========= Haunt Theme ===========
Hello, my name is Michael Bruner; my wife's name is Susan, and the little baby you
see is our son Logan. Now, we didn't always do this haunted house thing. In fact,
we only started it after we moved into this particular house. It seemed only natural
after what we found inside the walls.
Sorry, I'm getting ahead of myself; here's the whole story.
I was moving some furniture in our house when I slipped and dented the drywall. Well,
you can ask your parents, when you damage drywall you usually have to cut out the
whole square out and replace it. A real pain in the wazoo job if you get my drift.
As I removed the damaged section, I noticed something shiny reflecting light. It turned
out to be some children's toys. Looking deeper, that's when my wife and I found the
children's clothing. From the looks of it, it looked like the possessions of lots
of different children. Weird, but nothing to get excited about, right?
My wife, Susan, was a little curious about this and we called the previous owner,
a middle aged housewife named Patty, and she had no idea that the clothes were there
and had no idea where they came from.
That's when I discovered the blood on the clothes.
I called the police, feeling that foul play was involved. Luckily it was Officer Reilly
who answered the call. He was an old timer and he said that he remembered my house.
It seems that about twenty years ago the house was owned by a man named Allistair
Crowley. The newspapers of the day called him the man so evil; he had to be killed
twice. He hated children; so after it got dark out he went searching for children
who were outside, alone. In one year's time, seven children disappeared. It was the eighth
child when Officer Reilly caught Crowley red handed. It made all the papers of the
day. The trial was highly publicized, but Allistair Crowley was only tried for the
murder of the eighth child. Why? They never found the bodies of the other seven kids, the
bodies that were hidden inside the walls of our house! Crowley however, was sent
to the electric chair for the eighth child. They pulled the switch and the physician
in attendance pronounced him dead.
The doctor made a mistake.
Allistair Crowley was the only man ever to survive the electric chair.
Crowley managed to escape when they were sending his "body" to the morgue. The parents
of the missing children, led by Officer Reilly, tracked him back to this house, the
house that Susan and I live in, the very same house you are about to enter. After
a brief scuffle, Officer Reilly shot and killed Crowley as Crowley screamed "I'll come
back from the dead and take every child that steps into my house!" The day? October
31st, it was Halloween.
End of Story, right? Wrong.
It seems that Crowley's body disappeared from the morgue a second time.
Fast forward to today, every once in a while, my wife and I will hear childrens voices,
but we can't find out from where the voices are coming from. Then there's the young
red-headed girl's reflection that we'll see in our bedroom mirror, and when we turn around there's no one there. What's even worse is the creaking up in the attic. As
if someone was walking back and forth. I want to go up into the attic to check it
out, the entrance to the attic is in the carport, just look up, and you can't miss
it. But I can't get up there, it's locked, from the inside.
People walk through and tell me that my eight monsters in the maze scared them. Now,
this should cheer me up, I work very hard to give the kids a good scare, and I love
running this haunted house. What confuses me is that I only have five friends helping
me, including my wife and I, that makes seven. So who is the eighth monster in my
maze?
Why don't you go inside and check it out for me? I'll wait right here for you.
=========== Haunt Tips ===========
Location
Does location really matter when it comes to seasonal haunted houses? I believe it
does, but only in extreme cases. If you hold your event in the middle of your local
slums, you will surely notice a difference in your attendance (not good).
At the same time, if you hold an event in your city's most populated area, you will
also see a difference in attendance (this is good). On the average, most people are
willing to drive the distance to visit an attraction if it at least meets their personal standards. (And of course, the attraction needs to be good) Use a familiar area
for your event and always have security on site. Have a well-lit area with close
(free) parking to the event. Offer on-site restrooms or food if they are not found
near by. Does your facility even look haunted? Consider "spooking it up" with a haunted facade.
Haunted Themes
Is your haunted house a horror house, or does it focus more on realistic haunting?
A theme will help you maintain a certain spooky atmosphere for your haunt. I first
started my haunted house various gags and assorted terror. This included horror movie
characters and lots of chainsaws. It was not until a local newspaper review pointed out
that a certain haunted house had no plot. "A plot?" I asked. "Who needs a plot?"
The paper was right though; they did need a theme. Since then, our house has been
running on a legend that its dead owner, Allistair Crowley, has returned to reclaim his house.
It really gives the audience something to focus on. The entire attraction revolves
around this one story, so chainsaws and movie characters are limited.
Create a spooky character for your haunted house. Robin Graves, Harry the Haunted,
etc ... Develop a haunted story or legend about your haunted house. How did it get
haunted? If you use a theme, stick with it! Do not give up half way in it and start
adding in clowns!
