1.17 Hell House
Title | Hell House |
Episode # | Season 1, Episode 17 |
First aired | March 30, 2006 |
Directed by | Chris Long |
Written by | Trey Callaway |
On IMDB | Hell House |
Outline | Sam and Dean struggle to shut down a haunted house generated by an internet audience. |
Monster | Tulpa Mordechai Murdoch |
Timeline | June 6th/7th - June 13th/14th, 2006 |
Location(s) | Richardson, Texas |
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Contents
Synopsis
A group of teenagers in Richardson, Texas, visit a reputedly haunted house, but the thrills turn tragic when they find the body of a girl hanging in the cellar. By the time the police arrive, however, the body is missing.
Two months later Sam and Dean, who are engaged in a prank war, decide to investigate and track down Craig Thursten. He relates the legend, told to him by his cousin Dana, of Mordechai Murdoch. Murdoch was a farmer who lived in the house during the 1930s and who killed his daughters, hanging them in the cellar.
Sam and Dean visit the house, which has symbols from many different origins freshly painted on the walls and floor. While searching the house, the boys run into Ed Zeddmore and Harry Spengler, paranormal investigators who run a website called Hell Hound's Lair. Sam and Dean do some more research, but can’t find any evidence to support the legend of Mordechai Murdoch. They are preparing to leave when they hear that the previous night a girl did die in the house – hung from the rafters.
Returning to the house they again run into Ed and Harry -– and the spirit of Mordechai who chases them from the house and is not slowed by a blast of rock-salt. Back at their motel, the boys try and work out what is happening. Mordechai’s spirit appeared to have slit wrists, which was previously not part of his legend. The story on the Hell Hound's Lair website has also changed.
Dean recognizes one of the symbols painted in the house, and he and Sam return to visit Craig. The symbol is from a Blue Oyster Cult album cover, and Craig works in a record shop. Craig admits that he and his cousin painted the symbols and spread the rumor about Mordechai as a prank. Sam postulates that Mordechai is a tulpa – the manifestation of a thought. One of the symbols painted in the house is a Tibetan spirit sigil, which assists in concentrating mental energy. Sam thinks that as people view the website, they are willing into reality what they read there. In order to “kill off” Mordechai, the boys tell Ed and Harry that they have found out that being shot with iron rounds will kill him. They wait for the boys to post it on their website and for enough people to view it that it becomes real.
Sam and Dean return to the house to finish off Mordechai, but Ed and Harry are there and tell them the server crashed, so the new legend will not manifest. As Mordechai attacks them, Dean sets the house on fire, figuring that without that part of the legend Mordechai won’t exist. Sam and Dean bid farewell to Ed and Harry, Sam with a prank call from a Hollywood producer and Dean with a fish in the back of their car. The boys call a halt to their own prank war – for now.
Characters
Definitions
- Alcohol
- Costumes & Disguises
- Dean's Amulet
- EMF
- Ghosts
- Hell Hound's Lair
- Iron
- Salt
- Sammy
- Satanic Looking Symbols
- Sigil of Sulfur
- Table of Death
- Thought Forms/Psychic Projections
- Tongues
- Tulpa
Music
- "Fire of Unknown Origin" by Blue Öyster Cult
- (the song on the radio Dean is singing)
- "Burnin' for You" by Blue Öyster Cult
- (plays when Dean and Sam interview the kids, and also at the end of the episode when they leave the trailer park)
- "Slow Death" by Zach Tempest (Extreme Music)
- (plays when Dean and Sam go to the music store to talk to Craig for the first time)
- "Anthem" by Zach Tempest (Extreme Music)
- (plays when Dean and Sam go to the music store to talk to Craig for the second time)
- "Point of No Return" by Rex Hobart and the Misery Boys
- (plays while talking about the tulpa in the diner)
- "Fast Train Down" by The Waco Brothers
- (plays in the restaurant when Dean gets his hand glued to his beer)
Netflix
- "Jaded Little Love Song" by Terramara
- (the song on the radio Dean is singing)
- "Vicki and Jacky" by Robert Roth
- (plays when Dean and Sam interview the kids, and also at the end of the episode, when they leave the trailer park)
- "Slow Death" by Zach Tempest (Extreme Music)
- (plays when Dean and Sam go to the music store to talk to Craig for the first time)
- "Anthem" by Zach Tempest (Extreme Music)
- (plays when Dean and Sam go to the music store to talk to Craig for the second time)
- "Point of No Return" by Rex Hobart and the Misery Boys
- (plays while talking about the tulpa in the diner)
- "Fast Train Down" by The Waco Brothers
- (plays in the restaurant when Dean gets his hand glued to his beer)
Quotes
Dean: Haunted by what?
