Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Rose Red Wikipedia pages reposted




 



The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red

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"The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer" redirects here. For other uses, see The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer (disambiguation).
The Diary of Ellen Ribauer: My Life at Rose Red
DiaryofEllenRimbauerBook.jpg
Hardcover edition
 

Author
Ridley Pearson

Country
United States

Language
English

Genre
Horror

Publisher
Hyperion


Publication date
 2001

Media type
Print (Hardcover & Paperback)

Pages
Hardcover: 252
Paperback: 278

ISBN
ISBN 0-7868-6801-5 (Hardcover)
ISBN 0-7868-9043-6 (Paperback)

OCLC
48659852

The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red is a 2001 novel by Ridley Pearson focusing on the life of the fictional John and Ellen Rimbauer and the construction of their mansion, Rose Red, in the early 20th century. Built on an old Indian burial ground, Rose Red is considered haunted and mysterious tragedies occur throughout the mansion's history. The novel is written in the form of a diary by Ellen Rimbauer, and annotated by the fictional professor of paranormal activity, Joyce Reardon. The novel also presents a fictional afterword by Ellen Rimbauer's grandson, Steven.


Contents  [hide]
1 Genesis of the novel
2 Plot synopsis
3 Reception
4 References
5 External links


Genesis of the novel[edit]
The novel's genesis came as part of a $200,000 promotional marketing campaign for Stephen King's Rose Red television miniseries.[1] Marketing of the film presented the movie as based on actual events.[1]
In 2000, two years before the Rose Red miniseries aired, the producers contracted with author Ridley Pearson to write a tie-in novel, to be titled The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red, under the pseudonym "Dr. Joyce Reardon" (one of the main characters of the miniseries).[2] The novel presented itself as nonfiction, and claimed to be the actual diary of Ellen Rimbauer (wife of the builder of Rose Red). The work was originally intended to be an architectural book featuring photos and drawings of the fictional Rose Red house with the supernatural elements subtly woven into the text and photos, but Pearson (building on several references to a diary in King's script for the miniseries) wrote it as Ellen Rimbauer's diary instead.[3] Inspired by the 1999 film The Blair Witch Project, King came up with the idea of presenting the novel as a real one by having "Dr. Joyce Reardon" edit the "diary."[3] King also inserted a reference into the book's foreword that a "best-selling author had found the journal in Maine", so that fans would be misled into concluding that King had written the work.[3] The ruse worked. Fans and the press speculated for some time that Stephen King or his wife Tabitha King had written the book until Pearson was revealed to be the novel's author.[4]
To help promote the miniseries and further blur the line between reality and fiction, the book contained a link to a fictional "Beaumont University" Web site where "Dr. Joyce Reardon" was alleged to have taught.[5][6] The site contains in-universe promotional material[7] as well as an easter egg page with diary entries that were "censored" from the main book.[8]
Intended to be a promotional item rather than a stand-alone work, its popularity spawned a 2003 prequel television miniseries to Rose Red, titled The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer.[4] The novel tie-in idea was repeated on Stephen King's next project, the miniseries Kingdom Hospital. Richard Dooling, King's collaborator on Kingdom Hospital and writer of several episodes in the miniseries, published a fictional diary, The Journals of Eleanor Druse, in 2004.[2][9]
Plot synopsis[edit]
The novel relates the building of the Rimbauer house (which is eventually named "Rose Red") in 1906 by John Rimbauer for his new wife, Ellen, as a wedding present. John Rimbauer owned an oil company, and used much of his wealth to build the mansion, which was in the Tudor-Gothic style and situated on 40 acres (160,000 m2) of woodland in the heart of Seattle, Washington, in the United States. The site was a Native American burial ground (a common motif in early works by author Stephen King).[10] The house appeared cursed even as it was being constructed: Three construction workers were killed on the site, and a construction foreman was murdered by a co-worker.[11]
Various entries in the fictional diary also describe Ellen Rimbauer's naiveté regarding sexual matters. In sometimes graphic language, the novel's "diary entries" discuss Ellen's sexual relationship with her physically, sexually, and emotionally abusive husband; her growing awareness of her lesbianism (or possible bisexuality; the novel is unclear); her friendship and sexual relationship with Sukeena; the birth of her children; and her growing dislike (even hatred) of her misogynistic, arrogant husband.[11] The novel portrays Ellen Rimbauer as a victim of sexual repression and Victorian morality.[12]
The novel tells how, while vacationing in Africa during the construction of her home, Ellen Rimbauer fell deathly ill and made the acquaintance of Sukeena, a local tribeswoman who nursed her back to health. Ellen and Sukeena became close, and Sukeena accompanied the Rimbauers back to the United States to work full time at the fully completed Rose Red. The Rimbauers had two children, Adam and April (born with a withered left arm). Tragic deaths and unexplained disappearances continued at the house. Many maids disappeared and one of John Rimbauer's friends died of an allergic reaction to a bee sting in the solarium. John Rimbauer's business partner (whom Rimbauer had cheated out of his part of their oil fortune) hanged himself in the parlor in front of the Rimbauer children. Six-year-old April also disappeared in the house, never to be seen again. Sukeena was the last person to see April alive before she vanished and was tortured by the local police after being suspected of April's "murder". After April was gone, eight-year-old Adam was sent to boarding school and kept away from Rose Red. Soon John Rimbauer (whom his wife suspected of adultery) committed suicide by throwing himself from one of the mansion's towers (an event which the reader learns later was actually murder, committeed by Ellen and Sukeena).[11]
As the novel's plot progresses, Ellen Rimbauer and Sukeena continue to live in the house. Ellen came to believe that if she never stopped building the house, she would never die. So Ellen used nearly all of her dead husband's fortune to enlarge the home significantly over the next several decades. According to Ellen, the house speaks to her and tells her what it wants constructed (a plot element reminiscent of the real-life construction of the Winchester Mystery House).[13] Mysterious disappearances continued: Deanna Petrie, a glamorous actress and friend of Ellen's (who was also rumored to have had a sexual relationship with her) vanished at the house while attending a party in the 1940s. A few years after, Sukeena disappeared and only Ellen and a few servants inhabited the property.[11]
In the fictional afterword, Ellen Rimbauer's grandson, Steven Rimbauer, notes that Ellen herself disappeared in the house in 1950. (This is where the fictional diary entries which comprise the novel's body end). The "afterword" also relates that, for several years after Ellen Rimbauer's disappearance, only servants occupied Rose Red but eventually all left out of fear. Adam Rimbauer inherited the house and lived there for a short time with his wife, but left after witnessing several paranormal events and allowed the house to be abandoned. After Adam Rimbauer's death, his wife sold off many of the home's antique furnishings. She generated some income by permitting the fictional "Seattle Historical Society" to give tours of the house; these ceased in 1972 after a participant disappeared while on a tour of the mansion. Investigations of the grounds and structure were conducted in the 1960s and 1970s to seek an explanation for the strange sounds, lights, and other phenomena alleged to have occurred there. But these ended, and the house fell into disrepair. In all, 26 people disappeared or died at Rose Red.[11]
The novel's "afterword" concludes by relating that a paranormal investigation into Rose Red by Dr. Joyce Reardon led to the deaths of several participants, and the home was demolished to make way for condominiums.[14]
Reception[edit]
The companion novel was a hit, rising high on several bestseller lists.[4] For example, it debuted in the #4 slot on USA Today's best-selling fiction list in January 2002,[15] and in the #15 slot on The New York Times' best-selling fiction list.[5] It rose to #1 on the Publishers Weekly best-selling fiction list for the week ending February 16, 2002.[16]
The book was not widely reviewed. USA Today called the book "clever, beautifully detailed fiction."[6] The Daily Evergreen qualified its review, but declared: "Considering everything, this book was quite entertaining. It's one of those books that is difficult to stop reading. The scare element wasn't too terribly high, but the fact Pearson and King marketed the book as an authentic diary makes it all the more enjoyable to read."[17] But the Christian Science Monitor gave it an "Unfavorable Review" rating, unhappy with the book's violence and explicit depictions of sexuality.[18]
References[edit]
1.^ Jump up to: a b Jones, Stephen. Creepshows: The Illustrated Stephen King Movie Guide. Watson-Guptill, 2002. ISBN 0-8230-7884-1
2.^ Jump up to: a b Wiater, Stan; Golden, Christopher; and Wagner, Hank. The Complete Stephen King Universe: A Guide to the Worlds of Stephen King. Rev. reprint ed. New York: Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 0-312-32490-1
3.^ Jump up to: a b c Jasmin, Ernest A. "'Rimbauer' Writer Clears Up Book, Film Mystery." Tacoma News Tribune. February 2, 2003.
4.^ Jump up to: a b c Jasmin, Ernest A. "Filming Begins on 'Rose Red' Prequel." Tacoma News Tribune. January 9, 2003.
5.^ Jump up to: a b Schneider, Michael. "Promos Blur Shades of 'Red'." Variety. January 21, 2002.
6.^ Jump up to: a b Blais, Jacqueline. "'Diary' Is a Window Into Spooky Rose Red." USA TODAY. January 24, 2002.
7.Jump up ^ Reardon, Joyce. "The Diary of Ellen Ribauer (archive)". Retrieved 6 February 2011.
8.Jump up ^ Reardon, Joyce. "Missing Diary Excerpts". Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 15 February 2011.
9.Jump up ^ Eleanor Druse is a key character in Kingdom Hospital, much as Dr. Joyce Readon and Ellen Rimbauer are key characters in Rose Red.
10.Jump up ^ Stephen King novels which feature Native American burial grounds include The Shining and Pet Sematary. See: Badley, Linda. Writing Horror and the Body: The Fiction of Stephen King, Clive Barker, and Anne Rice. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1996. ISBN 0-313-29716-9; Wiater, Stan; Golden, Christopher; and Wagner, Hank. The Stephen King Universe: A Guide to the Worlds of the King of Horror. New York: Macmillan, 2001. ISBN 1-58063-160-6
11.^ Jump up to: a b c d e Magistrale, Tony. Hollywood's Stephen King. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. ISBN 0-312-29321-6
12.Jump up ^ Seipp, Cathy. "Cathy's World: Rose Red." United Press International. January 23, 2002.
13.Jump up ^ "This Week's Picks." The Washington Post. January 27, 2002.
14.Jump up ^ Barcus, Jordan. "The Mystery of Rose Red." Tulsa World. July 26, 2002.
15.Jump up ^ "Bestsellers." Providence Journal-Bulletin. January 17, 2002.
16.Jump up ^ "Reader's Guide: National Best Sellers." Chicago Tribune. February 17, 2002.
17.Jump up ^ Plucker, Carrie. "Murder Mystery a Bit Overdone." The Daily Evergreen. September 19, 2005.
18.Jump up ^ Ellington, Christy. "The Monitor's Monthly Guide to Hardcover Fiction Bestsellers." Christian Science Monitor. March 7, 2002.

External links[edit]
The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red at Ridley Pearson's Web site.



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The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

"The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer" redirects here. For other uses, see The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer (disambiguation).
The Diary of Ellen Ribauer: My Life at Rose Red
DiaryofEllenRimbauerBook.jpg
Hardcover edition
 

Author
Ridley Pearson

Country
United States

Language
English

Genre
Horror

Publisher
Hyperion


Publication date
 2001

Media type
Print (Hardcover & Paperback)

Pages
Hardcover: 252
Paperback: 278

ISBN
ISBN 0-7868-6801-5 (Hardcover)
ISBN 0-7868-9043-6 (Paperback)

OCLC
48659852

The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red is a 2001 novel by Ridley Pearson focusing on the life of the fictional John and Ellen Rimbauer and the construction of their mansion, Rose Red, in the early 20th century. Built on an old Indian burial ground, Rose Red is considered haunted and mysterious tragedies occur throughout the mansion's history. The novel is written in the form of a diary by Ellen Rimbauer, and annotated by the fictional professor of paranormal activity, Joyce Reardon. The novel also presents a fictional afterword by Ellen Rimbauer's grandson, Steven.


