Session 9

Session 9

Dark, brown-tinted and horror-themed image of a man in an asbestos-removal suit (to the right side of the poster), with an image of a chair (in the middle of the image) and an image of a large castle-like building at the top of the image. The text "Session 9" is emboldened in white text in the middle of the image, and near the bottom of the image is written, "Fear is a place."

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Brad Anderson
Produced by John Sloss
Dorothy Aufiero
David Collins
Michael Williams
Written by Brad Anderson
Stephen Gevedon
Starring David Caruso
Peter Mullan
Stephen Gevedon
Paul Guilfoyle
Josh Lucas
Brendan Sexton III
Music by Climax Golden Twins
Cinematography Uta Briesewitz
Edited by Brad Anderson
Production
company
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release dates
Running time
100 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Box office $1,612,259[2][3]

Session 9 is a 2001 American independent psychological horror film directed by Brad Anderson and written by Anderson and Stephen Gevedon. The film stars David Caruso, Peter Mullan, Stephen Gevedon, Paul Guilfoyle, Josh Lucas, and Brendan Sexton III as an asbestos abatement crew who begin to experience growing tensions while working in an abandoned mental asylum, which is paralleled by the gradual revelation of a former patient's disturbed past through recorded audio tapes of the patient's hypnotherapy sessions.[4]

The film takes place in and around the Danvers State Mental Hospital in Danvers, Massachusetts, which was partially demolished five years after the film was made. While the film was not a financial success, Session 9 was moderately well-received critically and is considered a cult film.[5]

Plot

Gordon Fleming is the owner of a small asbestos removal company. The stresses of work and being a new father are causing problems between him and his wife, Wendy. He is in a desperate financial bind and makes a bid to remove asbestos from the Danvers State Hospital, closed fifteen years ago, within one week. His team consists of Mike, a law school dropout who is knowledgeable about the asylum's history; Phil, who is filled with bitterness after losing his girlfriend and finds solace in smoking marijuana; Hank, whom Phil lost his girlfriend to; and Jeff, Gordon's nephew, who suffers from severe nyctophobia. As Phil congratulates Gordon with his newborn daughter, Gordon tells him that he loves both his wife and his daughter to bits, but that he is just so tired. The new baby keeps him up at night.

As work begins inside the asylum, Mike finds a box containing nine taped sessions with a patient named Mary Hobbes, who had dissociative identity disorder. The purpose of the sessions, which Mike becomes increasingly engrossed in, is to unveil what happened on Christmas night in Lowell, her hometown, twenty-two years before. One of her personalities, "the Princess", is childlike and innocent, knowing only the Christmas presents - a china doll for Mary and a knife for her brother, Peter - and that they played hide-and-seek after their parents went to bed. Another personality, "Billy", is both childlike and protective. He lives "in the eyes" and saw what happened, but refuses to let Mary find out. The doctor repeatedly asks about the third personality, "Simon", whom "the Princess" knows nothing about and "Billy" fears.

In the tunnels beneath the property, Hank finds a cache of antique Morgan dollar coins and other silver items, scattered from the crematory nearby. He returns that night to steal the artifacts and finds an orbitoclast. He hears odd sounds in the tunnels and discovers an empty peanut butter jar. He hears someone behind him and tries to escape the tunnels, but he is attacked by an unseen assailant. The next morning, the other four learn that Hank abruptly broke up with his girlfriend and left town; the four speculate about the possibility that Hank finally won some money in a lottery. Gordon, who frequently calls his wife and saw Phil speaking to two unknown men during one telephone call, suspects that Phil had something to do with Hank's disappearance, causing tension between the group.

At one point Gordon goes outside the building into the old garden, where several tombstones from patients that died during their stay at the asylum can be seen. As Gordon sits on a part of a tree trunk, he tries to call his wife again. He quickly puts his mobile phone away when he sees Jeff coming to him. Jeff wants to thank Gordon for giving him a chance at this job. Neither of the two men can see the tombstone that is half hidden under the trunk; it has the same number as Mary Hobbes' room. Gordon later opens up to Phil and admits that he hit Wendy after she accidentally spilled a pot of boiling water on his leg; he has been trying to apologize over the phone ever since. His leg is badly blistering and hurting, but he continues with the work.

