FILM
1761: WHITE NOISE
TRIVIA:
The recording used in the trailer that is attributed to Stanley Searles
("I love you") is thought to be the "ghostly" voice of
Searles, a former politician who died in 2002. The recording was said to have
been made by Searles' daughter, a well-known EVP researcher named Karen Mossey.
The
EVP recording from the trailer ("I will see you no more") that is
attributed to a woman named Ruth Baxter, who died in 1987, is supposedly a
recording from Point Lookout, a "haunted" lighthouse in Maryland,
made by an EVP researcher named Sarah Estep. The
lighthouse was used as a hospital during the Civil War, and some
interpretations of the recording believe it to say, "I was seeing the
war", or "I was seeing the water". While the recording is said
to be authentic by the AAEVP, the Ruth Baxter story is fictional.
(At
around one minute) Approximately one second before the WHITE NOISE title card
appears, there is a split-second subliminal "flash" image of a
skeletal figure. Immediately after the final blackout at the end of the film,
there is another "flash" image, this time (presumably) of Michael Keaton,
which fades into the static.
No comments:
Post a Comment