<- Shadow
  • Trey Callaway
  • Chris Long
  • April 14, 2006 - April 15, 2006
  • June 7, 2006 - June 11, 2006

Summary

Official WB Description Dean and Sam investigate a house haunted by the ghost of Mordecai, a man who killed his six daughters during the 1930s. The brothers discover a website dedicated to the Mordecai legend and realize the town is unknowingly conjuring up the evil spirit through the site.

Timeline

April 14, 2006 Craig and Dana graffiti Murdoch house
April 15, 2006 Teens and Craig go into Murdoch house and find "dead" body; cops claim prank
June 7, 2006 Dean and Sam travel to Richardson, Texas; Dean's spoon prank; Dean and Sam arrive and interview teen and Craig about Murdoch house
June 8, 2006 The boys explore the Murdoch house; meet Harry Spangler and Ed Zeddmore; research at Collin County Public Library and police station finding nothing; Sam's radio prank; teens explore Murdoch house that night and Jill dies
June 9, 2006 Jill's body discovered; Dean realizes that they missed something; that night, Dean and Sam scare Harry and Ed towards the police and explore the Murdoch house; Mordechai Murdoch proves immune to rock salt; Harry and Ed end up arrested
June 10, 2006 Dean realizes what the symbol is that has been bothering him; Craig admits to creating the original haunting story; Dean's itching powder prank; Sam postulates that Mordechai is a Tulpa; Dean and Sam use Harry and Ed to create a new story about Mordechai; Sam's hand glued to beer prank; Dean and Sam return to the Murdoch house to gank Mordechai; Tulpa story failed to circulate so wrought-iron rounds fail; Dean improvises and sets the house on fire
June 11, 2006 Dean and Sam go see Harry and Ed; Sam prank called Harry and Ed as a producer; Dean pranked them by putting a dead fish in their back seat; prank war truce for the next 100 miles

Two months ago, three teenagers in Richardson, Texas, lead by a young man Craig, are heading to a reputedly haunted house. All of them eventually enter. The legend goes that it lives in the root cellar, and it only goes after girls by stringing them up. James does not believe it, and leads the group to the basement, where he cuts up and jokes. However, they find the body of a girl hanging in the cellar. By the time the police arrive, the body is missing, so the police say the kids are just yanking chains.

Now Sam knew they would be passing through Texas, so the previous night he found a paranormal website called HellHoundsLair.com and found a case. The site had the kids' testimonies, including the cops thinking they were lying. He is sleeping soundly while Dean in driving. Due to Dean's overwhelming boredom, he sticks a spoon in Sam's mouth and takes a photo. He then wakes Sam, both startled and annoyed, by rudely turning up the radio and singing. Sam does not want to start that crap - a prank war - up again, but Dean teases him into it. Sam gives the information of the case to Dean, who teases that the website was streaming live out of Mom's basement, and they would not know a ghost if it bit them in the persqueeter. Sam mentions they let Dad take off - which was a mistake in his opinion - so there will be no harm in checking out this hunt. Just need to find the kids in a food place.

The three teens talk about their experience to Sam and Dean, each giving different details and believing it to be true. Sam and Dean ask about how they found the place, and they all say one name: Craig. The boys track down Craig Thursten in a record store. While Dean flips through some records, Sam listens to Craig's retelling, told to him by his cousin Dana, of the legend of Mordechai Murdoch. He was a farmer who lived in the house during the 1930s, who killed his daughters, hanging them in the cellar to spare them from slow starving to death caused by The Depression. He then hung himself, so he is trapped in the house forever. Craig insists he did not believe it before, but now he does not know what to think, only that the girl was real.