Contents  [hide]
1 Genesis of the novel
2 Plot synopsis
3 Reception
4 References
5 External links


Genesis of the novel[edit]
The novel's genesis came as part of a $200,000 promotional marketing campaign for Stephen King's Rose Red television miniseries.[1] Marketing of the film presented the movie as based on actual events.[1]
In 2000, two years before the Rose Red miniseries aired, the producers contracted with author Ridley Pearson to write a tie-in novel, to be titled The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red, under the pseudonym "Dr. Joyce Reardon" (one of the main characters of the miniseries).[2] The novel presented itself as nonfiction, and claimed to be the actual diary of Ellen Rimbauer (wife of the builder of Rose Red). The work was originally intended to be an architectural book featuring photos and drawings of the fictional Rose Red house with the supernatural elements subtly woven into the text and photos, but Pearson (building on several references to a diary in King's script for the miniseries) wrote it as Ellen Rimbauer's diary instead.[3] Inspired by the 1999 film The Blair Witch Project, King came up with the idea of presenting the novel as a real one by having "Dr. Joyce Reardon" edit the "diary."[3] King also inserted a reference into the book's foreword that a "best-selling author had found the journal in Maine", so that fans would be misled into concluding that King had written the work.[3] The ruse worked. Fans and the press speculated for some time that Stephen King or his wife Tabitha King had written the book until Pearson was revealed to be the novel's author.[4]
To help promote the miniseries and further blur the line between reality and fiction, the book contained a link to a fictional "Beaumont University" Web site where "Dr. Joyce Reardon" was alleged to have taught.[5][6] The site contains in-universe promotional material[7] as well as an easter egg page with diary entries that were "censored" from the main book.[8]
Intended to be a promotional item rather than a stand-alone work, its popularity spawned a 2003 prequel television miniseries to Rose Red, titled The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer.[4] The novel tie-in idea was repeated on Stephen King's next project, the miniseries Kingdom Hospital. Richard Dooling, King's collaborator on Kingdom Hospital and writer of several episodes in the miniseries, published a fictional diary, The Journals of Eleanor Druse, in 2004.[2][9]
Plot synopsis[edit]
The novel relates the building of the Rimbauer house (which is eventually named "Rose Red") in 1906 by John Rimbauer for his new wife, Ellen, as a wedding present. John Rimbauer owned an oil company, and used much of his wealth to build the mansion, which was in the Tudor-Gothic style and situated on 40 acres (160,000 m2) of woodland in the heart of Seattle, Washington, in the United States. The site was a Native American burial ground (a common motif in early works by author Stephen King).[10] The house appeared cursed even as it was being constructed: Three construction workers were killed on the site, and a construction foreman was murdered by a co-worker.[11]
Various entries in the fictional diary also describe Ellen Rimbauer's naiveté regarding sexual matters. In sometimes graphic language, the novel's "diary entries" discuss Ellen's sexual relationship with her physically, sexually, and emotionally abusive husband; her growing awareness of her lesbianism (or possible bisexuality; the novel is unclear); her friendship and sexual relationship with Sukeena; the birth of her children; and her growing dislike (even hatred) of her misogynistic, arrogant husband.[11] The novel portrays Ellen Rimbauer as a victim of sexual repression and Victorian morality.[12]
The novel tells how, while vacationing in Africa during the construction of her home, Ellen Rimbauer fell deathly ill and made the acquaintance of Sukeena, a local tribeswoman who nursed her back to health. Ellen and Sukeena became close, and Sukeena accompanied the Rimbauers back to the United States to work full time at the fully completed Rose Red. The Rimbauers had two children, Adam and April (born with a withered left arm). Tragic deaths and unexplained disappearances continued at the house. Many maids disappeared and one of John Rimbauer's friends died of an allergic reaction to a bee sting in the solarium. John Rimbauer's business partner (whom Rimbauer had cheated out of his part of their oil fortune) hanged himself in the parlor in front of the Rimbauer children. Six-year-old April also disappeared in the house, never to be seen again. Sukeena was the last person to see April alive before she vanished and was tortured by the local police after being suspected of April's "murder". After April was gone, eight-year-old Adam was sent to boarding school and kept away from Rose Red. Soon John Rimbauer (whom his wife suspected of adultery) committed suicide by throwing himself from one of the mansion's towers (an event which the reader learns later was actually murder, committeed by Ellen and Sukeena).[11]
As the novel's plot progresses, Ellen Rimbauer and Sukeena continue to live in the house. Ellen came to believe that if she never stopped building the house, she would never die. So Ellen used nearly all of her dead husband's fortune to enlarge the home significantly over the next several decades. According to Ellen, the house speaks to her and tells her what it wants constructed (a plot element reminiscent of the real-life construction of the Winchester Mystery House).[13] Mysterious disappearances continued: Deanna Petrie, a glamorous actress and friend of Ellen's (who was also rumored to have had a sexual relationship with her) vanished at the house while attending a party in the 1940s. A few years after, Sukeena disappeared and only Ellen and a few servants inhabited the property.[11]
In the fictional afterword, Ellen Rimbauer's grandson, Steven Rimbauer, notes that Ellen herself disappeared in the house in 1950. (This is where the fictional diary entries which comprise the novel's body end). The "afterword" also relates that, for several years after Ellen Rimbauer's disappearance, only servants occupied Rose Red but eventually all left out of fear. Adam Rimbauer inherited the house and lived there for a short time with his wife, but left after witnessing several paranormal events and allowed the house to be abandoned. After Adam Rimbauer's death, his wife sold off many of the home's antique furnishings. She generated some income by permitting the fictional "Seattle Historical Society" to give tours of the house; these ceased in 1972 after a participant disappeared while on a tour of the mansion. Investigations of the grounds and structure were conducted in the 1960s and 1970s to seek an explanation for the strange sounds, lights, and other phenomena alleged to have occurred there. But these ended, and the house fell into disrepair. In all, 26 people disappeared or died at Rose Red.[11]
The novel's "afterword" concludes by relating that a paranormal investigation into Rose Red by Dr. Joyce Reardon led to the deaths of several participants, and the home was demolished to make way for condominiums.[14]
Reception[edit]
The companion novel was a hit, rising high on several bestseller lists.[4] For example, it debuted in the #4 slot on USA Today's best-selling fiction list in January 2002,[15] and in the #15 slot on The New York Times' best-selling fiction list.[5] It rose to #1 on the Publishers Weekly best-selling fiction list for the week ending February 16, 2002.[16]
The book was not widely reviewed. USA Today called the book "clever, beautifully detailed fiction."[6] The Daily Evergreen qualified its review, but declared: "Considering everything, this book was quite entertaining. It's one of those books that is difficult to stop reading. The scare element wasn't too terribly high, but the fact Pearson and King marketed the book as an authentic diary makes it all the more enjoyable to read."[17] But the Christian Science Monitor gave it an "Unfavorable Review" rating, unhappy with the book's violence and explicit depictions of sexuality.[18]
References[edit]
1.^ Jump up to: a b Jones, Stephen. Creepshows: The Illustrated Stephen King Movie Guide. Watson-Guptill, 2002. ISBN 0-8230-7884-1
2.^ Jump up to: a b Wiater, Stan; Golden, Christopher; and Wagner, Hank. The Complete Stephen King Universe: A Guide to the Worlds of Stephen King. Rev. reprint ed. New York: Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 0-312-32490-1
3.^ Jump up to: a b c Jasmin, Ernest A. "'Rimbauer' Writer Clears Up Book, Film Mystery." Tacoma News Tribune. February 2, 2003.
4.^ Jump up to: a b c Jasmin, Ernest A. "Filming Begins on 'Rose Red' Prequel." Tacoma News Tribune. January 9, 2003.
5.^ Jump up to: a b Schneider, Michael. "Promos Blur Shades of 'Red'." Variety. January 21, 2002.
6.^ Jump up to: a b Blais, Jacqueline. "'Diary' Is a Window Into Spooky Rose Red." USA TODAY. January 24, 2002.
7.Jump up ^ Reardon, Joyce. "The Diary of Ellen Ribauer (archive)". Retrieved 6 February 2011.
8.Jump up ^ Reardon, Joyce. "Missing Diary Excerpts". Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 15 February 2011.
9.Jump up ^ Eleanor Druse is a key character in Kingdom Hospital, much as Dr. Joyce Readon and Ellen Rimbauer are key characters in Rose Red.
10.Jump up ^ Stephen King novels which feature Native American burial grounds include The Shining and Pet Sematary. See: Badley, Linda. Writing Horror and the Body: The Fiction of Stephen King, Clive Barker, and Anne Rice. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1996. ISBN 0-313-29716-9; Wiater, Stan; Golden, Christopher; and Wagner, Hank. The Stephen King Universe: A Guide to the Worlds of the King of Horror. New York: Macmillan, 2001. ISBN 1-58063-160-6
11.^ Jump up to: a b c d e Magistrale, Tony. Hollywood's Stephen King. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. ISBN 0-312-29321-6
12.Jump up ^ Seipp, Cathy. "Cathy's World: Rose Red." United Press International. January 23, 2002.
13.Jump up ^ "This Week's Picks." The Washington Post. January 27, 2002.
14.Jump up ^ Barcus, Jordan. "The Mystery of Rose Red." Tulsa World. July 26, 2002.
15.Jump up ^ "Bestsellers." Providence Journal-Bulletin. January 17, 2002.
16.Jump up ^ "Reader's Guide: National Best Sellers." Chicago Tribune. February 17, 2002.
17.Jump up ^ Plucker, Carrie. "Murder Mystery a Bit Overdone." The Daily Evergreen. September 19, 2005.
18.Jump up ^ Ellington, Christy. "The Monitor's Monthly Guide to Hardcover Fiction Bestsellers." Christian Science Monitor. March 7, 2002.

External links[edit]
The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red at Ridley Pearson's Web site.



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The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer (miniseries)

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Jump to: navigation, search



 This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2010)

The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer
DiaryofEllenRimbauerDVD.jpg
DVD cover
 

Written by
Stephen King (characters)
Ridley Pearson (novel and teleplay)

Directed by
Craig R. Baxley

Starring
Lisa Brenner
Steven Brand
Tsidii Le Loka

Theme music composer
Gary Chang

Original language(s)
English

Production

Producer(s)
Thomas H. Brodek

Editor(s)
Sonny Baskin

Cinematography
João Fernandes

Running time
88 minutes

Distributor
ABC
Lions Gate Entertainment (US DVD)
Warner Home Video (worldwide DVD)

Release

Original release
May 12, 2003
 

The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer is a 2003 television miniseries prequel to the film Rose Red (2002). Directed by Craig R. Baxley, the film stars Lisa Brenner as Ellen Rimbauer, Steven Brand as John Rimbauer, and Tsidii Le Loka as Sukeena.
Synopsis[edit]
The miniseries is an adaptation of The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red (2001), written by Ridley Pearson under the pseudonym Joyce Reardon, Ph.D. Pearson's novel was based on the script of Stephen King's Rose Red.
The plot revolves around the construction of the Rimbauer mansion, Rose Red, in Seattle, Washington, tracing a series of mysterious accidents throughout the mansion's early history which cause it to become haunted. Set at the turn of the 20th century, the stately, sinister mansion is constructed by powerful Seattle oil magnate John Rimbauer (Steven Brand) as a wedding present for his timid, submissive young bride, Ellen (Lisa Brenner). Rimbauer uses much of his wealth to build the mansion in the Tudor neo-Gothic style and situate it on 40 acres (160,000 m2) of woodland. The site previously was a Native American burial ground. The house appeared cursed even as it was being constructed: three construction workers are killed on the site, and a construction foreman is murdered by a co-worker.
Shortly after her marriage to Rimbauer, Ellen begins keeping a diary in which she confesses her anxieties about her new marriage, expresses her confusion over her emerging sexuality, and contemplates the nightmare that her life is becoming. At first impressed by her husband's extravagance, Ellen eventually hates and fears John, especially when learning unsavory facts about his past. Meanwhile, the number of individual hauntings in the mansion increases, possibly including ghosts of the many people close to John who have mysteriously vanished. Ellen interprets the eerie manifestations as a warning that she, too, may some day disappear without a trace.
Ellen and her maid and confidant Sukeena continue to live in the house after John's death. Ellen believes that if she continues to build the house, she will never die. She uses nearly all of her inherited fortune to continually add to the home over the next several decades, enlarging it significantly. Mysterious disappearances continue: Deanna Petrie, an actress friend of Ellen's, and Sukeena both disappear over the next few years. Ellen herself disappears in 1950. Though supernatural means, the house continues to grow, with new rooms, hallways, and staircases appearing overnight.
External links[edit]
##The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer at the Internet Movie Database.



