Of all the unexplained phenomena that swirled through the faddish  1970s, from the ancient aliens in the book "Chariots of the Gods?" to  the spoon-bending Uri Geller, few fascinated the public like "The Amityville Horror."
The bestselling 1977 book and the 1979  hit film were based on the allegedly true story of George and Kathy  Lutz and her three young children, whose Dutch Colonial at 112 Ocean  Ave. in Amityville -- the site of a mass murder 13 months earlier --  turned out to be plagued by oozing walls and demonic spirits. The  Lutzes' haunted-house tale became a media sensation, a lucrative  franchise (James Brolin and Margot Kidder  played them in the first of many movies) and remains the subject of a  still-unresolved debate: Was it definitive proof of the supernatural, or  just a canny hoax?
Daniel Lutz, who lived through it as a  9-year-old, is publicly telling his story for the first time in "My  Amityville Horror," an independently produced documentary opening Friday  at Manhattan's IFC Center and available through video-on-demand.  Believers and debunkers alike may find that the movie provides fuel for  their opposing arguments.
"I'm not a believer in what  happened, but I'm not an outright skeptic," says Eric Walter, the film's  Los Angeles-based director. "I believe something happened to these  people, but we don't know what it was."
Walter, 28, grew up in Maryland  and became so obsessed with the Amityville story as a youngster that he  eventually launched the website amityvillefiles.com. It was through the  site that he was contacted by a friend of Daniel, now a UPS driver  living in Queens. In 2009, Walter flew out to meet one of the last  eyewitnesses to the Amityville story who was willing to speak about it.  (George and Kathy Lutz are dead; Daniel's siblings declined to  participate in the film.)
What Walter found was an angry,  chain-smoking man in his late 40s who appears deeply traumatized by his  past. "This is not something I asked for," Daniel says in the film,  explaining why he has come forward after so many years. "I've been  running away from it, and it finally caught up with me." He declined to  be interviewed for this story.
Daniel insists that the Amityville  haunting was real and blames it largely on his stepfather, George Lutz,  whom he loathed. He says that George dabbled in the occult and was  capable of telekinesis; Daniel also claims that he himself was possessed  by a spirit a la "The Exorcist," complete with a violently shaking bed.
Walter acknowledges that Daniel's  memories -- such as a visiting priest being swarmed by flies --  sometimes mimic the movie version a little too closely. And skeptics may  raise an eyebrow when Daniel refuses to take a polygraph test. What's  irrefutable is Daniel's enduring emotional pain, though its cause may  never become clear.
"I hope that viewers not only walk  away with a more intimate account of the dynamics within the Lutz  family, but also witness firsthand the terrible effects that relentless  media hype can have on a person," says Walter. "And I think Daniel Lutz  is the living embodiment of that."
Source: Long Island Newsday
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My Amityville Horror the documentary, still haunts family member (trailer video)
