-title Poltergeist: Behind the Scenes of a Horror Classic

poltergeist‘ Actor reveals Practical Effects Secrets, Nearly Lost Face to Jello

Forty-two years‌ after its release, details surrounding the making of ‍the 1982 horror classic ​ Poltergeist continue to surface, offering a glimpse into ⁣the ingenuity-and occasional ⁢mishaps-behind its iconic scares. Martin Casella, who played Dr. marty​ Casey, recently shared behind-the-scenes anecdotes detailing the practical effects used to create the film’s unsettling imagery.

Casella described the infamous scene involving a steak crawling across ‍a kitchen countertop ⁤as achieved with a crew member operating chopsticks through a ⁤hidden track in the grouting.The maggots ‌appearing on a discarded chicken‍ leg were handled by on-set personnel to ensure no ⁢harm came to the‍ creatures.

Perhaps ⁢the most startling revelation ​concerns⁤ the scene where Dr. Casey appears ‌to tear off his own face. A full upper-body dummy was constructed, with a wig costing $10,000 (in 1981 ⁤dollars). ⁢Casella admitted he couldn’t convincingly perform the effect, leading director⁤ steven Spielberg to step in, using Casella’s⁣ ring for the shot.⁤ Later reshoots required three ‍hours of prosthetic ⁢application,‍ which were initially‌ applied to the wrong⁣ side ‍of Casella’s face due to a ⁣mirror image ⁣error.

A scene involving Casella’s character being lifted and bitten ‍by a ⁢ghost, utilizing explosive squibs filled with detergent, ⁢was ‍cut. The effects team jokingly referred to​ the effect‌ as resembling ⁤”ghost ⁢semen,” but⁢ Spielberg ultimately ​removed it because it detracted from JoBeth ​Williams’s powerful⁢ performance in a​ scene where her character senses her daughter’s peril, ‍delivering the line, ​”She went through my soul.”

Casella noted that Poltergeist ⁢ initially faced an ‌R rating due‌ to its​ intensity,⁤ but​ Spielberg successfully‍ argued⁢ for ‌a PG rating-a​ rarity‍ at the time, as the PG-13⁤ rating didn’t⁣ exist until 1984⁣ with Indiana Jones and the Temple ‌of Doom.

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