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2003 films






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The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer (miniseries)

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 This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2010)

The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer
DiaryofEllenRimbauerDVD.jpg
DVD cover
 

Written by
Stephen King (characters)
Ridley Pearson (novel and teleplay)

Directed by
Craig R. Baxley

Starring
Lisa Brenner
Steven Brand
Tsidii Le Loka

Theme music composer
Gary Chang

Original language(s)
English

Production

Producer(s)
Thomas H. Brodek

Editor(s)
Sonny Baskin

Cinematography
João Fernandes

Running time
88 minutes

Distributor
ABC
Lions Gate Entertainment (US DVD)
Warner Home Video (worldwide DVD)

Release

Original release
May 12, 2003
 

The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer is a 2003 television miniseries prequel to the film Rose Red (2002). Directed by Craig R. Baxley, the film stars Lisa Brenner as Ellen Rimbauer, Steven Brand as John Rimbauer, and Tsidii Le Loka as Sukeena.
Synopsis[edit]
The miniseries is an adaptation of The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red (2001), written by Ridley Pearson under the pseudonym Joyce Reardon, Ph.D. Pearson's novel was based on the script of Stephen King's Rose Red.
The plot revolves around the construction of the Rimbauer mansion, Rose Red, in Seattle, Washington, tracing a series of mysterious accidents throughout the mansion's early history which cause it to become haunted. Set at the turn of the 20th century, the stately, sinister mansion is constructed by powerful Seattle oil magnate John Rimbauer (Steven Brand) as a wedding present for his timid, submissive young bride, Ellen (Lisa Brenner). Rimbauer uses much of his wealth to build the mansion in the Tudor neo-Gothic style and situate it on 40 acres (160,000 m2) of woodland. The site previously was a Native American burial ground. The house appeared cursed even as it was being constructed: three construction workers are killed on the site, and a construction foreman is murdered by a co-worker.
Shortly after her marriage to Rimbauer, Ellen begins keeping a diary in which she confesses her anxieties about her new marriage, expresses her confusion over her emerging sexuality, and contemplates the nightmare that her life is becoming. At first impressed by her husband's extravagance, Ellen eventually hates and fears John, especially when learning unsavory facts about his past. Meanwhile, the number of individual hauntings in the mansion increases, possibly including ghosts of the many people close to John who have mysteriously vanished. Ellen interprets the eerie manifestations as a warning that she, too, may some day disappear without a trace.
Ellen and her maid and confidant Sukeena continue to live in the house after John's death. Ellen believes that if she continues to build the house, she will never die. She uses nearly all of her inherited fortune to continually add to the home over the next several decades, enlarging it significantly. Mysterious disappearances continue: Deanna Petrie, an actress friend of Ellen's, and Sukeena both disappear over the next few years. Ellen herself disappears in 1950. Though supernatural means, the house continues to grow, with new rooms, hallways, and staircases appearing overnight.
External links[edit]
##The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer at the Internet Movie Database.



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Categories: 2003 television films
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Diary_of_Ellen_Rimbauer_(miniseries)





 



Rose Red (miniseries)

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Jump to: navigation, search


Rose Red
RoseRedDVD.jpg
DVD cover
 

Written by
Stephen King

Directed by
Craig R. Baxley

Starring
Nancy Travis
Matt Keeslar
Julian Sands
Kimberly J. Brown
David Dukes
Judith Ivey
Melanie Lynskey
Matt Ross
Kevin Tighe
Julia Campbell
Emily Deschanel
 Laura Kenny
Tsidii Le Loka
Yvonne Sciò
Jimmi Simpson

Music by
Gary Chang

Original language(s)
English

Production

Producer(s)
Thomas H. Brodek
 Robert F. Phillips

Cinematography
David Connell

Running time
255 min.

Distributor
ABC
Trimark Video (USA DVD)
Warner Home Video (international DVD)

Release

Original release
January 27, 2002 (US)

Chronology

Followed by
The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer

Rose Red (also known as Stephen King's Rose Red) is a television miniseries scripted by horror novelist Stephen King. The series was premiered in the United States on ABC on January 27, 2002. The story involves a mysteriously haunted Seattle mansion called Rose Red, that is widely rumoured to have a mind of its own ever since it was built in 1907. The house is eventually investigated by parapsychologist Dr. Joyce Reardon and a team of psychics.


Contents  [hide]
1 Plot Summary 1.1 History of Rose Red
1.2 Part 1
1.3 Part 2
1.4 Part 3

