Lou Barlow, 'Choke Chain'
Untrained you never shut up
Needs keep you empty
Freedom spins you out of control
Till someone chokes you with a chain.
Learn to be paranoid
Fear pulls my strings, too
Oh what a lack of trust can do
Poor broken-hearted you.
I'm sorry I hurt you
Please don't leave me on my knees
We had a simple understanding
Didn't we?
Didn't we?
All consumed and convinced as ever
But where were you?
Tease my guilt but please me still
All the others just disgust me
Too simple to trust me
Too dull to engage
Too shallow to please me
It would be so easy to please me.
The Haunted Palace (The Ghosts of Danvers Hospital) (transcription of the Session 9 companion featurette)
David Caruso (Actor): "There's something here. I mean, there's nowhere like this in North America. This is probably the scariest building in the world."
Jeremy Barnard (Photographer): "There's something very human about this place. There's something that's here that's in all of us."
Mike Ramseur (Painter / Author): "It's a heavy-duty place, it's extremely heavy-duty, and it's very psychic, and I think we all in a sense have to protect ourselves."
A. Andy Chulyk (Sculptor): "You know, art and madness has always been connected. Creativity and madness. There's a fine line."
Peter Mullen (Actor): "When we perform in these rooms, it's not difficult to be fucking real because it's creepy."
Brad Anderson (Director, Writer, Editor): "We wrote the script with this actual location in mind."
Mike Ramseur: "The psychotic thought process that went on inside these walls. You can't imagine it."
Peter Mullen: "Don't suggest there was no pain in this place. Don't suggest that this was a lovely little sunny outpost for the inmates, you know, or if you do so, you do so at your peril."
[Title card] Becoming a Snake Pit
Ramseur, pastel: Heavy Metal Entry |
Danvers Hospital closed in 1982 [note: this appears to be incorrect; although Danvers was dismantled throughout the '80s, it wasn't until 1992 that it was officially closed.]
Was it that something went wrong for all of these people? Or is it that something these people did was taken the wrong way? |
Mike Ramseur: "There was a lot of reform in the beginning, there was a congregate diner room, there was a no-restraint policy around 1900."
David Caruso: "There's a real element of loss here, there's a real element of a high-stakes tragedy that's taking place."
Mike Ramseur: "The whole story of Danvers is about the evils of overcrowding which the physicians were always lamenting in their reports, so it was just constantly escalating census. By 1900 actually the whole dream of moral treatment which brought a place like Danvers into being was dead. These institutions were on their way — all of them, they were all the same story — were on their way to becoming snake pits."
Ramseur, pastel: Danvers Red and White |
The Pre-Frontal Lobotomy was developed at Danvers Hospital in 1948
A. Andy Chulyk: "This is where they did the lobotomies, this is what happened, this is the horrific thing that happened here; you can just keep... it can just keep going."
Mike Ramseur: "The stories like the grandeur, the grandeur of the architecture and all this, versus the stuff that went on inside."
[Title card] Overactive Curiosity
Jeremy Barnard, A. Andy Chulyk: Mythra Circle (alt) |
Peter Mullen: "Madness often times is completely ill-defined. Most madness is overactive curiosity. What's it like to walk down the middle of the street with no clothes on? What's it like to take an axe and chop off someone's head? And that's what makes them frightening, and that's what makes that place frightening. It's because not only were there people there who would exercise that bizarre curiosity, [but] many of them were physically lobotomised to prevent them doing so which thus makes the state - or the keeper - as bad as the kept, and I think that's what comes across here."
"We did a scene on the roof and for a blip of a nanosecond - it was that short - I wanted to throw myself off the roof. I don't know, would I fall, would I float? We're just chatting away and it suddenly just - like a voice - was kind of, 'try it, someone will catch you, it's a film, actors don't fall off roofs', and that scared me. It scared me of what you're capable of. Like why on earth would I want to jump off a fucking roof? I have no reason to want to fucking kill myself. But that was the thing, it wasn't a suicidal thought, it was a curiosity, and... I'm pretty convinced that came from here, that comes from the building."
[Title card] Inspired by the house
Brad Anderson: "It's a horror movie in the sense... in the traditional sense of horror as dread as opposed to shock. It's more about the internal mechanisms, the inner workings of the human mind and how they kind of get twisted; particularly five men, the relationships between five men under very stressful circumstances, working in a big crazy place like this and doing dangerous work. The horror evolves out of their relationships."
Josh Lucas (Actor): "The beauty of the script is that all of us have ... there's very different ideas about why life has not worked for them and why they've ended up in a position where they have a very risky, very dangerous, very lonely, ugly job."
Brad Anderson: "These guys enter this place and five days later they've kind of become patients themselves. The building has absorbed them, taken them in."
