Remi Adefarasin
Distributed by Walt Disney Pictures
Release date(s) November 26 2003
Running time 99 min.
Language English
Budget $90,000,000 (estimated)
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Haunted Mansion is a film released in November 2003 and produced and distributed by The Walt Disney Company.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Based loosely on The Haunted Mansion theme park ride, this film stars Eddie Murphy and Marsha Thomason as Jim and Sara Evers, proprietors of "Evers and Evers Real Estate" and parents of 10 year old Michael and 13 year old Megan (played by Marc John Jefferies and Aree Davis respectively). Jim is a workaholic who has not been spending time with his family, to the disapproval of his wife. On a weekend trip in which he has promised to devote time to the family, they make a detour through the swamps of New Orleans to Gracey Manor, a decaying but valuable property. The owners have contacted Sara with interest in selling.

Once arriving a violent rainstorm erupts, and they are led inside by butler Ramsley (Terence Stamp) who is immediately disturbed that Sara did not come alone. They are introduced to Master Edward Gracey (Nathaniel Parker), the heir of the house, and invited to stay the night as the roads have flooded. The children are sent to one bedroom, the parents to another.

As the parents are separated and Jim finds himself trapped in a secret passage, the children are led by a floating blue orb into an attic room where they discover an antiquated painting that looks exactly like their mother. They are encountered by Ezra and Emma (a footman and maid), who work for the mansion who warn them of impending danger. They discover that the two are actually ghosts, as is Master Gracey, and that he thinks their mother is his lost suicided lover Elizabeth returned to him from beyond the grave.

Meanwhile Jim discovers the animated head of gypsy Madame Leota (Jennifer Tilly in a critically praised performance), stored magically inside a crystal ball. Through her help, he is led to his children and together they follow her instructions through a ghost-populated graveyard to find a key that will help them flee the mansion. They learn that there is a curse binding the souls of everyone who has died in the mansion to walk its premises until it is broken.

Jim and his daughter go into a mausoleum (per the gypsy's instructions) and locate the key in question, only to be attacked by hundreds of zombie-corpses. They find themselves trapped in the mausoleum, but his 10-year-old son overcomes his fear of spiders (which are crawling all over the outside of the crypt door) and frees them just in time.

They use the key to unlock a trunk. Inside the trunk is a letter from Elizabeth declaring that she loved Master Gracey. It is revealed that Ramsley, also a ghost, poisoned Elizabeth to prevent an "interracial relationship" between she and Gracey. He then traps the children in a trunk suitcase and literally throws Jim out of the house, locking him outside. He confronts Sara and makes it clear that she will either proceed with the marriage (and a suicide) to help break the curse from his point of view, or that her children will die.

Jim, attempting to break back into the mansion but finding it magically sealed, sits outside in vain until the head of Madame Leota comedically rolls up to him to encourage him to keep trying. He drives his BMW through the wall just in time to stop the wedding and confront Gracey with the truth. When all is revealed, Ramsley is enraged and envokes the powers of Hell. The multiple windows of the mountain shatter as evil spirits fly around the room. Then out of the fireplace comes a giant demonic dragon. The dragon sucks Ramsley into the fire place for his eternal punishment in Hell. Before that, Ramsley grabs Jim's left leg and then Gracey saves him before he is pulled in. Unfortunately Sara has had enough of the poison given to her before the wedding to die. Just in time, Elizabeth's spirit moves into Sara's body and revives her, breaking the curse and bringing her back to life.

Thus all of the spirits in the mansion, including Elizabeth, Master Gracey, Ezra, and Emma ascend into the light of Heaven, their curse broken. Jim has learned an important lesson about family, and his son and daughter have learned bravery in the face of evil. The family, now in possession of the deed to the house, head back home (with the encased head of Madame Leota in the back seat and a quartet of singing busts strapped to the back of the car singing their own version of When the Saints Come Marching In).

[edit] Critical Reception

The film received mixed commentary. Many critics felt Murphy's performance was out of place; Thomason's (a British actress affecting an American accent) cold. Fans also greatly criticized Jennifer Tilly's casting as Madame Leota, whom they consider to be one of the most important characters in the ride. Fans also criticized the film for not having their favourite scenes from the ride in it, such as the stretching gallery. Others praised the film for never wavering from its dark and serious message of racial tolerance despite being directed at children. It was also praised for having a large number of known crew members including Rick Baker, Jay Redd and Mona May. The film did very well in its opening weekend, grossing approximately $35,000,000 in the United States.

[edit] Box office

Although film was mildly successful at the box office, it didn't make as much money as Disney's other ride-based movie, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. It grossed a total of $75,847,266 in the US alone. The film was, however, successful outside the US, grossing a total of $106,443,000 there. It did make more money than Disney's first ride-based movie, The Country Bears.

[edit] Cast

[edit] References to the attraction in the film

As the film is based on the ride, the film has many references to the Haunted Mansion and even some to The Phantom Manor, Europe's version of the Haunted Mansion. Below is a list of the references.

