This House Has People in It | |
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Genre | Found footage horror Analog horror Psychological horror[1] Supernatural horror[2] Horror-comedy[3] Surreal horror[4] |
Written by | Alan Resnick Robby Rackleff Dina Kelberman |
Directed by | Alan Resnick |
Starring | Naomi Kline Robby Rackleff Rory Ogden Jackson Manning Sharyn Kmieciak Ben O'Brien |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producers | Dave Hughes Robby Rackleff Alan Resnick Ben O'Brien Dina Kelberman |
Producer | Cricket Arrison |
Cinematography | Alan Resnick James Trevor |
Editors | Alan Resnick Robby Rackleff Ben O'Brien |
Running time | 11 minutes |
Production companies | Williams Street AB Video Solutions |
Original release | |
Network | Adult Swim |
Release | March 15, 2016 (2016-03-15) |
This House Has People in It is a 2016 Americanfound footageanalog horror short film directed byAlan Resnick and produced by his production company, AB Video Solutions, withWilliams Street. It premiered on March 15, 2016 as part ofAdult Swim'sInfomercials series. Framed assurveillance footage inside a suburban home, the 11-minute special follows parents Ann and Tom as they deal with the aftermath of an argument with their teenage daughter, who lies on the floor in protest. However, things turn worse as an invisible force begins to pull her through the floor, then attempting to do so to the people outside the home.
It was written by, produced by, and starred members of theBaltimore comedy collectiveWham City, including Resnick, Robby Rackleff, Dina Kelberman,Ben O'Brien, and Cricket Arrison. A link at the end of the film led viewers to analternate reality game (ARG) surrounding the film and created by Kelberman. The film received critical acclaim, particularly for its unsettling tone and itstransmedia component. Many regard it as Alan Resnick's "masterpiece".
A suburban family is viewed throughsecurity cameras placed throughout their home and monitored by a company called AB Surveillance Solutions on the day of their son, Jackson's ("Subject 4"), birthday party. The film is presented asfound footage.[5] Parents Ann ("Subject 1") and Tom ("Subject 2"), while holding their baby, argue in the kitchen about their teenage daughter, Madison ("Subject 3"), as she liesprone on the floor behind them. As Jackson and his grandmother ("Subject 5") sit in the living room, another man, Dennis ("Subject 6"), does handiwork in the basement beneath Ann and Tom.
After trying to get her off of the floor, Tom realizes she is stuck and not moving, and neither he nor Ann know why. The two frantically and unsuccessfully try to pry her off of the floor as guests arrive for Jackson's birthday party. Jackson arrives in the kitchen and, in tears, Tom asks him to keep his party guests outside. Madison starts to sink into the floor and through the basement ceiling. Jackson's birthday party guests gather in the front yard without him. Dennis, after seeing Madison in the kitchen, runs back down to the basement with Ann and tries to push her up using a wooden plank. He soon goes back upstairs and starts to cut around her with a saw.
