Poltergeist Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Poltergeist quiz and we will tell you which Poltergeist character you are. Play it now.

The use of special effects in movies has become so technically advanced, sensational, and terrifying that they can sometimes steal the show from the human actors. And their prices are typically significantly higher. The cast of “Poltergeist,” for example, consists of relatively unknown performers; however, this is not a problem because the real stars of the film are producer Steven Spielberg (“Raiders of the Lost Ark”), director Tobe Hooper (“The Texas Chainsaw Massacre”), and their respective reputations for realistic violence and special effects. The fact that their names are attached to this scary movie gives the impression that its technology will be flawless. And they don’t let us down in any way. This is the film that “The Amityville Horror” hoped it would become someday. It starts with the same components as before (a happy American family, living in a big, comfortable house). It gives similar warnings of impending disaster (household objects move by themselves, the weather seems different around the house than anywhere else). And it comes to an end with an identical apocalypse (spirits take total possession of the house, and terrorize the family). Even some of the special effects are quite similar to one another, such as when greasy goo begins to ooze around the edges of a doorjamb.

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But “Poltergeist” is an effective thriller, not so much because of the special effects as it is because Hooper and Spielberg have tried to see the strange events of the movie through the eyes of the family members, instead of just standing back and letting the special effects overwhelm the cast along with the audience. This makes the movie more believable and helps the audience feel more invested in the characters. The American suburb, which is Steven Spielberg’s preferred setting, is featured prominently in this film (also the locale of parts of “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “Jaws” and “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial”). Although the haunted house does not have seven gables, it does have a garage large enough to fit two cars. It is inhabited by a relatively typical family consisting of two parents and three children, and the film starts on a note that is somewhat upbeat with the performance of “The Star-Spangled Banner” as a television station goes off the air.
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Poltergeist quiz.

Poltergeist Quiz

The beginning images, on the other hand, have a sinister air to them. They are a very tight shot of the screen of a television, which is covered in the typical patriotic images (Iwo Jima, the Lincoln Memorial). Why are they so close? On the surface of the screen, it appears as though we are being encouraged to read between the lines in order to discern additional information. In point of fact, the youngest daughter of the family, who is depicted as an open-faced, long-haired, and naive little cherub, starts talking to the screen. She maintains relationships with various “TV people.” In a short amount of time, she vanishes from this plane of existence and travels to the TV people, wherever they may be, to live with them. Strange occurrences start to take place inside the house. Something sinister is going on with an old tree. The swimming pool acts as if it has a will of its own at times. And the real estate developers, who were also the antagonists in Steven Spielberg’s “Jaws,” play a role as the antagonists in this film as well. This time, rather than luring people back into the water, they are going to construct a housing development on top of an old cemetery.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Poltergeist quiz.

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This is all ridiculous, but Hooper and Spielberg keep our interest by observing the daily routines of this family so closely that, because the family seems real, the strange events take on a certain credibility by association. This allows the absurdity of the situation to be taken seriously by the audience. This takes place within the first sixty minutes of the film. Then, all hell breaks loose, and the movie begins to operate on the same plane as “Alien” or “Altered States,” as a shocking special-effects sound-and-light show. In other words, the movie becomes a sound-and-light extravaganza. It’s almost as if a closet is located in a different dimension. The once-popular watering hole is currently occupied by grasping, despondent representations of the undead. A professional psionics expert and a lady dwarf who specializes in “cleaning” haunted homes are both helping in the search for the missing little girl who was last seen in the area. Nobody ever does decide whether a poltergeist is really involved in the events that take place in the house, or who the poltergeist may be, but if that doesn’t prevent them from naming the movie “Poltergeist,” then I guess it shouldn’t keep us from enjoying it. Nobody ever does decide whether a poltergeist is really involved in the events that take place in the house.Also, you must try to play this Poltergeist quiz.

For more personality quizzes check this: Selma Quiz.

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