Dean: And what's it called.
Sam: HellHoundsLair.com
Dean: Lemme guess, streaming live out of mom's basement.
Sam: Yeah, probably.
Sam: How?
Sam: And after his time too. That reverse cross has been used by Satanists for centuries but this sigil of sulfur didn't show up in San Francisco until the '60s.
Ed: Once. We were, uh... we were investigating this old house and we saw a vase fall right off the table...
Harry: By itself.
Ed: Well, we, we we we didn't actually see it, we heard it. And something like that...it uh... it changes you.
Sam: What the hell would I do that for?
Sam: It does.
Dean: Tulpa?
Sam: Yeah, a Tibetan thought form.
Dean: So?
Sam: ‘Cause you’re a bad person.
Dean: Well I have an obligation to kick both of your little asses right now.
Sam: I'm not touching that line with a ten foot pole.
Dean: Oh, yeah? Wrong number?
Dean: What's that.
Sam: I, uh... I was the one that called them and told them I was a producer.
Dean: Yeah well I'm the one who put the dead fish in their back seat.
Sam: Truce?
Trivia & References
- Nair is a popular hair removal product made by Church & Dwight.
- Morrissey is a British singer and lyricist, best known as the vocalist for the the Smiths during the 1980s.
- This could be a reference to Harrison Ford's character "Indiana Jones", who has a similar aversion to snakes. (His father, Henry Jones, reveals in Indiana Jones III that he doesn't like rats.) Harrison Ford also plays Han Solo in Star Wars, a character, Dean has been related to by series producer Eric Kripke.
- John Edward is a psychic medium and was the star of the show Crossing Over with John Edward from 1999 to 2004.
Harry: ...of the Rings. Run! Go! Go!
- Lord of the Rings is a fantasy epic written by J.R.R. Tolkien and a box office hit movie trilogy directed by Peter Jackson.
- BOC stands for Blue Öyster Cult, whose hook-and-cross logo appeared on the episode (as well as two songs). The logo itself is tied to the Greek Titan, and father of Zeus, Kronos.
Harry: What would Buffy do. But Ed, she's stronger than me.
- Ed and Harry's "WWBD: What Would Buffy Do?" is a reference to the TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
- A line taken from the 1973 movie The Exorcist, from the Roman Catholic rite of exorcism.
Minutiae
- Dean puts a plastic spoon in Sam's mouth while he is asleep, takes a photo, then turns the music on really loud, waking Sam up and startling him.
- Dean mentions putting Nair in Sam's shampoo bottle as part of a prank war when they were younger.
- Sam turns on the windshield wipers and turns the car radio's volume all the way up, startling Dean with a tango song when he starts the car.
- Dean puts itching powder in Sam's underwear while he's in the shower.
- Sam glues Dean's hand to a beer bottle.
- Sam calls Ed & Harry, pretending to be a producer offering them a movie.
- Dean puts a dead fish on the back seat of Ed & Harry's car.
Sides, Scripts & Transcripts
- 1.17 Hell House (transcript)
- Casting sides for Craig Thursten
- Casting sides for "Ernie" (later renamed Ed Zeddmore
- Casting sides for "Harold" (later renamed Harry Spengler)
Promotion
Episode Meta
- SPN Heavy Meta Season One Meta Index
- Bond, Silvia. 2008. Talk to the Towel: "Hell House" Season 1, Episode 17. Pink Raygun, September 5; archive link
- "The Flamingos in SPN 1x17" by hugemind (September 2007); archive link, spnematography