A Floor Plan
Is your layout a safely planned "one-way" path? Walls, ramps, and other areas are
all very important issues in a haunt. You always want to give your audience a smooth
tour without having to "back track" over them, or having to ask them to hold on while
you make sure that it's clear for them to proceed. Signs, tour guides, and recorded
messages will help you keep the tours flowing right. Get the most out of your facility
by sectioning it off into several small staging areas. Consider using guides to stand
to the side and quietly show the way if needed. With a "one way" path, anyone could
tour the house and still find their out with no direction.
Ghostly Scenes
Should you use walk by scenes, or use interactive actors and creeps? You're scare
factor is most affected by your scenes, so incorporate your audience as much as you
can into them. I prefer NOT to use handrails in my scenes since it tends to separate
the audience from the horror. The guests need to be a part of thrill and not just on-lookers.
Simple walk through haunts is good for younger audiences, but tend to bore the older
ones. A good haunt should use both walk by scenes AND short acting skits.
Consider using doors that the audience must open in order to exit the room. Involve
them! Always plan to scare your audience forward (this means "getting them" from
behind). In every room, use a focal point that they are attracted to first. This
could be a body, a table, or whatever. As they are looking at it, the creep comes out from
behind. It works every time! Be sure to move around the scenes each time so the audience
is left wondering what will happen next.
Music
Are you looking for some really good haunted house music to play this year? Almost
every costume shop or Wal-Mart (only during the Halloween season) has a great spooky
music cassette or CD. "Horror Sounds of the Night" and "Haunted Horror Sounds" are
CD's that I prefer. I have also found that movie tracks work good too. Check out the CD
entitled HALLOWEEN: The Best of John Carpenter.
Advertising and Promotions
I am a firm believer in effective advertising. Even if your haunted house is not the
best this year, you still need to promote it like crazy. You can use flyers, posters,
radio and TV commercials, free public service announcements, direct mail coupons,
billboards, newspaper ads and free articles, publicity stunts, and even merchandise.
No matter you do to promote the event, WORD OF MOUTH will always be the best! This
comes from having a great show, and tons of exposure.
Safe Lighting
Number one on the safe lighting chart is the subject of seizures and strobe lights.
From my knowledge with haunted houses, seizure activity is brought on with EXCESSIVE
usage of strobe lights. This would include a constant strobe flash, and/or directing
the light source into the eyes of the audience. The strobe lights in our haunt are
only directed on fixed objects like our electric chair and etc. No matter what you
do to prevent harm to guests, it could always happen. Post "strobe light warning"
signs as we do, and at least cover yourself this way.
Another tip would be to ALWAYS have back-up lighting in your haunted house. If something
were to go wrong, you could turn on these lights quickly. We have overhead lights
with emergency switches, and use individual safety lights in each room. They consist of simple clamp-on lights.
Dark is good, but use it wisely. Perhaps place small candle fixtures or blacklights
to lead the way. In our darkness parts, we've added boarded windows. A regular (or
fake) window is covered with pieces of painted scrap wood. Under the wood is a hidden
light source that shines through the boards in the dark. Red, green, and even blue work
great!
Tunnels and Ramps
You should NEVER require anyone to bend over, jump, or crawl in a haunted house. They
should always tour in their normal standing position. Sorry, but save the tunnels
for the playground. There is too much risk for anyone having to crawl in an attraction, and there would be no way to regulate the safety issues on this either. On top of
all of this, tunnels do not even fit most haunted house criteria. In my opinion...too
dangerous, not scary, and not worth it!
Plus, it's always nice to have your haunt "handicap accessible" so that a person with
a prosthetic leg, a wheelchair, or even a kid with a cast on his broken leg and crutches
can navigate your haunt. Boasting that your site is "handicap accessible" is good public relations. Remember to test it out yourself first, grab your hands on a wheelchair
and test your haunt. If you can't navigate it, how can someone else do the same ?
As long as your ramps are built safe, I see no problem. Ramps add a special feel as
you tour a haunted house. I have one ramp (incline) that levels off into a flat platform.
You then exit down from the platform around a downward (decline) ramp. They are built sturdy and safe for even the biggest person. The great thing is that you hardly
notice you are on them until you reach the top. (A cheesy white stone paint job looks
great under blacklight.)
Haunted House Supplies
"One man's trash is another man's treasure." My favorite haunted house items were
bought at my local Salvation Army and Goodwill Thrift Stores. Lights, pictures, dummy
clothes, and loads more of CHEAP stuff can be picked up here! Visit your local thrift
store today, and you will not be disappointed. Yard sales also fall under this category.
If you have to buy at regular price, then Home Depot (also Lowe's, Builder's Square,
Hechinger's) are great places to shop. These large warehouse stores carry almost
everything for haunted houses except actual bloody props. The main advantage of shopping
here is the low prices and convenience of a "one stop" shop. Radio Shack is a great
place for red LED lights, mini-bulbs (for eyes), circuit boards, and all of the other nick-knacks for building detailed haunted house figures. You could also run into
specials on radio speakers and alarms. Also check out American Science and Surplus
for tons of useful leftover parts and accessories.
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