Tom hands the baby to the grandmother, who places her on the floor and continues to watch TV as the baby crawls away. He goes to the basement and manically rants to Ann, then to himself, about their bond as a family being tested. As smoke pours out of the oven, the house starts to fill with smoke. In the front yard, children open Jackson's birthday presents and start to destroy them. Ann and Dennis grab the mattress from Jackson's bed and bring it to the basement, placing it under Madison to catch her. She falls into the mattress and the feed briefly cuts out before showing an empty mattress and the children in the front yard lying prone on the ground. A link for AB Surveillance Solutions' website appears onscreen at the end.[6]
Comedian and artistAlan Resnick, who wrote and directedThis House Has People in It, originally rose to prominence with hisYouTube channel "alantutorial", whichVice described as a "creepypasta-meets-series" and which posted videos from 2011 to 2014.[7]This House Has People in It was produced by AB Video Solutions, his production company, withBen O'Brien, Dina Kelberman, Robby Rackleff, and Cricket Arrison, all members of theBaltimore-based comedy collectiveWham City. It is a follow-up to their short horror filmUnedited Footage of a Bear, which premiered onAdult Swim as part of theirInfomercials series.[8]
This House Has People in It was first conceived of by Rackleff as being about a cult living in a compound, wherein they would be filmed "like a '90sWB show", whereas the tone would become "grainier", "grimier", and "threatening" whenever they left the compound to go outside, which would be filmed with a different camera. Resnick and Kelberman then came up with the idea of surveillance footage of a suburban family arguing playing without context during a TV broadcast. Rackleff has stated that he was inspired by thefound footage horror ofThe Blair Witch Project, while Resnick said that the "unsettling" nature of poor quality video that he observed when he began learning to usevideo cameras was influential on the film's techniques.[8]
This House Has People in It was initially intended to be a series, with each episode having a different tone or genre, but ended up as a short film. It was filmed with security cameras placed throughout different rooms and monitored by Resnick, as well as apan–tilt–zoom camera that he controlled with a joystick.[1] Early scripts, according to Rackleff, revolved around the idea of "adulthood as pain", with the events of the film turning the parents into "exaggerated personifications" of their pain. Other themes in the film includemental illness and family as "a natural form of surveillance".[8]
This House Has People in It premiered at 4 a.m. EST on Adult Swim on March 15, 2016 as one of theirInfomercials and was also uploaded toYouTube.[8]
The link at the end of the film, absurveillancesolutions.com, led to analternate reality game (ARG) created by Kelberman, who designed the website and, according to Resnick, wanted "to make something so convoluted that only the most dedicated person will fully understand it". Logging into the website using an account number shown at the beginning of the film, 00437, and the password "bedsheets", which is shown on the kitchen fridge in the film, would lead to a "security log" about the family containing audio files, text files, videos, images, and hidden links found through clues hidden within the short film.[6][8]
Asubreddit was created to catalogue discoveries within the ARG, which contains other fictional media and topics, including a series calledThe Sculptor's Clayground, a blue cartoon mascot named Boomy the Cat, and a mysterious disease called Lynks, all of which are referenced within the film itself.[1]YouTuber Night Mind also uploaded a video compiling all of the discoveries from the ARG.[6] Kelberman stated that there were so many details within the ARG that "I don't think any of us know about all of them".[8]
Vice describedThis House Has People in It as "bizarrely horrifying" and "partToo Many Cooks, partParanormal Activity, and wholly fucking weird".[9] D. J. Pangburn of the same publication wrote that "the fun in experiencing [This House Has People in It] is to be found in exploring the various strands of media that comprise it".[10]Fast Company's Joe Berkowitz wrote soon after its release thatThis House Has People in It was "another win for Adult Swim's anything-goes 4 a.m. time slot", calling it "chilling" with "a bizarre premise" that the film "challenge[d] viewers to make sense of".[11] Ellie Houghtaling ofMashable includedThis House Has People in It on a 2019 list of "the best disturbing, unsettling, spooky shorts from the past few years", writing that it was "a definition project aboutcryptids" that got creepier "the further you look into it".[6]Bloody Disgusting's Wesley Lara wrote in 2020 that the film being depicted as security camera footage "escalat[ed] the disturbing nature of what happens to a higher degree" and that it was "one of the most notorious [Infomercials] segments".[12]
In 2022,Collider listedThis House Has People In It as one of the bestanalog horror series onYouTube, with Samantha Graves writing that it contained "a lot of 'blink and you'll miss it' horror aspects" and "creepy moments" and describing it as "unsettling".[13] Lex Briscuso/Film praisedThis House Has People In It in 2023 as an "analog horror nightmare" and "Adult Swim's defining gem" for its unique concept, specific story, production design,worldbuilding, the "brilliant and wacky" performances of the cast—particularly that of Rackleff, who Briscuso wrote had a "fierce intensity" that "forces the audience to become intimately familiar with the terror this family is facing"—and Resnick's "singularly strange sense of humor".[4] ForLittle White Lies in 2024, Sam Moore wrote that the film "captures a very specific online anxiety: what it means to be constantly seen, whether you want to be or not" and compared Madison falling into the floor to aglitch and "that strange sensation of falling off the edge of the map".[5] Also in 2024, forBloody Disgusting, Luiz H. C. wrote thatThis House Has People in It was a "transmedia oddity" with an "abundance of supplemental material".[2]