Brendan Sexton III (Actor): "The institution, the atmosphere is the sixth character in the film. It's the one pushing the other characters and making them change course and have different motivations, make them deviate from their normal characters. That's the whole sort of supernatural eeriness to it."
David Caruso: "When you get to do your first walkthrough, it's not something I mentioned earlier that you kind of go into denial to perform the movie, but you do your first walkthrough and those images and that feeling will stay with you forever."
Steve Gevedon (Actor / Co-writer): "It was a very synergistic kind of thing where we were inspired by the house, the house inspired us."
Peter Mullen: "It's a huge kind of maze of anguish. Every corridor has a different kind of story to tell, every room, every blade of grass around here has been touched by what went on and it looms large in everybody's psyche. You act very differently in a place like this."
[Title card] Art Has a Habit of Going Bad
Peter Mullen: "I don't know how much I believe in all this supernatural-y sort of stuff, but if it is there then because this film has been done - touch wood - with relatively good intent then there's been little interference. I think buildings and places where things have happened, I think if they think there's an ill intent then they start to react. But what it is, if it's done with ill intent, if it's done for ego or exploitation then art has a habit of turning nasty on you."
"I was waiting... I found a little corner for myself because I was having to do some quite sort of heavy kind of stuff... there was no one around me and someone whispers 'Peter'. It was the way in which they whispered it that made me turn. [...] it was a request, a very, very quiet request, and as I looked I was waiting to see someone [say] 'Peter, sorry to bother you, you're wanted on set', [but] as I turned there was no one there. I hadn't created this for myself, someone said to me as a request, 'Peter', and it scared me, it did scare me. But not scared in the sense 'oh my god, any second now someone's going to jump out and kill me', it scared me because it was a request, it was almost 'would you like to come in, I'd like to talk to you about something', and that's scary, because you fear for... that's when you fear more for your sanity than for yourself. It's like, no, I'm not going in there, I don't want to be talking to any fucking ghost, no. Someone make a film about it, fine, someone write me about it, fine, but I'm sorry, I don't have the wherewithal to sit down with something that doesn't exist to tell me what the fuck happened in this place over the last hundred and fifty years."
Bonner Medical. © Tom Kirsch. http://opacity.us/ |
[Title card] It's When You Walk Away
Peter Mullen: "I'm sure there are many ghostly spirits around here that would find us - our activities - laughable. It's like, you wanna know madness? I'll show you madness. Enter my brain for fifty seconds."
David Caruso: "In order to perform the movie you have to go to a place of denial somewhat because you kind of, well... wow, a lot went down here."
(As if the place wasn't off-kilter enough, staff felt it necessary to add a little clown spice into the mix.) Jeremy Barnard: clown mold |
Mike Ramseur: "I've developed more of a sense of respect here that borders on a fear, it's a respect out of fear, because I feel like in its own way the place is alive."
Peter Mullen: "I don't think it's like you walk in and it's musty and [you think to yourself] 'I want out of here', I think it's when you walk away."
Paintings, illustrations and history
by Michael Ramseur
old school website and across the web (just search his name to find his body of work which consists of art, videos and books):
http://www.angelfire.com/id2/DanversStateHosp/dshgues.htm
exit doors Mythra |
View the Danvers-related artwork of Jeremy Barnard and A. Andy Chulyk, two exhibitions titled "Light into Darkness". Click. Click.
If you want to see the 12-minute featurette 'The Haunted Palace: The Ghosts of Danvers Hospital' for yourself, you could either pick up a copy of the psychological horror film Session 9 (where you'll find it on the special features menu) or, if you aren't able to do this for whatever reason, you could always see if it's on the net - the featurette, not the film. Last I checked it was indeed. I won't link to it because chances are it will be removed in the near-future and then the link'll be redundant.
History of Danvers State Hospital and the source of an old picture or two that I've used, here:
http://www.danverslibrary.org/archive/?page_id=1096
Avalon Danvers apartments, Danvers MA, 26th August 2010. CC-BY-3.0 John Phelan. |
I like the parallel to be drawn between the mental hospital of both the film and of real life with the outside, how these individuals in the short featurette address the nature and personality of Danvers State Hospital as being like a microcosm for the world - we enter and it devours us. We're not from here but we're acclimatised to think that this is home, that this is where we belong. It's kind of insane.
From the boy who cried fair use. Fair use! Fair use! Fair use! Fair use! Fair use! Fair use! Was I not entirely fair?
(Be there, do it, see the movie, get the t-shirt - at your own discretion, of course. P.s I'm better than you. But nobody that I've referenced here affiliates what I've said, so get your panties out of a twist. There's no affiliation going on. None. I just appreciate their work. Is that alright or—?)
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