Phil calls in Craig McManus to replace Hank and tells Mike that he thinks Gordon has become a liability. Jeff finds Hank alive and goes to tell the others, but Hank is gone again when Jeff returns. They split up to find him, but Mike quickly returns to the session tapes. "Billy" refuses to awaken "Simon", admitting to the doctor only that "Simon" was behind whatever happened that night. Phil finds Hank in one of the tunnels, half-naked and wearing sunglasses. The power goes out at that point, trapping Jeff in a pitch-black tunnel and stopping the ninth session tape short. Mike returns the power and the ninth session continues with "Simon", the same voice Gordon has been hearing since the job began, taking over. It is revealed that Peter scared Mary while they were playing and she fell on her doll, breaking it and badly scarring herself. "Simon" then took her over and killed Peter and their parents with the new knife. As the recording continues, Phil finds Gordon in Mary's former room, staring at his own photos stuck to the wall. A shaken Jeff returns to the van, where he also is attacked by an unseen assailant.

The next day, Craig arrives at the asylum. Gordon finds Hank, with the orbitoclast protruding from his eye, in one of the larger rooms. Phil is also present and tells Gordon to wake up when Gordon accuses him of attacking the others. As Craig finds them, it is shown that Phil's presence was in Gordon's mind. Possessed by "Simon", Gordon enters a dissociative state and kills Craig with the orbitoclast. It is shown that he attacked Hank that night and, when found by Phil in Mary's room, killed Phil before finding and killing Mike and Jeff. It is also shown that he killed his wife and baby when the pot of boiling water was spilled on him. He breaks down and uses his broken cell phone to apologize to Wendy. The film ends with the doctor asking, "And where do you live, Simon?" and "Simon" answering, "I live in the weak and the wounded, Doc."

Cast

Conception and production

Session 9 was director Brad Anderson's first horror film, after directing two romantic comedy films, Next Stop Wonderland (1998) and Happy Accidents (2000). The film was inspired by a murder that took place in Boston, where Anderson grew up, in the mid-1990s, in which a man supposedly killed his wife after she accidentally burnt his dinner, then cut out her heart and lungs and put them in his backyard on a stake.[6]

Most of the film was shot in a small section of the Danvers State Asylum; according to David Caruso, the rest of the building was "unsafe" for shooting.[6] Caruso also claims the sets didn't need to be dressed as all the props featured in the film were already there inside the building.[6]

It was one of the first motion pictures to be shot in 24p HD digital video,[7] which shoots at 24 frames-per-second like film, as opposed to regular digital video which shoots at 30 frames-per-second.

Release

Session 9 premiered at the Fantasia Festival in July 2001.[8] It was released to theaters on August 10, and ended its run on October 18, grossing a total of $378,176.[9]

Critical reception

Session 9 received mixed to positive reviews from critics. The film currently holds a 63% approval rating on movie review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on sixty-five reviews, with a weighted mean score of 6.2/10.[10]

Some critics praised the film's dark, eerie atmosphere and lack of gore.[10] Entertainment Weekly called the film "a marvel of vérité nightmare atmosphere."[11] Rolling Stone called it "a spine-tingler", and praised Brad Anderson's direction.[12] Los Angeles Times said of the film: "Session 9 is so effective that its sense of uncertainty lingers long after the theater lights have gone up."[13] Bloody Disgusting ranked the film fifth in its list of the twenty best horror films of the 2000s, writing, "Session 9 isn't just a cheap, hack 'n' slash, instantly-forgettable type horror film, but a psychologically probing, deeply unsettling journey off the edge and into the abyss of the human mind."[14] Slant Magazine favorably compared it to the 1973 film Don't Look Now, writing, "Anderson's creeper is nowhere near as profound, but the film's old-fashioned pacing and revelatory camerawork bring to mind [Nicolas] Roeg's uniquely terrifying dreamworlds."[15]