2 Cast 2.1 Characters in the present
2.2 Characters from the past

3 Production 3.1 Script
3.2 Filming and post-production
3.3 Marketing
3.4 Releases

4 Reception
5 Links to other King novels
6 References
7 External links


Plot Summary[edit]
Dr. Joyce Reardon, an unorthodox university psychology professor, leads a team of psychics to the massive and antiquated Seattle mansion known as Rose Red in an attempt to record data which would constitute scientific proof of paranormal phenomena. The mansion is publicly thought to be haunted, as at least 23 people have either disappeared or died there and the interior of the house appears to change or increase in size. Reardon's team unleashes the spirit of the house, leading to several deaths and the revelation of the mansion's secrets.
History of Rose Red[edit]
According to information revealed at various points in the miniseries, and Ellen's diary, Rose Red was built in 1906 by wealthy oilman John Rimbauer for his wife, Ellen. Rimbauer used much of his wealth to build the mansion, which was in the Tudor-Gothic style and situated on 40 acres (160,000 m2) of woodland in the heart of Seattle on the site of a Native American burial ground. The house was rumored to be cursed even as it was being constructed; three construction workers were killed on the site, and a construction foreman was murdered by a co-worker.
While honeymooning in Africa, Ellen Rimbauer fell ill (from an unspecified sexually transmitted disease given to her by her husband) and made the acquaintance of Sukeena, a local tribeswoman. The two women became very close while Sukeena nursed Ellen back to health, and Sukeena accompanied the Rimbauers back to the newly completed Rose Red to work there full time as a servant. The Rimbauers soon had two children, Adam and April (born with a withered arm), but Ellen quickly became unhappy with her marriage to her philandering and neglectful, misogynistic husband. After a spiritualist seance, Ellen came to believe that if she continued to build and expand the house, she would never die (echoing the story of the Winchester Mystery House).
Bizzare deaths and unresolved disappearances became more commonplace at the house throughout the years. One of John Rimbauer's friends died of a bee sting in the solarium, while his business partner whom Rimbauer had cheated out of his share of the oil company's profits hanged himself in front of Rimbauer's children in the parlour room of Rose Red. Six-year-old April also disappeared in the kitchen, never to be seen or heard from again. Sukeena, the last person to see April alive, was tortured by the police after being suspected of her murder. John Rimbauer appeared to commit suicide by throwing himself from an upper window (although viewers of the miniseries later learn that he was murdered by Ellen and Sukeena).
Ellen used nearly all of her dead husband's fortune to continually add to the home over the next several decades, enlarging it significantly. The mysterious disappearances continued to occur, a famous actress and dear friend of Ellen, Deanna Petrie vanished within the house's billard room during a party in the 1940's. by the 1950's both Ellen Rimbauer and Sukeena eventually disappeared in Rose Red also.
For several years after Ellen's disappearance, only servants occupied Rose Red but eventually all left one by one out of fear. Adam Rimbauer, who inherited the house, lived there for a short time with his wife. However, he abandoned Rose Red after witnessing several paranormal events such seeing the ghost of his little sister April, and watching rooms alter their size right before his very eyes. After his death and with the family fortune spent away, his wife sold off many of the home's antique furnishings and valuable decor to generate some income by permitting the fictional "Seattle Historical Society" to give tours of the house. These tours ceased in 1972, after a participant disappeared while on a tour of the mansion. Investigations for paranormal phenomena were conducted on the property in the 1960s and 1970s. But these also ended, and the house fell into disrepair.
The miniseries begins in the year 2001. Steven Rimbauer, the great grandson of John and Ellen Rimbauer, has inherited Rose Red. He has been offered a substantial sum of money to have the house torn down and the site developed into condominiums; but he is intrigued by the paranormal history of the house, and has agreed to allow one more investigation of the mansion.
Part 1[edit]
The miniseries opens with a prologue set in 1991. The young autistic girl Annie Wheaton (played as a child by Kristen Fischer, and later as a teenager by Kimberly J. Brown) is drawing a picture of a house as her parents and older sister, Rachel (Melanie Lynskey), argue outside her room. As she draws lines down over the house in her picture, rocks fall through the roof of an identical house belonging to an elderly couple down the street whose dog had bitten Annie, severely damaging the building.
The setting now switches to 2001. Dr. Joyce Reardon (Nancy Travis) is a professor at the fictional Seattle State University who teaches classes on psychic phenomena. Kevin Bollinger (Jimmi Simpson), a reporter for the campus newspaper, skeptically questions her about a trip she will be taking to Rose Red, an ostensibly haunted and abandoned mansion in nearby Seattle. Professor Carl Miller (David Dukes), Joyce's departmental chair who questions the validity of Joyce's research, orders Bollinger to follow Reardon and spy on a meeting with the group of psychics she is taking to Rose Red. The group includes Victor "Vic" Kandinsky (Kevin Tighe), an elderly precognate with heart disease; Pam Asbury (Emily Deschanel), a young psychometric; Cathy Kramer (Judith Ivey), a middle-aged automatic writer; Nick Hardaway (Julian Sands), a telepath with remote viewing capabilities; and Emery Waterman (Matt Ross), a young post-cognate. The group meets with Steve Rimbauer (Matt Keeslar), the last descendent of Ellen (Julia Campbell) and John Rimbauer (John Procaccino), in an auditorium at the college. Bollinger takes a photo of the group joining hands in a circle, and the photo and an article ridiculing Joyce are published in the campus newspaper. Dr. Miller takes Bollinger to Rose Red and drops him off, instructing him to obtain additional embarrassing photos once the group of psychics arrives. The reporter is greeted by Sukeena (Tsidii Le Loka) at the front door, who tells him that he is expected. Not realizing she is a ghost, Bollinger enters the mansion. He becomes trapped in the solarium, where he is pulled off-screen by an unseen force.
The back-stories of psychics Emery Waterman and Annie Wheaton are introduced. Emery Waterman is a rude, sarcastic, and obnoxious young man under the control of his domineering mother, Patricia Waterman (Laura Kenny). The audience learns that Rachel Wheaton now cares for Annie Wheaton, who rarely speaks and who refers to Rachel as "Sister." The audience also learns that Joyce is having a sexual affair with Steve, although the film remains unclear whether she loves him or is merely using him to gain access to Rose Red.
Part 2[edit]
Joyce and the group of psychics, now joined by Rachel "Sister" Wheaton and a teenaged Annie Wheaton arrive at Rose Red. The team tours the mansion. Joyce and Steve point out that the home contains many optical illusions as well as an upside-down room and a library with a mirrored floor. The team finds Bollinger's cellphone, and Steve calls Miller to confront him over his attempt to discredit the group. That night, Emery sees the ghost of an actress that disappeared from the house decades earlier; Pam dreams of the decomposing body of Kevin Bollinger; the Wheaton sisters are visited by a ghost under the bed and in the closet; and Cathy sees something moving under the carpet and her blankets. Later in the night, Pam is lured outside into the garden.
The next morning, Steve leaves Dr. Miller a voicemail message threatening to have him embarrassed at the university by charging Bollinger with trespassing. When Dr. Miller receives the voicemail message, it instead says that Bollinger slit his wrists and wrote Miller's name in his blood before expiring. The message unnerves Dr. Miller and he goes to the mansion to learn more. Patricia Waterman, too, has driven to the mansion after being unable to reach her son via cell phone. The two arrive simultaneously, and their cars collide in the driveway when Mrs. Waterman swerves to avoid what she believes to be a figure running across the road. Terrified, Mrs. Waterman begins to run through the forest on the grounds of the mansion while calling for her son. Miller, wanting to get her insurance information, pursues her. Inside Rose Red, Emery hears his mother's cries but dismisses them as an auditory illusion created by the haunted house.
On the other side of the house, Pam leads Vic into the garden toward a pond with a statue of Ellen in it as she suddenly disappears. When Vic looks down into the pond, he sees what he believes to be Pam's dead body. He attempts to pull her out of the water, but the body vanishes and he is left clutching only her nightgown. He panics and runs back toward the house. Looking back, he sees the statue come to life and has a heart attack. Vic tries to draw the attention of Emery (who is inside the house), but Emery again believes this to be an apparition and refuses to open the window. Nick arrives and tries to open the window, but it will not open and the glass cannot be broken. Vic collapses and dies in full view of Emery and Nick. Out in the woods, Mrs. Waterman is stopped and knocked unconscious by the ghost of Kevin Bollinger.
Part 3[edit]
Annie Wheaton has discovered a dollhouse that is a replica in miniature of Rose Red. While standing on a chair in an attempt to reach the dollhouse, she falls and is knocked unconscious. Rachel Wheaton and Steve Rimbauer see her fall and attempt to render first aid. Meanwhile, on the other side of the house, Rose Red's windows and doors mysteriously open again. Emery Waterman, realizing that his mother's screams were not an illusion, rushes outside to look for his mother. He runs into Dr. Miller, who warns him to stay away and then flees. Emery chases Miller but cannot catch him, so he returns to Rose Red. Miller, continuing to frantically run around the grounds of the house, is found and attacked by the ghost of Kevin Bollinger.
Emery attempts to convince the others that they should all leave. They refuse, and Emery tries to depart on his own. As he does so, he runs into the ghosts of Pam Asbury and Deanna Petrie (Yvonne Sciò), the movie star who vanished in the house in the 1940s. Emery has the power to make apparitions disappear by repeating the phrase "not there," and avoids the deadly fate of his mother and Dr. Miller. As Emery is about to leave Rose Red, Annie Wheaton wakes and via psychokinesis causes the doors of Rose Red to slam shut. Emery's hand is caught in the door, and some of his fingers are severed. While the others assist Emery, Joyce Reardon asks Annie to continue to keep the doors and windows sealed, promising to give her the dollhouse if she does so. Steve, however, soon discovers that he is able to communicate with Annie telepathically, and she begins to form a friendship with him.
Later, Steve relives some repressed memories of a visit to the house with his drunken mother during which a ghostly Ellen Rimbauer appeared to him and called on Steven to aid her in continuing Rose Red's unending construction. Emery, meanwhile, suspects that Annie, not some "spirit of Rose Red", is keeping the house sealed. Nick confirms Emery's suspicions, and then informs the group that Bollinger appeared to have hanged himself in the library. The group begins to speculate that Rose Red has never been in a dormant state, and that the mansion's supernatural powers are linked to Annie and Steve (whose psychic abilities become apparent only when he is in the house because of his familial connection to the property). Nick correctly guesses that Joyce brought the psychics to the house in an attempt to reawaken Rose Red rather than simply investigate it.
The wounded Emery suggests that Annie be killed in order to allow everyone to escape, alarming the rest of the group. While in the kitchen, Cathy Kramer is attacked by Mrs. Waterman and is rescued by Nick. The two decide to tie up the deranged woman and decide to leave her in the kitchen. They agree not to inform Emery so that the unstable young man does not become more unbalanced. A ghostly Sukeena appears and drags Mrs. Waterman off into the dark wine cellar. As Nick and Cathy head back toward the main hall, the house changes around them and they become lost. A mysterious shape under the carpet chases them, and they flee. The shape begins to catch up to them, and Nick shoves Cathy into a room and slams the door behind her, turning around just in time to see a skeletal monster rushing up to him. With silence in the hallway, Cathy opens the door again but finds no sign of Nick or the entity in the empty hallway. As the house continues to change around her, Cathy ends up in the attic. Suddenly overcome by the urge to automatically write, she witnesses the murder of John Rimbauer by Ellen and Sukeena. Steve and Rachel, meanwhile, decide to look for Nick and Cathy. They find Cathy in the attic, where she is about to be attacked by a corpse-like creature. Their presence seemingly prevents the house from acting, and the corpse drops lifeless to the floor. The corpse's withered arm lets them deduce that the carcass is that of Steven's missing great-aunt (and Ellen's daughter), April Rimbauer. Suddenly April's corpse releases a bright white light from its mouth and instantly disintegrates.
The group reunites in the main hall. Emery attempts to attack Annie with a fireplace poker. Using psychokinesis, Annie animates a suit of armor and attempts to kill Emery with a halberd. Neither attack succeeds, and Joyce calms both individuals. In an attempt to uncover the secret of Rose Red, Steve creates a telepathic link between Cathy and Annie, and Cathy begins to engage in automatic writing. Annie begins to draw pictures of boulders striking the house, smashed doors, and broken glass, and soon doors and windows all over the house are opening and closing violently and glass in the windows shatters. Rocks begin to fall, destroying Mrs. Waterman's car and causing severe damage to Rose Red. Cathy automatically writes "help us" and "open the doors," prompting Annie to unseal the house. Steve, Emery, Cathy, Rachel, and Annie make their escape from Rose Red, but Joyce, now clearly insane, refuses to leave. The group is attacked by the spectre of Ellen Rimbauer, but Annie prevents Ellen from coming after them. Mrs. Waterman's ghost leaps from a mirror and attempts to draw Emery into the spirit realm, but Emery, with the assistance of Steve and Cathy, resists his mother for the first time in his life, and Mrs. Waterman vanishes again. The survivors flee to their cars as boulders rain down on Rose Red. Back in the house, Joyce suddenly realizes too late that she does want to leave, but is surrounded by the ghosts of Rose Red: Nick, Pam, Vic, Mrs. Waterman, Miller, Bollinger, Sukeena, and Deanna Petrie. She screams in terror as the film fades to black.
Six months later, the survivors visit Rose Red, just before the mansion is due to be demolished and replaced by condominiums. It remains unsaid whether or not the evil that inhabits the house will leave with its destruction or go on to curse the condos. They pay their last respects to the dead by laying red roses on the path leading up to the house. As they drive away, the theme from the movie "A Summer Place" can be heard, and the ghosts of Ellen Rimbauer, Sukeena, and Joyce watch the survivors depart from the tower window.
Cast[edit]
Characters in the present[edit]

Name
Occupation
Psychic power
Played by
Character's fate
Dr. Joyce Reardon Parapsychology Professor None Nancy Travis Killed by the ghosts of Vic Kandinsky, Deanna Petrie, Patricia Waterman, Carl Miller, Kevin Bollinger, Sukeena, Nick Hardaway, and Pam Asbury.
Steven Rimbauer Unknown None at first; Telepathy only when inside Rose Red Matt Keeslar Survivor
Rachel "Sister" Wheaton Waitress None Melanie Lynskey Survivor
Annie Wheaton None Telekinetic, Telepathic Kimberly J. Brown Survivor
Cathy Kramer Unknown Automatic Writing Judith Ivey Survivor
Emery Waterman Worked with police to solve homicides Retrocognition Matt Ross Survivor, lost several fingers
Nick Hardaway Psychologist Telepathic, Remote Viewing Julian Sands Disappeared while saving Cathy, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Pam Asbury Lecturer and host of Psychic TV, a television program which gave exposure to the psychic community Psychometry Emily Deschanel Killed (seemingly drowned in pond while in a trance).
Victor "Vic" Kandinsky Unknown Precognitive Kevin Tighe Died of a heart attack.
Dr. Carl Miller Psychology Department Head None David Dukes Killed by the ghost of Kevin Bollinger. (David Dukes died from a heart attack while filming on location for the movie. The movie is therefore dedicated to him)
Kay Waterman Unknown None Laura Kenny Killed by the ghost of Sukeena.
Kevin Bollinger College Student/Newspaper Reporter None Jimmi Simpson Killed off-screen by hanging himself in the Mirror Library.
Pizza Delivery Man Pizza Delivery None Stephen King[1] Endures rudeness from the psychics

Characters from the past[edit]

Name
Occupation
Psychic power
Played by
Character's fate
John P. Rimbauer Oil tycoon None John Procaccino Murdered (pushed from a tower window at Rose Red) by Ellen Rimbauer and Sukeena.
Ellen Gilchrist-Rimbauer Homemaker None Julia Campbell Disappeared while living at Rose Red, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Sukeena Ellen Rimbauer's maid None Tsidii Le Loka Disappeared while living at Rose Red, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Adam Rimbauer Son of John and Ellen Rimbauer None Justin T. Milner Survivor
April Rimbauer Daughter of John and Ellen Rimbauer None Paige Gordon Disappeared while living at Rose Red, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Deanna Petrie Actress and friend of Ellen Rimbauer None Yvonne Sciò Disappeared while a guest at Rose Red, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Douglas Posey John Rimbauer's former business partner None Don Alder Hanged himself in front of the Rimbauer children.

Production[edit]
Author Stephen King had always wanted to write a script about a haunted house, having been inspired by an alleged haunted house in his home town of Durham, Maine.[1]
King originally pitched Rose Red to Steven Spielberg as a feature film in the early 1990s, partly as a remake of the 1963 film The Haunting.[1][2][3][4] The project went into turnaround and a complete script was written, but Spielberg demanded more thrills and action sequences while King wanted more horror.[1][2][4] King and Spielberg mutually agreed to shelve the project after several years of work, and King bought back the rights to the script.[1][2] King returned to the project in 1999, completed a revised script, and unsuccessfully pitched the script to director Mick Garris (with whom King had worked on the 1992 film Sleepwalkers, the 1994 TV miniseries The Stand, and the 1997 TV miniseries The Shining).[2] King next proposed the project on Friday, June 18, 1999, to producer Mark Carliner (with whom King had worked on two miniseries, The Shining and 1999's Storm of the Century).[2][4][5] Carliner agreed to produce the script as a feature film, and King agreed to start script revisions on Monday, June 21.[2] Unfortunately, King was hit by an automobile while walking on a road near his home on Saturday, June 19, 1999.[6]
Script[edit]
After surgery and a month's recovery in the hospital, King returned home and completed work on the Rose Red script over the next month, recasting the project as a television miniseries.[2][4] The writing proved to be therapeutic.