  • The large plaque on the front of the video/DVD box of the film, is taken from the ride.
  • The storyline of the film is loosely based on Phantom Manor's storyline. In the ride, The Phantom hangs the groom and leaves the bride (named Melanie) searching the house for the groom. In the film, Ramsley poisons the bride, and later, Master Gracey hangs himself.
  • The theme song from the ride, Grim Grinning Ghosts, is used in various forms throughout Mark Mancina's score for the film.
  • "Welcome Foolish Mortals", the famous welcoming is not voiced by Paul Frees but by Corey Burton, who was a fan of Frees's work and did the Ghost Host's voice in the Haunted Mansion Holiday overlay of the Disneyland attraction.
  • The floating candelabrum from the Endless Hallway.
  • The floating tarot cards are from Madame Leota's room.
  • The grand foyer featured in the movie's mansion is based on original concepts for the ride's foyer. It is somewhat copied from the loading area from the Phantom Manor.
  • Master Gracey is a main character, played by Nathaniel Parker.
  • The music box in the opening credits is a reference to the Phantom Manor, where there is a music box in a gazebo in the facade.
  • The Bleeding Bride also is a main character in the film.
  • The ballroom dancers (they later appear as ghosts).
  • A clock strikes 13, as in the ride, although the design and placement of the clock are different.
  • Gracey's hanging corpse and a woman's scream is taken from the ride.
  • The mansion's exterior is built in a style similar to that of the Disneyland mansion (Greek Revival). However, many Italianate elements were introduced.
  • The raven is featured in some scenes of the film, but the bird used is not even a raven.
  • When Jim gets out of the car, there is a plant in the background like one from the ride's facade.
  • In the background when Jim is turned away from the house, there is a bust in the background that looks like Thurl Ravenscroft.
  • The conservatory.
  • The graveyard.
  • The opening doors, they are taken from the rides entrances.
  • When the Evers enter the mansion, you can see two of the changing portraits on the landing. They reappear in a later scene.
  • Spiders.
  • The ballroom set is inspired by the scene in the ride. The original scene was to have the camera moving along a balcony, giving the audience a view of the ballroom from above, exactly like the ride. The ballroom is one of several scenes in the film that are superficially similar to their counterparts in the rides.
  • Wallace Shawn's character, Ezra, is named after one of the Hitchhiking Ghosts.
  • The wallpaper with demon faces.
  • The light and table in Jim's room resembles the set-up of the séance room in the ride.
  • A chair in Jim's room looks like the chair from the ride with the odd face.
  • The library.
  • The library has the piano in it, but with no phantom pianist.
  • In the library, there is a samurai suit, which originally was to come alive, but the scene was scrapped.
  • The large red sofa in the library is actually taken from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
  • The Ghost Ball is new to the movie and has never appeared in the ride, although guests and photos on websites have spoke of, or shown "ghost balls".
  • Dina Waters plays a maid in the film, and female cast members dress as maids in the rides.
  • The elevator in the film may be a reference to the stretching gallery in the Disneyland version of the attraction which is in fact an elevator.
  • The Portrait Gallery is an almost exact replica of the one in the ride, although the portraits are somewhat different from the ride.
  • The watching busts are in the film.
  • The breathing door from the Corridor of Doors is in the film.
  • A dark area with a ringing telephone seems to be inspired by the loading zone of the ride. The mirror displays Eddie Murphy's facing morphing between a corpse and back to normal. This is a reference to the changing Master Gracey potrait in the ride.
  • The attic scenes are very similar to the ones in the ride.
  • The portrait of Elizabeth may be a refernce to the bride portrait in the Phantom Manor.
  • The Heartbeat sound effect can be heard in several scenes.
  • Madame Leota has a major part, and the séance room is a cross between the ride scene and a gypsy tent.
  • The flying instruments and objects.
  • "There's always my way..."
  • The hearse with the invisible horse, except the horse is a skeleton in the film.
  • The ghost bicyclists.
  • The ghost duellists from the ballroom scene.
  • The tea party.
  • The ghost with the hooked nose is the hearse driver in the ride.
  • The floating teapot.
  • The hanged man in the portrait in the ride.
  • The caretaker and his whimpering dog make a brief appearance, although the filmmakers mistakenly portray them as ghosts. Originally, the caretaker was to be a main character, played by Don Knotts.
  • The king and the queen on the see-saw.
  • The decapitated knight and the executioner.
  • The Hitchhiking Ghosts make an appearance, and Gus and Phineas talk. We can also see that Gus has been given a walking stick instead of his ball and chain. Originally, they were to be main characters, but were minused down to their present roles, thanks to Emma and Ezra being developed.
  • Animal screech from the graveyard.
  • The singing busts appear, singing a verse from Grim Grinning Ghosts. One is modeled after Thurl Ravenscroft, and another resembles Paul Frees.
  • The mausoleum may be a reference to the crypt at the end of the ride.
  • The inside of the mausoleum may be a reference to the catacombs in the Phantom Manor.
  • The large black coffin.
  • The zombies are from The Phantom Manor, as none appear in the Haunted Mansion.
  • Terence Stamp's character, Ramsley, traps Megan and Michael in a trunk. This may be a reference to one of the stories made by fans of the ride, where the bride died after being locked in a trunk.
  • Ezra (not the Hitchiking Ghost) plays a ghastly rendition of the "Wedding March" on the ballroom organ in the movie. In the ride, a phantom pianist labors over a similarly morbid variation of that piece, but in the attic. While playing, Ezra's costume greatly resembles that of the organist in the ride.
  • Originally, the skulls that fly out of the organ were to be put in the film, but the idea was scrapped.
  • Jim has to battle suits of armor in the film. This is a reference to the moving suit of armor in the rides.
  • The evil spirits flying in through the windows are somewhat similar to the ghosts flying out of the graveyard in the ride.
  • At the end of the credits, Madame Leota croons the "Hurry back" spiel that guests hear from Little Leota at the end of the ride.
  • Like the rides themselves, the film claims to have 999 spirits in the mansion, but this is not true, as only about 400 ghosts are seen in the film. In the rides, there are about 600 ghosts in the ride at Walt Disney World, 500 in the ride at Disneyland, 450 in Phantom Manor and 500 at Tokyo.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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