Some reviewers criticized the film's ending. A negative review came from Variety, who wrote, "while pic works up a nervously eerie paranoia, it finally doesn't know what to do with what it sets up."[4] San Francisco Chronicle said, "the story doesn't quite pay off, characters are underwritten and the surprise ending is contrived and unconvincing."[16] The Village Voice wrote, "the script for Session 9 is so underwritten that even such lively character actors as David Caruso, Peter Mullan and Brendan Sexton III are left stranded."[17]

Interpretations

In reviewing the film for the 2003 edition of The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror, Edward Bryant contends that Simon is not necessarily an alternate personality of the former patient Mary, but rather a malignant genius loci.[18] He also points out that the deleted scenes included on the DVD help fill out the narrative.[18]

Soundtrack

Session 9
Same image as of film poster, but cropped to square, CD-case size and with "original motion picture score" above and "Climax Golden Twins" below "Session 9" branding.
Soundtrack album by Climax Golden Twins
Released August 21, 2001
Genre Ambient, dark ambient
Length 50:50
Label Milan
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[19]

The score to Session 9 was composed by Seattle, Washington-based experimental band Climax Golden Twins. The score is in an ambient and dark ambient vein. The soundtrack was released on August 21, 2001, through Milan Records. "Choke Chain" by Sentridoh is played over the closing credits of the film, but is not featured on the album.

Track listing

All tracks written by Climax Golden Twins (Scott Colburn, Robert Millis, Jeffrey Taylor), except "Piece for Tape Recorder", written and recorded by Vladimir Ussachevsky. 

No. Title Length
1. "A Few Simple Up and Down Jerks"   4:35
2. "Hobbes Theme"   2:10
3. "Noon, About Noon"   5:06
4. "I Live in the Gut"   6:11
5. "Mortified Pride"   1:41
6. "Exit Plan"   2:14
7. "I Want to Talk to Amy"   1:13
8. "I Saw You"   2:01
9. "Ward A"   5:56
10. "Seclusion"   3:26
11. "Disappointed Expectations"   10:39
12. "Piece for Tape Recorder" (Vladimir Ussachevsky) 5:38

See also

References

  1. Session 9 (DVD). Anderson, Brad. Universal Pictures Home Video. 2001.
  2. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=main&id=session9.htm
  3. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=intl&id=session9.htm
  4. 1 2 Koehler, Robert (August 6, 2001). "Session 9". Variety. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  5. Tobias, Scott (November 24, 2010). "Session 9 | Film | The New Cult Canon | The A.V. Club". avclub.com. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  6. 1 2 3 Cavagna, Carlo (August 2001). "AboutFilm – David Caruso and Brad Anderson on Session 9 (2001)". aboutfilm.com. Retrieved September 13, 2012.
  7. "Session 9 (2001) – Trivia – IMDb". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  8. "History – Cinemabox & Unisoft Present Fantasia 2012". fantasiafestival.com. Retrieved September 15, 2012.
  9. "Session 9 (2001) – Box Office Mojo". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 17, 2012.
  10. 1 2 "Session 9 – Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. IGN Entertainment. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  11. Gleiberman, Owen (August 8, 2001). "Session 9". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  12. Travers, Peter (August 17, 2001). "Session 9". Rolling Stone. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  13. Thomas, Kevin (August 10, 2001). "Scary 'Session 9' Takes a Minimalist Approach". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  14. "00's Retrospect: Bloody Disgusting's Top 20 Films of the Decade...Part 4 || Bloody DisgustingBloody Disgusting". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  15. Gonzalez, Ed (July 30, 2001). "Session 9 | Film Review | Slant Magazine". Slant Magazine. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  16. Guthmann, Edward (September 14, 2001). "Film Clips / Also Opening Today". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  17. Taubin, Amy (August 7, 2001). "The Shinings". The Village Voice. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
  18. 1 2 Datlow, Ellen; Windling, Terri (2003). The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Sixteenth Annual Collection. Macmillan. p. LXXXVIII. ISBN 0-312-31425-6.
  19. Carruthers, Sean. "Session 9 – Original Soundtrack : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards : AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved September 15, 2012.

External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Session 9
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.