I was using the work as dope, basically, because it worked better than anything they were giving me to kill the pain. It was very difficult to push the pen 45 minutes a day, but it was vital to get back to work, because you have to break the ice somehow. You have to say, "This is what I do." I'm either going to continue to work, or I'm not. You say, "If I can do this, maybe I can walk. If I can walk, maybe I can resume some kind of human intercourse." Work seemed like a logical place to start.
— [4]
Several references are made in the script to other fictional works regarding ghosts, including The Haunting of Hill House, Ghostbusters, and A Christmas Carol. King based his concept for Rose Red on the Winchester Mystery House,[1][3][5][7] but added the concept that the house would keep expanding on the inside even though it looked the same from the outside.[4] Although the project was no longer intended to be an adaptation of The Haunting of Hill House, the script continued to borrow heavily from Shirley Jackson's novel.[3][4][5] The team of researchers strongly resembles that assembled in Jackson's novel, and the rain of rocks is identical to one described in Jackson's story.[3][4]
The action originally was set in Los Angeles, California.[5] Pre-production began in July 2000.[2] After a five-month search, the producers discovered Thornewood Castle in Lakewood, Washington, and secured permission to use the mansion as the facade of Rose Red.[1][2] King subsequently rewrote the script and set the action in Seattle, Washington, to accommodate the change.[2][5] The production paid $500,000 to have many of the rooms on the first floor of Thornewood restored to their early 20th century state for filming of the miniseries.[4][8][9] Dead trees and dead ivy were used to make Thornewood appear abandoned.[5][10]
Filming and post-production[edit]
The production team included producers Carliner, Thomas H. Brodek, and Robert F. Phillips; director Craig R. Baxley; production designer Craig Stearns; and visual effects supervisor Stuart Robertson (who won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects for his work on the 1997 film What Dreams May Come).[1][4] These individuals and others had worked on Storm of the Century two years earlier.[1][4]
Filming began on August 22, 2000, and ended in mid-December 2000.[2] The budget for the miniseries was originally $3 million,[2] but its final cost was closer to $35 million.[4][10] The computer-operated ghost puppets created by XFX cost $150,000 each.[4] Interior sets were built in three former airplane hangars at the abandoned Sand Point Naval Base in Seattle.[2][10] More than 200,000 square feet (19,000 m2) of interior sets were built.[1] The largest set contained a full-scale version of the great hall at Rose Red, including a fireplace, columns, grand staircase, adjacent dining hall, and doorway to the solarium (the last being a feature inspired by the Shirley Jackson novel).[4] Two bedrooms and the billiard room at Thornewood Castle were used for location shots.[4] Sadly, actor David Dukes died of a heart attack on October 9, 2000, in Spanaway, Washington, while shooting Rose Red.[11] He was due to film his death scene the following day.[1][5] A double was used for shots of the Dr. Carl Miller character running through foliage, and King rewrote some scenes to feature other characters instead of Miller.[1] The intersection of Spring Street and Seventh Avenue in Seattle was used for the fictional location of Rose Red; other Seattle locations used in the miniseries include a section of Main Street and a house in Mount Baker (which is destroyed by a rain of stones in the miniseries).[4][5]
Post-production took six months, and the miniseries was delivered to the ABC television network in early September 2001.[2]
Marketing[edit]
A $200,000 promotional marketing campaign for the miniseries began in November 2001.[2] Marketing of the film presented the movie as based on actual events. In 2000, two years before the miniseries aired, the producers contracted with author Ridley Pearson to write a tie-in novel, The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red, under the pseudonym "Dr. Joyce Reardon" (one of the main characters of the miniseries).[3] The novel presented itself as nonfiction, and claimed to be the actual diary of Ellen Rimbauer (wife of the builder of Rose Red). The work was originally intended to be an architectural book featuring photos and drawings of the fictional Rose Red house with the supernatural elements subtly woven into the text and photos, but Pearson (building on several references to a diary in King's script) wrote it as Ellen Rimbauer's diary instead.[12] Inspired by the 1999 film The Blair Witch Project, King came up with the idea of presenting the novel as real by having "Dr. Joyce Reardon" edit the "diary".[12] King also inserted a reference into the book's foreword that a "best-selling author had found the journal in Maine", so that fans would be misled into concluding that King had written the work.[12] The ruse worked. Fans and the press speculated for some time that Stephen King or his wife Tabitha King had written the book until Pearson was revealed to be the novel's author.[10] The companion novel was a big hit, rising high on several bestseller lists.[10] Intended to be a promotional item rather than a stand-alone work, its popularity spawned a 2003 prequel television miniseries to Rose Red, titled The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer.[10] The novel tie-in idea was repeated on Stephen King's next project, the miniseries Kingdom Hospital. Richard Dooling, King's collaborator on Kingdom Hospital and writer of several episodes in the miniseries, published a fictional diary, The Journals of Eleanor Druse, in 2004.[3][13]
A fictional website for Beaumont University (where Dr. Joyce Reardon, one of the main characters in the miniseries, taught parapsychology) was established. It provided information on the history of Rose Red, background on the Rimbauer family, and limited information on various disappearances at the mansion. The site is no longer functional,[14] but the site can still be seen through web archive programs such as the Wayback Machine.[15]
The marketing campaign was considered highly successful. Many readers came to believe that The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer was real.[12] The fake Beaumont University site was bombarded with emails from fans who were convinced that Dr. Joyce Reardon, Beaumont University, and Rose Red were real.[3]
Releases[edit]
The miniseries originally aired on the ABC broadcast television network in the United States on three nights, from January 27–29, 2002.[16]
A DVD, running 4 hours and 14 minutes, was released in 2007.
Reception[edit]
Rose Red, which aired during sweeps, was a ratings hit with an average of 18.5 million viewers over three nights and an 8.5 rating.[10]
Critical reception to the miniseries was mixed. The New York Times called it fun if not terribly original:

Most of the way, the cast, directed by Craig R. Baxley, show restraint (under the circumstances). Until they are overwhelmed by the inevitable unraveling of reason, Ms. Travis's Joyce and Mr. Sands's Nick are two people you would definitely want along the next time you bunk down in a ghostly manse. The production, including Stuart Robertson's visual effects, serves the story without overwhelming it. Rose Red is a clever tale to the end. You'll never be tempted to take it seriously. But if you let it hook you, you won't be tempted to turn it off.
— [16]
Another critic noted that, while the miniseries moves along "effectively", the effort seemed "padded to more than four hours" with "needless exposition ... and repetitious spookhouse sequences".[17] Daily Variety was more critical of the miniseries, however, noting that "All of the elements that make a King story so accessible and entertaining are missing from this production."[18] Daily Variety praised director Craig Baxley's direction, cinematographer David Connell's camera work, Craig Stearns' special effects and production design, and young actress Kimberly Brown's performance.[18] But the magazine concluded that the over-long script and "backstories, particularly the origin of the house, are so convoluted and ill conceived, even the best f/x can't save the day."[18] Critic Laura Fries had particularly severe criticism for actress Nancy Travis:

It's hard to say whether or not Travis is simply the wrong choice for Reardon or if she just took the wrong approach. For the entire mini, the actress grimaces like a rabid dog; her character frothing at the idea of recording psychic anomalies at the expense of everyone around her. Most important, however, she never convincingly demonstrates the kind of power of persuasion it takes to win over strangers to do her character's bidding.
— [18]
Other critics panned the screenplay as "dumbly, numbly entertaining pastiche" and "a strained struggle for cogent characters and a coherent story line", but praised the production for its sound, visual effects, music, and make-up.[19]
Other reviewers found little to praise in the miniseries, however. "Rose Red is a rambling wreck of a film...about as scary as a hangnail," said the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. "...It is made-for-TV pablum, meant to satisfy unsophisticated palates the way restaurants make ordinary food seem appetizing with highfalutin menus."[20] USA Today focused on what it felt was a poor story and slow pacing: "...a numbingly predictable series of seen-it-before jolts...played at exceedingly slow speed."[21] Many critics were unimpressed with the special visual effects which others had found praiseworthy. "Rose Red," said the New York Daily News, "...is a haunted-house story that's told so slowly, it's almost inert. The climactic special effects are even worse, guaranteeing that—should you last to the end—the only screaming you'll be doing is with laughter."[22] Critic and academician Tony Magistrale felt the miniseries over-relied on special effects so much that it felt "oppressive", concluding:

the miniseries spends an excessive amount of time dramatizing the shocking and horrific displays of the house's reanimation and not nearly enough effort examining why any of these displays are relevant to a larger purpose.... While the film's super-annuated Halloween tricks are often visually and technically stunning, they also tend to weaken the seriousness of Rose Red's storyline and dominate it at the expense of character development.
— [23]
Most damning of all, he concluded, was the lack of character development: "...there are few characters in the miniseries that we care about—and certainly no one to inspire the heroic imagination, as does Wendy Torrance in the minseries version of The Shining or Mike Anderson in Storm [of the Century]."[23]
Links to other King novels[edit]
The character of Annie Wheaton is similar to another Stephen King character, Carrie White—the main character from Stephen King's first published novel, Carrie. As a young girl, Carrie telekinetically dropped stones on her house, and Annie does the same thing at both the beginning and end of Rose Red.[3][24] Likewise, the epilogue of Carrie contains a brief appearance of a young girl named Annie who, it appears, has the same powers as Carrie.
The character of Deanna Petrie shares the last name of the young protagonist Mark Petrie of King's 1975 novel 'Salem's Lot. Likewise, Emery Waterman shares a name—and many character traits—with Harold Emery Lauder from The Stand.
Rose Red is referred to in King's Black House as one of the places where "slippage" occurs.[25]
The character Pam has the special power of "The Touch". Although the ability is not referred to with this name, it is the same psychic power that the characters Alain Johns and Jake Chambers have in The Dark Tower novels.
Rose Red itself resembles the mansion depicted in Stephen King's short story, "It Grows On You", and carries similar motives and abilities, including the ability to build onto itself as more people are killed within its halls by the ghosts of those who've died there.
References[edit]
1.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l McGarrigle, Dale. "The Haunted House That Could." Bangor Daily News. January 4, 2002.
2.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Jones, Stephen. Creepshows: The Illustrated Stephen King Movie Guide. Watson-Guptill, 2002. ISBN 0-8230-7884-1
3.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Wiater, Stan; Golden, Christoperh; and Wagner, Hank. The Complete Stephen King Universe: A Guide to the Worlds of Stephen King. Rev. reprint ed. New York: Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 0-312-32490-1
4.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Murphy, Kim. "House Master." Los Angeles Times. January 27, 2002.
5.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Rahner, Mark. "Miniseries Reveals Scary Side." Seattle Times. October 31, 2000.
6.Jump up ^ "Author Stephen King Hit by Van, Seriously Hurt." Los Angeles Times. June 20, 1999.
7.Jump up ^ Joshi, S.T. Icons of Horror and the Supernatural: An Encyclopedia of Our Worst Nightmares. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006. ISBN 0-313-33780-2
8.Jump up ^ "ABC's Stephen King Movie 'Rose Red'." Thornewood Castle. No date. Accessed 2009-05-03.
9.Jump up ^ Hewitt, Scott. "Planning Commission Vote Has Tails Wagging." The Columbian. October 12, 2000.
10.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Jasmin, Ernest A. "Filming Begins on 'Rose Red' Prequel." Tacoma News Tribune. January 9, 2003.
11.Jump up ^ Eakin, Emily. "David Dukes, Chameleon of An Actor, 55." New York Times. October 12, 2000; "Actor David Dukes Dies During Break in TV Miniseries Filming." Associated Press. October 10, 2000.
12.^ Jump up to: a b c d Jasmin, Ernest A. "'Rimbauer' Writer Clears Up Book, Film Mystery." Tacoma News Tribune. February 2, 2003.
13.Jump up ^ Eleanor Druse is a key character in Kingdom Hospital, much as Dr. Joyce Readon and Ellen Rimbauer are key characters in Rose Red.
14.Jump up ^ Web site of the fictional Beaumont University, accessed 2009-0-03.
15.Jump up ^ Archived version of Beaumont University website
16.^ Jump up to: a b Wertheimer, Ron. "'Rose Red,' Victims Blue In A Stephen King Thriller", The New York Times, 25 January 2002.
17.Jump up ^ Rankins, Michael. "Rose Red", DVD Verdict, 16 July 2002.
18.^ Jump up to: a b c d Fries, Laura. "Stephen King's Rose Red." Daily Variety. January 24, 2002.
19.Jump up ^ Carman, John. "King's 'Rose' Is A Real Fixer-Upper", SFGate.com, 25 January 2002.
20.Jump up ^ Levesque, John. "Stephen King's Miniseries Makes About As Much Sense As Our Traffic", Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 25 January 2002.
21.Jump up ^ Bianco, Robert. "Pointless Plot Haunts 'Rose Red'", USA Today, 24 January 2002.
22.Jump up ^ Bianculli, David. "Stephen King Mini's Big Shock: It's Bad", New York Daily News, 24 January 2002.
23.^ Jump up to: a b Magistrale, Tony. Hollywood's Stephen King, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. ISBN 0-312-29321-6
24.Jump up ^ King called Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House one of the finest horror novels ever written. See: King, Stephen. Danse Macabre. New York: Everest House, 1981. ISBN 978-0-425-18160-7
25.Jump up ^ McAleer, Patrick. Inside the Dark Tower Series: Art, Evil, and Intertextuality in the Stephen King Novels. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, 2009, p. 160.

