Tuesday, November 9, 2010

November's SPIRITS with SPIRITS!


GHOULA meets for cocktails in haunted places on the 13th of each month. “SPIRITS with SPIRITS” is a casual gathering of regional ghost hunters and those that just like ghost stories. Open to all, from the curious skeptic to the passionate phantom pursuer. Make friends, and toast a ghost! Let's put the “Boo!” back into “booze.”

All those who attend will receive a free G.H.O.U.L.A. button. If you already have one, please wear it so others can find you.

THE DATE: November 13th, 2010 (Saturday)
THE PLACE: Barefoot Bar (@ Duke's)
(21150 Pacific Coast Hwy, Malibu) Map
THE TIME: 8:00pm to 10:30pm

THE GHOST(S):

The stretch of coastal land in between Topanga Canyon and Malibu Canyon was once dotted with Native American villages and burial grounds. Local legend claims that these communities died out when the "Indian" women began to kill their babies in fear that the would eventually become enslaved by the early Spanish settlers. It seems that their blood may have stained this otherwise beautiful area of our county forever. As if cursed, this section of the Pacific Coast Highway has seen more than its share of floods, fires, landslides, and fatal car accidents. Even the former owners of this land have been met with tragedy (like the famous "Los Feliz Curse" of Griffith Park). One such former owner, Rhoda May Rindge, lost her family fortune trying to prevent the government from taking her land to build a highway across her property. Although she eventually lost the battle, for many years PCH (previously the Roosevelt Highway) used to end abruptly at Los Flores Canyon, where a small inn (built in 1915) and a hamburger stand catered to the adventurous motorists that ventured out to this remote dead-end.

Over the years, that roadside attraction evolved into a larger curiosity, the Sea Lion Restaurant, so named because of the giant tank in the parking lot filled with playful sea lions. Additionally, this eatery had two more claims to fame. First, it had the "longest ocean view dinning room in the world" (320 feet long), and secondly it served slices of chocolate cake that where bigger than a phone book. Today, the tavern's name has been changed, the sea lions are gone, the massive cakes are gone, but it still has the "longest ocean view dinning room in the world," as well as it's own unique dessert (Duke's famous "Hula Pie" with a secret message printed on the plate for those that can finish it), and most importantly it still has retained the ghosts from those earlier times.

The staff claims that a full-bodied apparition of a woman has been seen strolling along the walkway that runs parallel to the restaurant's 300 ft. window looking out to the ocean. The ladies room (which is along that walkway) is also said to be haunted by this female form. One of the bartenders told GHOULA, that after the restaurant closed one night, he stuck his head into that restroom to make sure that no one was there before locking up, and "invisible hands" forcefully pushed him back out through the door. Now, he avoids that room.

Additionally, the spirit of a man (affectionately referred to as "The Captain") lingers in the bar area. Bartenders have not only seen him (out of the corner of their eyes), but have heard his apparently distinctive cough as if it were next to them when the room is empty. Chris "The Captain" Polos, bought the Los Flores Inn in 1944, turned it into the Sea Lion Restaurant (as an attempt to save the mammals that were injured on the rocks below), and worked there everyday of his life until he died at 99 in 1986. Two years previous to his death, he sold the restaurant, but continued to live upstairs, and continued to still inspect the food, employees, and the restaurant's business (despite having no real official authority). It seems even in death, he continues.

http://www.dukesmalibu.com/

(to see last month's location...)

Monday, November 8, 2010

The Nov.7th Screening

A group of 40 brave people assembled for a rare screening of "House on Haunted Hill" (1999), featuring a fictional Los Angeles based haunted hospital closed because of patient neglect, at an actual Los Angeles based haunted hospital that was closed because of patient neglect. After Sarah Troop (of the Boyle Heights Paranormal Project) gave an amazing lecture of the sorted dark history and ghost lore of this historic structure, a suggestion was made to the audience to look above the screen ever now and then, and scan the dark windows of this foreboding building to see if perhaps you could catch a glimpse of one of the ghosts routinely seen by residents of the neighborhood as the walk past or look out their own windows. At the end of the screening, a couple of movie-goers confessed that they had indeed seen strange activity in a couple of the windows of this locked and empty building. Also on hand, in the event anyone came close to death from fright were the good doctors and nurses from "The Art of Bleeding" with their vintage ambulance parked nearby in case of an emergency.

Friday, November 5, 2010

It's Baaaaaaaack! The Make-Up Screening



Date: November 7th (Sunday)
Time: 8:00pm
Movie: "House on Haunted Hill" (1999)
Location: The Haunted Linda Vista Hospital
610 South Saint Louis Stree
t, Los Angeles (map)

Come out for our last free outdoor-screening of the "Haunted Films at Haunted Places" film series presented by GHOULA and the EPFC Filmmobile, and see "House on Haunted Hill" (1999) at this real haunted hospital (like the one in the movie). Also, hear about this local landmark's dark history (and ghost stories) with special guests, Sarah Troop of The Boyle Heights Paranormal Project and the Art of Bleeding.

When this hospital (originally built for Santa Fe Railroad employees) opened in 1904, it may have had a simple design on the outside, but it was all state-of-the-art on the inside. Among the many (then) high-tech gadgets found here were automatic elevators (push-button), automatic fire escapes (using body weight to lower slowly), and automatic wheelchairs (???). Some of the revolutionary design elements used in the construction (and now commonplace) were individually heated/cooled rooms, park lands surrounding the hospital, large interconnected halls on each floor so beds and bath tubs could be rolled easily from any room to any other room. The Hospital also featured tiled surgical rooms so cleaning could be done simply with a water hose. These features made it the most sanitary and best equipped hospital on the Pacific Coast, and one of the largest hospitals in the country at that time.

Unfortunately, these improvements (as with any hospital) are never enough to keep patients from dying within their walls. In over a hundred years, there has been a lot of death and sadness at this site. So, it is no wonder that just about any kind of paranormal experience that one can imagine has happened within these buildings.

This Sunday's movie, "House on Haunted Hill" (1999) is an odd (but fun) remake of the 1959 classic. In addition to adding more blood in the scenes, the producers inexplicably set the story in a hospital on a hill (as opposed to a "house" like the title suggests). Geoffrey Rush (who must reprise the role created by the great Vincent Prince) delivers his own great scenery-chewing performance that surely would make Vincent Price's corpse smile. It is also interesting to note, that this time around the main character designs theme park attractions for a living. Is this a nod to the influence William Castle (the creator of the original "House on Haunted Hill) had on the development of Disneyland (for more info...)