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Session 9 Poster

Session 9

Fear is a place.
2001 | 100m | English

(65621 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

Tensions rise within an asbestos cleaning crew as they work in an abandoned mental hospital with a horrific past that seems to be coming back.
Release Date: Aug 10, 2001
Director: Brad Anderson
Writer: Brad Anderson, Stephen Gevedon
Genres: Drama, Horror, Mystery
Keywords schizophrenia, massachusetts, lunatic asylum, psychology, coin, tape recorder, pot smoking, cell phone, walkie talkie, security guard, mental illness, asbestos, multiple personality, tunnel, lobotomy, hazmat suit, job
Production Companies October Films, USA Films, Scout Productions
Box Office Revenue: $1,612,259
Budget: $1,500,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Peter Mullan Gordon
David Caruso Phil
Stephen Gevedon Mike
Josh Lucas Hank
Brendan Sexton III Jeff
Paul Guilfoyle Bill Griggs
Larry Fessenden Craig McManus
Charley Broderick Security Guard
Lonnie Farmer Doctor (voice)
Sheila Stasack Wendy (voice)
Jurian Hughes Mary Hobbes (voice)
Name Job
Michael Hertlein Dialogue Editor
Aimee McCue Costume Design
Claire Folger Still Photographer
Barry Cole Music Supervisor
Johanna Turner Sound Effects Editor
Michael Mullane Sound Effects Editor
Todd Kleitsch Key Makeup Artist
Georgianne Walken Casting
Roger Danchik Art Direction
Christopher Covert Music Supervisor
Jeremy Raub Music Editor
William Smith Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Carrie Lisonbee Sound Effects Editor
Jerry DeCarlo Hairstylist
Joe Rossi Makeup Artist
Jay Heyman Property Master
Marilyn Nave Visual Effects Coordinator
John Althoff Dolly Grip
Mike Hadley Electrician
Michael Peterson Electrician
Woody Bell Key Grip
Climax Golden Twins Original Music Composer
Sheila Jaffe Casting
Sophie Carlhian Production Design
Karen Corsica Production Coordinator
Derek Marcil Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Javier Bennassar Sound Effects Editor
Elizabeth Cecchini Hairstylist
Tricia Heine Makeup Artist
Theodore Suchecki Construction Coordinator
Robert Getty Dialogue Editor, ADR Editor
Karine Albano Best Boy Electric
Rachelle Fankhauser Electrician
Chris Nickerson Electrician
Evans Brown Gaffer
Dave Cambria Rigging Gaffer
Colin Hudson Steadicam Operator
Maura Tighe Local Casting
Ann Pankonin Craft Service
Manya Cetlin Art Department Coordinator
James D. Hurd Propmaker
Bob Coleman Electrician
Dan Hutchinson Electrician
Joseph Christofori First Assistant Camera
Lon Caracappa Rigging Gaffer
Charles Papert Steadicam Operator
Nancy Doyle Local Casting
Ian B. Wile Assistant Editor
William L. Flanagan Rigging Grip
Jennifer Malone Unit Publicist
Tom Williams Sound Mixer
Brad Anderson Editor, Director, Screenplay
Stephen Gevedon Screenplay
Uta Briesewitz Director of Photography
Kelly Cronin Script Supervisor
Jason George Supervising Sound Editor
Peter Kuran Visual Effects Supervisor
Katharina Eggmann Casting Associate
Steven Hathaway Assistant Editor
Name Title
Dorothy Aufiero Producer
David Collins Producer
John Sloss Executive Producer
Michael Williams Producer
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2024 6 24 33 14
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Reviews

John Chard
10.0

Madness is just overactive curiosity. Session 9 is directed by Brad Anderson who also co-writes the screenplay with Stephen Gevedon. It stars Peter Mullan, David Caruso, Josh Lucas, Brendan Sexton III and Stephen Gevedon. Music is scored by Climax Golden Twins and cinematography is by Uta Briese ... witz. Danvers State Hospital (AKA: State Lunatic Hospital at Danvers, The Danvers Lunatic Asylum, and The Danvers State Insane Asylum), Massachusetts. Built in 1874, opened in 1878 and closed in 1992. The home to misery, madness, tragedies and troubling treatments. Five men from an asbestos removal company, each with issues or points to prove, enter the vast bat shaped structure under the promise of a big pay off to get the job done in one week. But over the course of the week money will be the last thing on their minds. Psychological horror at its finest, Session 9, in the hands of Brad Anderson, pretty much gets everything right in this most skin itching of sub-genres. Like the ghost story splinter of horror, setting is absolutely everything, and few, if any? Horror settings are as imposing or eerie as the one time Danvers State Hospital. Sadly demolished in 2006/7 to make way for an apartment complex (bastard property developers have no respect outside of the purse), the place positively oozes unease throughout the movie. With Anderson choosing to shoot his film on videotape, this further aids the sense of realism and palpable dread, and although it isn't a stretch of the mind to think about some of the misery that played out in reality at Danvers, Anderson and his photographer Briesewitz ensure that it never leaves our conscious. Tone is set from the off as being slow burn, this is perfect as it allows us to get a grasp of the characters, their psychological make ups and narrative worth. With the Danvers facility proving to be the extra character, all things come together seamlessly to gnaw away at the viewers. It's a devilishly odd thing to say, but as the story and characters are given room to breath, the audience who have immersed themselves in the picture will start to feel claustrophobic, and then for the night time sequences, even achluophobic. It's pitch perfect pacing by Anderson, who prior to unleashing the unnerving finale, has pulled us (and his excellent cast) slowly through a labyrinth of dank corridors, wards, treatment rooms, caged stairwells and a morgue. Even on the outside during daylight hours everything feels bleak, either with characters loomed over by the building, or on a roof chatting while Gothic turrets watch over them menacingly, the ghosts and bitterness of Danvers Hospital exist fully in Anderson's movie. Story links a tape recording found by Mike (Gevedon) with that of the workers' unfolding plight. The tape tells of 9 sessions with a troubled patient named Mary Hobbes, to say anymore would be spoilerish, but for the record in this writers eyes it's the creepiest tape recording in horrorville. Add in the odd hospital prop such as a lone wheelchair, a hydrotherapy bath or an orbitoclast! Well you get the picture I'm sure. Climax Golden Twins provide a suitably jarring score, where disjointed noises and elongated tonal strains further enhance the pervading disquiet. Picture only falls down slightly with silly plot error involving a furnace, and for some folk the ending will inevitably be met with dissatisfaction. I liked it plenty but I also feel they could have gone another way with it. But it does work well and isn't a cop out, and certainly it's better than the alternate ending available in the extras section of home disc formats. It's a horror film aimed at a certain horror fan, the one who has the patience to enjoy slow burn psychological pin prickery. All played out expertly by cast and film makers at a naturally unsettling location. 9/10

May 16, 2024