External links[edit]
Rose Red at the Internet Movie Database
Rose Red at AllMovie
Rose Red at Rotten Tomatoes
Thornewood Castle, used as a shooting location for the Rose Red mansion



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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rose_Red_(miniseries)





 



Rose Red (miniseries)

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Rose Red
RoseRedDVD.jpg
DVD cover
 

Written by
Stephen King

Directed by
Craig R. Baxley

Starring
Nancy Travis
Matt Keeslar
Julian Sands
Kimberly J. Brown
David Dukes
Judith Ivey
Melanie Lynskey
Matt Ross
Kevin Tighe
Julia Campbell
Emily Deschanel
 Laura Kenny
Tsidii Le Loka
Yvonne Sciò
Jimmi Simpson

Music by
Gary Chang

Original language(s)
English

Production

Producer(s)
Thomas H. Brodek
 Robert F. Phillips

Cinematography
David Connell

Running time
255 min.

Distributor
ABC
Trimark Video (USA DVD)
Warner Home Video (international DVD)

Release

Original release
January 27, 2002 (US)

Chronology

Followed by
The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer

Rose Red (also known as Stephen King's Rose Red) is a television miniseries scripted by horror novelist Stephen King. The series was premiered in the United States on ABC on January 27, 2002. The story involves a mysteriously haunted Seattle mansion called Rose Red, that is widely rumoured to have a mind of its own ever since it was built in 1907. The house is eventually investigated by parapsychologist Dr. Joyce Reardon and a team of psychics.


Contents  [hide]
1 Plot Summary 1.1 History of Rose Red
1.2 Part 1
1.3 Part 2
1.4 Part 3

2 Cast 2.1 Characters in the present
2.2 Characters from the past

3 Production 3.1 Script
3.2 Filming and post-production
3.3 Marketing
3.4 Releases

4 Reception
5 Links to other King novels
6 References
7 External links


Plot Summary[edit]
Dr. Joyce Reardon, an unorthodox university psychology professor, leads a team of psychics to the massive and antiquated Seattle mansion known as Rose Red in an attempt to record data which would constitute scientific proof of paranormal phenomena. The mansion is publicly thought to be haunted, as at least 23 people have either disappeared or died there and the interior of the house appears to change or increase in size. Reardon's team unleashes the spirit of the house, leading to several deaths and the revelation of the mansion's secrets.
History of Rose Red[edit]
According to information revealed at various points in the miniseries, and Ellen's diary, Rose Red was built in 1906 by wealthy oilman John Rimbauer for his wife, Ellen. Rimbauer used much of his wealth to build the mansion, which was in the Tudor-Gothic style and situated on 40 acres (160,000 m2) of woodland in the heart of Seattle on the site of a Native American burial ground. The house was rumored to be cursed even as it was being constructed; three construction workers were killed on the site, and a construction foreman was murdered by a co-worker.
While honeymooning in Africa, Ellen Rimbauer fell ill (from an unspecified sexually transmitted disease given to her by her husband) and made the acquaintance of Sukeena, a local tribeswoman. The two women became very close while Sukeena nursed Ellen back to health, and Sukeena accompanied the Rimbauers back to the newly completed Rose Red to work there full time as a servant. The Rimbauers soon had two children, Adam and April (born with a withered arm), but Ellen quickly became unhappy with her marriage to her philandering and neglectful, misogynistic husband. After a spiritualist seance, Ellen came to believe that if she continued to build and expand the house, she would never die (echoing the story of the Winchester Mystery House).
Bizzare deaths and unresolved disappearances became more commonplace at the house throughout the years. One of John Rimbauer's friends died of a bee sting in the solarium, while his business partner whom Rimbauer had cheated out of his share of the oil company's profits hanged himself in front of Rimbauer's children in the parlour room of Rose Red. Six-year-old April also disappeared in the kitchen, never to be seen or heard from again. Sukeena, the last person to see April alive, was tortured by the police after being suspected of her murder. John Rimbauer appeared to commit suicide by throwing himself from an upper window (although viewers of the miniseries later learn that he was murdered by Ellen and Sukeena).
Ellen used nearly all of her dead husband's fortune to continually add to the home over the next several decades, enlarging it significantly. The mysterious disappearances continued to occur, a famous actress and dear friend of Ellen, Deanna Petrie vanished within the house's billard room during a party in the 1940's. by the 1950's both Ellen Rimbauer and Sukeena eventually disappeared in Rose Red also.
For several years after Ellen's disappearance, only servants occupied Rose Red but eventually all left one by one out of fear. Adam Rimbauer, who inherited the house, lived there for a short time with his wife. However, he abandoned Rose Red after witnessing several paranormal events such seeing the ghost of his little sister April, and watching rooms alter their size right before his very eyes. After his death and with the family fortune spent away, his wife sold off many of the home's antique furnishings and valuable decor to generate some income by permitting the fictional "Seattle Historical Society" to give tours of the house. These tours ceased in 1972, after a participant disappeared while on a tour of the mansion. Investigations for paranormal phenomena were conducted on the property in the 1960s and 1970s. But these also ended, and the house fell into disrepair.
The miniseries begins in the year 2001. Steven Rimbauer, the great grandson of John and Ellen Rimbauer, has inherited Rose Red. He has been offered a substantial sum of money to have the house torn down and the site developed into condominiums; but he is intrigued by the paranormal history of the house, and has agreed to allow one more investigation of the mansion.
Part 1[edit]
The miniseries opens with a prologue set in 1991. The young autistic girl Annie Wheaton (played as a child by Kristen Fischer, and later as a teenager by Kimberly J. Brown) is drawing a picture of a house as her parents and older sister, Rachel (Melanie Lynskey), argue outside her room. As she draws lines down over the house in her picture, rocks fall through the roof of an identical house belonging to an elderly couple down the street whose dog had bitten Annie, severely damaging the building.
The setting now switches to 2001. Dr. Joyce Reardon (Nancy Travis) is a professor at the fictional Seattle State University who teaches classes on psychic phenomena. Kevin Bollinger (Jimmi Simpson), a reporter for the campus newspaper, skeptically questions her about a trip she will be taking to Rose Red, an ostensibly haunted and abandoned mansion in nearby Seattle. Professor Carl Miller (David Dukes), Joyce's departmental chair who questions the validity of Joyce's research, orders Bollinger to follow Reardon and spy on a meeting with the group of psychics she is taking to Rose Red. The group includes Victor "Vic" Kandinsky (Kevin Tighe), an elderly precognate with heart disease; Pam Asbury (Emily Deschanel), a young psychometric; Cathy Kramer (Judith Ivey), a middle-aged automatic writer; Nick Hardaway (Julian Sands), a telepath with remote viewing capabilities; and Emery Waterman (Matt Ross), a young post-cognate. The group meets with Steve Rimbauer (Matt Keeslar), the last descendent of Ellen (Julia Campbell) and John Rimbauer (John Procaccino), in an auditorium at the college. Bollinger takes a photo of the group joining hands in a circle, and the photo and an article ridiculing Joyce are published in the campus newspaper. Dr. Miller takes Bollinger to Rose Red and drops him off, instructing him to obtain additional embarrassing photos once the group of psychics arrives. The reporter is greeted by Sukeena (Tsidii Le Loka) at the front door, who tells him that he is expected. Not realizing she is a ghost, Bollinger enters the mansion. He becomes trapped in the solarium, where he is pulled off-screen by an unseen force.
The back-stories of psychics Emery Waterman and Annie Wheaton are introduced. Emery Waterman is a rude, sarcastic, and obnoxious young man under the control of his domineering mother, Patricia Waterman (Laura Kenny). The audience learns that Rachel Wheaton now cares for Annie Wheaton, who rarely speaks and who refers to Rachel as "Sister." The audience also learns that Joyce is having a sexual affair with Steve, although the film remains unclear whether she loves him or is merely using him to gain access to Rose Red.
Part 2[edit]
Joyce and the group of psychics, now joined by Rachel "Sister" Wheaton and a teenaged Annie Wheaton arrive at Rose Red. The team tours the mansion. Joyce and Steve point out that the home contains many optical illusions as well as an upside-down room and a library with a mirrored floor. The team finds Bollinger's cellphone, and Steve calls Miller to confront him over his attempt to discredit the group. That night, Emery sees the ghost of an actress that disappeared from the house decades earlier; Pam dreams of the decomposing body of Kevin Bollinger; the Wheaton sisters are visited by a ghost under the bed and in the closet; and Cathy sees something moving under the carpet and her blankets. Later in the night, Pam is lured outside into the garden.
The next morning, Steve leaves Dr. Miller a voicemail message threatening to have him embarrassed at the university by charging Bollinger with trespassing. When Dr. Miller receives the voicemail message, it instead says that Bollinger slit his wrists and wrote Miller's name in his blood before expiring. The message unnerves Dr. Miller and he goes to the mansion to learn more. Patricia Waterman, too, has driven to the mansion after being unable to reach her son via cell phone. The two arrive simultaneously, and their cars collide in the driveway when Mrs. Waterman swerves to avoid what she believes to be a figure running across the road. Terrified, Mrs. Waterman begins to run through the forest on the grounds of the mansion while calling for her son. Miller, wanting to get her insurance information, pursues her. Inside Rose Red, Emery hears his mother's cries but dismisses them as an auditory illusion created by the haunted house.
On the other side of the house, Pam leads Vic into the garden toward a pond with a statue of Ellen in it as she suddenly disappears. When Vic looks down into the pond, he sees what he believes to be Pam's dead body. He attempts to pull her out of the water, but the body vanishes and he is left clutching only her nightgown. He panics and runs back toward the house. Looking back, he sees the statue come to life and has a heart attack. Vic tries to draw the attention of Emery (who is inside the house), but Emery again believes this to be an apparition and refuses to open the window. Nick arrives and tries to open the window, but it will not open and the glass cannot be broken. Vic collapses and dies in full view of Emery and Nick. Out in the woods, Mrs. Waterman is stopped and knocked unconscious by the ghost of Kevin Bollinger.
Part 3[edit]
Annie Wheaton has discovered a dollhouse that is a replica in miniature of Rose Red. While standing on a chair in an attempt to reach the dollhouse, she falls and is knocked unconscious. Rachel Wheaton and Steve Rimbauer see her fall and attempt to render first aid. Meanwhile, on the other side of the house, Rose Red's windows and doors mysteriously open again. Emery Waterman, realizing that his mother's screams were not an illusion, rushes outside to look for his mother. He runs into Dr. Miller, who warns him to stay away and then flees. Emery chases Miller but cannot catch him, so he returns to Rose Red. Miller, continuing to frantically run around the grounds of the house, is found and attacked by the ghost of Kevin Bollinger.
Emery attempts to convince the others that they should all leave. They refuse, and Emery tries to depart on his own. As he does so, he runs into the ghosts of Pam Asbury and Deanna Petrie (Yvonne Sciò), the movie star who vanished in the house in the 1940s. Emery has the power to make apparitions disappear by repeating the phrase "not there," and avoids the deadly fate of his mother and Dr. Miller. As Emery is about to leave Rose Red, Annie Wheaton wakes and via psychokinesis causes the doors of Rose Red to slam shut. Emery's hand is caught in the door, and some of his fingers are severed. While the others assist Emery, Joyce Reardon asks Annie to continue to keep the doors and windows sealed, promising to give her the dollhouse if she does so. Steve, however, soon discovers that he is able to communicate with Annie telepathically, and she begins to form a friendship with him.
Later, Steve relives some repressed memories of a visit to the house with his drunken mother during which a ghostly Ellen Rimbauer appeared to him and called on Steven to aid her in continuing Rose Red's unending construction. Emery, meanwhile, suspects that Annie, not some "spirit of Rose Red", is keeping the house sealed. Nick confirms Emery's suspicions, and then informs the group that Bollinger appeared to have hanged himself in the library. The group begins to speculate that Rose Red has never been in a dormant state, and that the mansion's supernatural powers are linked to Annie and Steve (whose psychic abilities become apparent only when he is in the house because of his familial connection to the property). Nick correctly guesses that Joyce brought the psychics to the house in an attempt to reawaken Rose Red rather than simply investigate it.
The wounded Emery suggests that Annie be killed in order to allow everyone to escape, alarming the rest of the group. While in the kitchen, Cathy Kramer is attacked by Mrs. Waterman and is rescued by Nick. The two decide to tie up the deranged woman and decide to leave her in the kitchen. They agree not to inform Emery so that the unstable young man does not become more unbalanced. A ghostly Sukeena appears and drags Mrs. Waterman off into the dark wine cellar. As Nick and Cathy head back toward the main hall, the house changes around them and they become lost. A mysterious shape under the carpet chases them, and they flee. The shape begins to catch up to them, and Nick shoves Cathy into a room and slams the door behind her, turning around just in time to see a skeletal monster rushing up to him. With silence in the hallway, Cathy opens the door again but finds no sign of Nick or the entity in the empty hallway. As the house continues to change around her, Cathy ends up in the attic. Suddenly overcome by the urge to automatically write, she witnesses the murder of John Rimbauer by Ellen and Sukeena. Steve and Rachel, meanwhile, decide to look for Nick and Cathy. They find Cathy in the attic, where she is about to be attacked by a corpse-like creature. Their presence seemingly prevents the house from acting, and the corpse drops lifeless to the floor. The corpse's withered arm lets them deduce that the carcass is that of Steven's missing great-aunt (and Ellen's daughter), April Rimbauer. Suddenly April's corpse releases a bright white light from its mouth and instantly disintegrates.
The group reunites in the main hall. Emery attempts to attack Annie with a fireplace poker. Using psychokinesis, Annie animates a suit of armor and attempts to kill Emery with a halberd. Neither attack succeeds, and Joyce calms both individuals. In an attempt to uncover the secret of Rose Red, Steve creates a telepathic link between Cathy and Annie, and Cathy begins to engage in automatic writing. Annie begins to draw pictures of boulders striking the house, smashed doors, and broken glass, and soon doors and windows all over the house are opening and closing violently and glass in the windows shatters. Rocks begin to fall, destroying Mrs. Waterman's car and causing severe damage to Rose Red. Cathy automatically writes "help us" and "open the doors," prompting Annie to unseal the house. Steve, Emery, Cathy, Rachel, and Annie make their escape from Rose Red, but Joyce, now clearly insane, refuses to leave. The group is attacked by the spectre of Ellen Rimbauer, but Annie prevents Ellen from coming after them. Mrs. Waterman's ghost leaps from a mirror and attempts to draw Emery into the spirit realm, but Emery, with the assistance of Steve and Cathy, resists his mother for the first time in his life, and Mrs. Waterman vanishes again. The survivors flee to their cars as boulders rain down on Rose Red. Back in the house, Joyce suddenly realizes too late that she does want to leave, but is surrounded by the ghosts of Rose Red: Nick, Pam, Vic, Mrs. Waterman, Miller, Bollinger, Sukeena, and Deanna Petrie. She screams in terror as the film fades to black.
Six months later, the survivors visit Rose Red, just before the mansion is due to be demolished and replaced by condominiums. It remains unsaid whether or not the evil that inhabits the house will leave with its destruction or go on to curse the condos. They pay their last respects to the dead by laying red roses on the path leading up to the house. As they drive away, the theme from the movie "A Summer Place" can be heard, and the ghosts of Ellen Rimbauer, Sukeena, and Joyce watch the survivors depart from the tower window.
Cast[edit]
Characters in the present[edit]

