Poltergeist is a pretty good movie.
Rudimentary Google says that house footing standard depth in the US is only five feet. And can be as little as one foot. So plenty of wiggle room to excuse it. I know in the real world the chances of missing every casket building all those houses seems quite low (especially as they'd have to be putting in all manner of piping), but...we're talking about a world where a tornado steals a tree and no one seems that freaked out about it.
Yeah... I was figuring piping as well. But I'm surprised foundations are that shallow, even for houses without basements.
Thank you for the proper knowledge. At least now we can scratch one unbelievable thing off the list.My father worked in the housing industry and shallow foundations could be due to a number of factors - the soil being too rocky/hard, groundwater concerns, local/state environmental regulations. In those instances, you just dug a shallow foundation, filled it with rebar, made sure your plumbing, electrical connections and anchor points for the walls/studs were laid out and poured concrete over it. They were/are called 'slab' foundations.
If you look closely in the background when Craig T. Nelson and James Karen are on the hill overlooking the development, there's a cul-de-sac with several 'slab' foundations visible. Skip to the two-minute mark if you want to see it.
...some have argued that last point.Spielberg was a writer of the movie, he was not its director,
100% this. I'd have my butt in a motel and be paying a moving company whatever they wanted to pack up and ship everything for me.I also found it really silly that even with Tangina saying the House was "clean" that the family would spend one more night in the place before moving away. I NEVER would have stayed there after that, "Clean" or not.
100% this. I'd have my butt in a motel and be paying a moving company whatever they wanted to pack up and ship everything for me.
O... I bet if anything had been found it was brushed under the rug or they'd risk all those dollars.
That's when the haunting began. Maybe as long as the dead were undisturbed, they didn't care about the houses above them.Since slab foundations don't go deep enough to uncover the buried, the swimming pool should have.
And would it have really cost that much more to simply move the bodies if they were going to the trouble of moving the headstones and everything else on the surface?
All that might have been better in the nit picking thread. Oh well.
There's a general thread about nit picking movies in the TV and Media forum. Sorry, I don't remember how to link to a thread.
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