Name
Occupation
Psychic power
Played by
Character's fate
Dr. Joyce Reardon Parapsychology Professor None Nancy Travis Killed by the ghosts of Vic Kandinsky, Deanna Petrie, Patricia Waterman, Carl Miller, Kevin Bollinger, Sukeena, Nick Hardaway, and Pam Asbury.
Steven Rimbauer Unknown None at first; Telepathy only when inside Rose Red Matt Keeslar Survivor
Rachel "Sister" Wheaton Waitress None Melanie Lynskey Survivor
Annie Wheaton None Telekinetic, Telepathic Kimberly J. Brown Survivor
Cathy Kramer Unknown Automatic Writing Judith Ivey Survivor
Emery Waterman Worked with police to solve homicides Retrocognition Matt Ross Survivor, lost several fingers
Nick Hardaway Psychologist Telepathic, Remote Viewing Julian Sands Disappeared while saving Cathy, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Pam Asbury Lecturer and host of Psychic TV, a television program which gave exposure to the psychic community Psychometry Emily Deschanel Killed (seemingly drowned in pond while in a trance).
Victor "Vic" Kandinsky Unknown Precognitive Kevin Tighe Died of a heart attack.
Dr. Carl Miller Psychology Department Head None David Dukes Killed by the ghost of Kevin Bollinger. (David Dukes died from a heart attack while filming on location for the movie. The movie is therefore dedicated to him)
Kay Waterman Unknown None Laura Kenny Killed by the ghost of Sukeena.
Kevin Bollinger College Student/Newspaper Reporter None Jimmi Simpson Killed off-screen by hanging himself in the Mirror Library.
Pizza Delivery Man Pizza Delivery None Stephen King[1] Endures rudeness from the psychics

Characters from the past[edit]

Name
Occupation
Psychic power
Played by
Character's fate
John P. Rimbauer Oil tycoon None John Procaccino Murdered (pushed from a tower window at Rose Red) by Ellen Rimbauer and Sukeena.
Ellen Gilchrist-Rimbauer Homemaker None Julia Campbell Disappeared while living at Rose Red, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Sukeena Ellen Rimbauer's maid None Tsidii Le Loka Disappeared while living at Rose Red, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Adam Rimbauer Son of John and Ellen Rimbauer None Justin T. Milner Survivor
April Rimbauer Daughter of John and Ellen Rimbauer None Paige Gordon Disappeared while living at Rose Red, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Deanna Petrie Actress and friend of Ellen Rimbauer None Yvonne Sciò Disappeared while a guest at Rose Red, becoming a spectral inhabitant of the mansion.
Douglas Posey John Rimbauer's former business partner None Don Alder Hanged himself in front of the Rimbauer children.

Production[edit]
Author Stephen King had always wanted to write a script about a haunted house, having been inspired by an alleged haunted house in his home town of Durham, Maine.[1]
King originally pitched Rose Red to Steven Spielberg as a feature film in the early 1990s, partly as a remake of the 1963 film The Haunting.[1][2][3][4] The project went into turnaround and a complete script was written, but Spielberg demanded more thrills and action sequences while King wanted more horror.[1][2][4] King and Spielberg mutually agreed to shelve the project after several years of work, and King bought back the rights to the script.[1][2] King returned to the project in 1999, completed a revised script, and unsuccessfully pitched the script to director Mick Garris (with whom King had worked on the 1992 film Sleepwalkers, the 1994 TV miniseries The Stand, and the 1997 TV miniseries The Shining).[2] King next proposed the project on Friday, June 18, 1999, to producer Mark Carliner (with whom King had worked on two miniseries, The Shining and 1999's Storm of the Century).[2][4][5] Carliner agreed to produce the script as a feature film, and King agreed to start script revisions on Monday, June 21.[2] Unfortunately, King was hit by an automobile while walking on a road near his home on Saturday, June 19, 1999.[6]
Script[edit]
After surgery and a month's recovery in the hospital, King returned home and completed work on the Rose Red script over the next month, recasting the project as a television miniseries.[2][4] The writing proved to be therapeutic.

I was using the work as dope, basically, because it worked better than anything they were giving me to kill the pain. It was very difficult to push the pen 45 minutes a day, but it was vital to get back to work, because you have to break the ice somehow. You have to say, "This is what I do." I'm either going to continue to work, or I'm not. You say, "If I can do this, maybe I can walk. If I can walk, maybe I can resume some kind of human intercourse." Work seemed like a logical place to start.
— [4]
Several references are made in the script to other fictional works regarding ghosts, including The Haunting of Hill House, Ghostbusters, and A Christmas Carol. King based his concept for Rose Red on the Winchester Mystery House,[1][3][5][7] but added the concept that the house would keep expanding on the inside even though it looked the same from the outside.[4] Although the project was no longer intended to be an adaptation of The Haunting of Hill House, the script continued to borrow heavily from Shirley Jackson's novel.[3][4][5] The team of researchers strongly resembles that assembled in Jackson's novel, and the rain of rocks is identical to one described in Jackson's story.[3][4]
The action originally was set in Los Angeles, California.[5] Pre-production began in July 2000.[2] After a five-month search, the producers discovered Thornewood Castle in Lakewood, Washington, and secured permission to use the mansion as the facade of Rose Red.[1][2] King subsequently rewrote the script and set the action in Seattle, Washington, to accommodate the change.[2][5] The production paid $500,000 to have many of the rooms on the first floor of Thornewood restored to their early 20th century state for filming of the miniseries.[4][8][9] Dead trees and dead ivy were used to make Thornewood appear abandoned.[5][10]
Filming and post-production[edit]
The production team included producers Carliner, Thomas H. Brodek, and Robert F. Phillips; director Craig R. Baxley; production designer Craig Stearns; and visual effects supervisor Stuart Robertson (who won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects for his work on the 1997 film What Dreams May Come).[1][4] These individuals and others had worked on Storm of the Century two years earlier.[1][4]
Filming began on August 22, 2000, and ended in mid-December 2000.[2] The budget for the miniseries was originally $3 million,[2] but its final cost was closer to $35 million.[4][10] The computer-operated ghost puppets created by XFX cost $150,000 each.[4] Interior sets were built in three former airplane hangars at the abandoned Sand Point Naval Base in Seattle.[2][10] More than 200,000 square feet (19,000 m2) of interior sets were built.[1] The largest set contained a full-scale version of the great hall at Rose Red, including a fireplace, columns, grand staircase, adjacent dining hall, and doorway to the solarium (the last being a feature inspired by the Shirley Jackson novel).[4] Two bedrooms and the billiard room at Thornewood Castle were used for location shots.[4] Sadly, actor David Dukes died of a heart attack on October 9, 2000, in Spanaway, Washington, while shooting Rose Red.[11] He was due to film his death scene the following day.[1][5] A double was used for shots of the Dr. Carl Miller character running through foliage, and King rewrote some scenes to feature other characters instead of Miller.[1] The intersection of Spring Street and Seventh Avenue in Seattle was used for the fictional location of Rose Red; other Seattle locations used in the miniseries include a section of Main Street and a house in Mount Baker (which is destroyed by a rain of stones in the miniseries).[4][5]
Post-production took six months, and the miniseries was delivered to the ABC television network in early September 2001.[2]
Marketing[edit]
A $200,000 promotional marketing campaign for the miniseries began in November 2001.[2] Marketing of the film presented the movie as based on actual events. In 2000, two years before the miniseries aired, the producers contracted with author Ridley Pearson to write a tie-in novel, The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer: My Life at Rose Red, under the pseudonym "Dr. Joyce Reardon" (one of the main characters of the miniseries).[3] The novel presented itself as nonfiction, and claimed to be the actual diary of Ellen Rimbauer (wife of the builder of Rose Red). The work was originally intended to be an architectural book featuring photos and drawings of the fictional Rose Red house with the supernatural elements subtly woven into the text and photos, but Pearson (building on several references to a diary in King's script) wrote it as Ellen Rimbauer's diary instead.[12] Inspired by the 1999 film The Blair Witch Project, King came up with the idea of presenting the novel as real by having "Dr. Joyce Reardon" edit the "diary".[12] King also inserted a reference into the book's foreword that a "best-selling author had found the journal in Maine", so that fans would be misled into concluding that King had written the work.[12] The ruse worked. Fans and the press speculated for some time that Stephen King or his wife Tabitha King had written the book until Pearson was revealed to be the novel's author.[10] The companion novel was a big hit, rising high on several bestseller lists.[10] Intended to be a promotional item rather than a stand-alone work, its popularity spawned a 2003 prequel television miniseries to Rose Red, titled The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer.[10] The novel tie-in idea was repeated on Stephen King's next project, the miniseries Kingdom Hospital. Richard Dooling, King's collaborator on Kingdom Hospital and writer of several episodes in the miniseries, published a fictional diary, The Journals of Eleanor Druse, in 2004.[3][13]
A fictional website for Beaumont University (where Dr. Joyce Reardon, one of the main characters in the miniseries, taught parapsychology) was established. It provided information on the history of Rose Red, background on the Rimbauer family, and limited information on various disappearances at the mansion. The site is no longer functional,[14] but the site can still be seen through web archive programs such as the Wayback Machine.[15]
The marketing campaign was considered highly successful. Many readers came to believe that The Diary of Ellen Rimbauer was real.[12] The fake Beaumont University site was bombarded with emails from fans who were convinced that Dr. Joyce Reardon, Beaumont University, and Rose Red were real.[3]
Releases[edit]
The miniseries originally aired on the ABC broadcast television network in the United States on three nights, from January 27–29, 2002.[16]
A DVD, running 4 hours and 14 minutes, was released in 2007.
Reception[edit]
Rose Red, which aired during sweeps, was a ratings hit with an average of 18.5 million viewers over three nights and an 8.5 rating.[10]
Critical reception to the miniseries was mixed. The New York Times called it fun if not terribly original:

Most of the way, the cast, directed by Craig R. Baxley, show restraint (under the circumstances). Until they are overwhelmed by the inevitable unraveling of reason, Ms. Travis's Joyce and Mr. Sands's Nick are two people you would definitely want along the next time you bunk down in a ghostly manse. The production, including Stuart Robertson's visual effects, serves the story without overwhelming it. Rose Red is a clever tale to the end. You'll never be tempted to take it seriously. But if you let it hook you, you won't be tempted to turn it off.
— [16]
Another critic noted that, while the miniseries moves along "effectively", the effort seemed "padded to more than four hours" with "needless exposition ... and repetitious spookhouse sequences".[17] Daily Variety was more critical of the miniseries, however, noting that "All of the elements that make a King story so accessible and entertaining are missing from this production."[18] Daily Variety praised director Craig Baxley's direction, cinematographer David Connell's camera work, Craig Stearns' special effects and production design, and young actress Kimberly Brown's performance.[18] But the magazine concluded that the over-long script and "backstories, particularly the origin of the house, are so convoluted and ill conceived, even the best f/x can't save the day."[18] Critic Laura Fries had particularly severe criticism for actress Nancy Travis:

It's hard to say whether or not Travis is simply the wrong choice for Reardon or if she just took the wrong approach. For the entire mini, the actress grimaces like a rabid dog; her character frothing at the idea of recording psychic anomalies at the expense of everyone around her. Most important, however, she never convincingly demonstrates the kind of power of persuasion it takes to win over strangers to do her character's bidding.
— [18]
Other critics panned the screenplay as "dumbly, numbly entertaining pastiche" and "a strained struggle for cogent characters and a coherent story line", but praised the production for its sound, visual effects, music, and make-up.[19]
Other reviewers found little to praise in the miniseries, however. "Rose Red is a rambling wreck of a film...about as scary as a hangnail," said the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. "...It is made-for-TV pablum, meant to satisfy unsophisticated palates the way restaurants make ordinary food seem appetizing with highfalutin menus."[20] USA Today focused on what it felt was a poor story and slow pacing: "...a numbingly predictable series of seen-it-before jolts...played at exceedingly slow speed."[21] Many critics were unimpressed with the special visual effects which others had found praiseworthy. "Rose Red," said the New York Daily News, "...is a haunted-house story that's told so slowly, it's almost inert. The climactic special effects are even worse, guaranteeing that—should you last to the end—the only screaming you'll be doing is with laughter."[22] Critic and academician Tony Magistrale felt the miniseries over-relied on special effects so much that it felt "oppressive", concluding:

the miniseries spends an excessive amount of time dramatizing the shocking and horrific displays of the house's reanimation and not nearly enough effort examining why any of these displays are relevant to a larger purpose.... While the film's super-annuated Halloween tricks are often visually and technically stunning, they also tend to weaken the seriousness of Rose Red's storyline and dominate it at the expense of character development.
— [23]
Most damning of all, he concluded, was the lack of character development: "...there are few characters in the miniseries that we care about—and certainly no one to inspire the heroic imagination, as does Wendy Torrance in the minseries version of The Shining or Mike Anderson in Storm [of the Century]."[23]
Links to other King novels[edit]
The character of Annie Wheaton is similar to another Stephen King character, Carrie White—the main character from Stephen King's first published novel, Carrie. As a young girl, Carrie telekinetically dropped stones on her house, and Annie does the same thing at both the beginning and end of Rose Red.[3][24] Likewise, the epilogue of Carrie contains a brief appearance of a young girl named Annie who, it appears, has the same powers as Carrie.
The character of Deanna Petrie shares the last name of the young protagonist Mark Petrie of King's 1975 novel 'Salem's Lot. Likewise, Emery Waterman shares a name—and many character traits—with Harold Emery Lauder from The Stand.
Rose Red is referred to in King's Black House as one of the places where "slippage" occurs.[25]
The character Pam has the special power of "The Touch". Although the ability is not referred to with this name, it is the same psychic power that the characters Alain Johns and Jake Chambers have in The Dark Tower novels.
Rose Red itself resembles the mansion depicted in Stephen King's short story, "It Grows On You", and carries similar motives and abilities, including the ability to build onto itself as more people are killed within its halls by the ghosts of those who've died there.
References[edit]
1.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l McGarrigle, Dale. "The Haunted House That Could." Bangor Daily News. January 4, 2002.
2.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Jones, Stephen. Creepshows: The Illustrated Stephen King Movie Guide. Watson-Guptill, 2002. ISBN 0-8230-7884-1
3.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Wiater, Stan; Golden, Christoperh; and Wagner, Hank. The Complete Stephen King Universe: A Guide to the Worlds of Stephen King. Rev. reprint ed. New York: Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 0-312-32490-1
4.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Murphy, Kim. "House Master." Los Angeles Times. January 27, 2002.
5.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Rahner, Mark. "Miniseries Reveals Scary Side." Seattle Times. October 31, 2000.
6.Jump up ^ "Author Stephen King Hit by Van, Seriously Hurt." Los Angeles Times. June 20, 1999.
7.Jump up ^ Joshi, S.T. Icons of Horror and the Supernatural: An Encyclopedia of Our Worst Nightmares. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006. ISBN 0-313-33780-2
8.Jump up ^ "ABC's Stephen King Movie 'Rose Red'." Thornewood Castle. No date. Accessed 2009-05-03.
9.Jump up ^ Hewitt, Scott. "Planning Commission Vote Has Tails Wagging." The Columbian. October 12, 2000.
10.^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Jasmin, Ernest A. "Filming Begins on 'Rose Red' Prequel." Tacoma News Tribune. January 9, 2003.
11.Jump up ^ Eakin, Emily. "David Dukes, Chameleon of An Actor, 55." New York Times. October 12, 2000; "Actor David Dukes Dies During Break in TV Miniseries Filming." Associated Press. October 10, 2000.
12.^ Jump up to: a b c d Jasmin, Ernest A. "'Rimbauer' Writer Clears Up Book, Film Mystery." Tacoma News Tribune. February 2, 2003.
13.Jump up ^ Eleanor Druse is a key character in Kingdom Hospital, much as Dr. Joyce Readon and Ellen Rimbauer are key characters in Rose Red.
14.Jump up ^ Web site of the fictional Beaumont University, accessed 2009-0-03.
15.Jump up ^ Archived version of Beaumont University website
16.^ Jump up to: a b Wertheimer, Ron. "'Rose Red,' Victims Blue In A Stephen King Thriller", The New York Times, 25 January 2002.
17.Jump up ^ Rankins, Michael. "Rose Red", DVD Verdict, 16 July 2002.
18.^ Jump up to: a b c d Fries, Laura. "Stephen King's Rose Red." Daily Variety. January 24, 2002.
19.Jump up ^ Carman, John. "King's 'Rose' Is A Real Fixer-Upper", SFGate.com, 25 January 2002.
20.Jump up ^ Levesque, John. "Stephen King's Miniseries Makes About As Much Sense As Our Traffic", Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 25 January 2002.
21.Jump up ^ Bianco, Robert. "Pointless Plot Haunts 'Rose Red'", USA Today, 24 January 2002.
22.Jump up ^ Bianculli, David. "Stephen King Mini's Big Shock: It's Bad", New York Daily News, 24 January 2002.
23.^ Jump up to: a b Magistrale, Tony. Hollywood's Stephen King, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003. ISBN 0-312-29321-6
24.Jump up ^ King called Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House one of the finest horror novels ever written. See: King, Stephen. Danse Macabre. New York: Everest House, 1981. ISBN 978-0-425-18160-7
25.Jump up ^ McAleer, Patrick. Inside the Dark Tower Series: Art, Evil, and Intertextuality in the Stephen King Novels. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, 2009, p. 160.

External links[edit]
Rose Red at the Internet Movie Database
Rose Red at AllMovie
Rose Red at Rotten Tomatoes
Thornewood Castle, used as a shooting location for the Rose Red mansion



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Categories: 2002 television films
Haunted house films
Screenplays by Stephen King
Fictional parapsychologists
2000s American television miniseries
Fictional houses
English-language films
Films set in Seattle, Washington
Television programs based on works by Stephen King
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Television shows set in Seattle, Washington
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