Dean and Sam scout the woods to check things out. EMF is no good, possibly from the overhead power line. They head inside, which has symbols from many different origins painted on the walls and floor. Dean notices one of the symbols on the walls but cannot identify what exactly it is, while Sam notices that the paint is fresh. While searching the house, the boys run into Ed Zeddmore and Harry Spangler, professional paranormal investigators, who run the website called HellHoundsLair.com. Ed claims the boys are amateurs, and tries to impress them with the EMF (electromagnetic field meter). Harry explains the mechanics to the boys, which spikes and gets them excited. After Dean determines that no, Ed and Harry had not actually seen a ghost, he and Sam leave them to their "work".

Sam has researched about Mordechai, but could not find anything. Instead he found another man, Martin Murdoch, who lived in the house in the 30s. He had two sons, neither of which died. Dean thinks this is just a bust, because no missing reports even match the dead girl's description. Dean climbs in the car to head for a bar and beers, only to have the radio playing full blast a Latino pop-dance music. He scrambles to turn it off to Sam's laughter, as Sam pranked Dean. Dean claims it is weak, and they drive off.

That night, on a dare, Jill enters to house to retrieve a jar from the cellar while two friends, a girl and a guy, wait outside. Jill is scared, but makes it down to the cellar. However, Mordechai appears and hangs her, just as the legend says. The next morning, in between the police and coroner with bystanders standing around, Dean and Sam revisit the house. They ask Mr. Goodwin what happened, only to be told the girl committed suicide when she was a straight A student with a full ride to UT. Dean realizes they missed something.

That night they return to the house, but the police are surrounding Hell House to keep others out. When Ed and Harry show up, Dean calls to the police to blow Ed and Harry's cover... and suddenly the brothers have access to Hell House. Walking through the main room, the symbol on the wall bugs Dean again, but they head down into the cellar. Dean double dares Sam to drink something, teasing him, but a noise causes them to be alert. It's only rats, which bothers Dean. The ghost appears behind Sam, and they react, turning around and shooting him. However, he's immune to rock salt, which is wrong, and they scramble to get out. Mordechai brings his axe down, bringing the shelf down on top of Dean. Sam uses his shotgun to block the next axe swing, yelling at Dean to get out, before Sam is able to get out from under the axe himself. Out front Ed and Harry had given the cops the slip and circled back, only to have Sam and Dean come barreling out of Hell House, racing away as fast as they can. Ed and Harry sees the ghost. Harry grabs Ed to start running, but they crash into the cops, who put them in the holding cell for the rest of the night.

The next day back at their motel Dean is bothered by the symbol on the wall. Sam explains how the Mordechai's ghost did not make sense because he was carrying around an axe and had slit wrists. Then Sam notices on HellHoundsLair.com that someone changed the story, into that he slit his wrists with an axe. Dean suddenly recognizes the symbol, and figures out where it all started. Dean and Sam return to visit Craig in the record store. The symbol is from a Blue Oyster Cult album cover. Craig admits that he and his cousin Dana were bored, so they found an abandoned dump and they made it look haunted by painting the symbols from band logos and signs from Dana's theology textbooks, and made up a story of a ghost named Murdoch as a prank. The story started to spread, and eventually got on the Hell Hounds website. It was funny at first, but now the girl is dead. He did not mean anything by it. Dean and Sam leave, wondering if it is not real, then how do you explain Mordechai?

Back at the motel, Sam is in the shower while Dean has been out. Dean returns and puts itching powder in Sam's underwear, while Sam postulates that Mordechai is a Tulpa. Sam comes out of the bathroom explaining that it is a Tibetan thought form, causing Dean to step away from Sam's underwear hastily. Dean suggests Sam getting dressed, as he wants something to eat, and jumps into the bathroom.

They grab coffees, and make their way to a table, the itching powder starting to have an effect. Sam is squirming around while he explains Tulpas to Dean. There was one incident when 20 monks visualized a golem and it appeared, so Sam postulates that 10,000 websurfers could do the same, since they are all thinking about Mordechai. Since Craig painted signs from a Theology textbook, and one of the signs was a sigil that has been used for centuries to concentrate meditative thoughts, that could have been enough to bring a Tulpa to life. But, the story on the internet keeps changing, so does the spirit. It is also why the rock salt did not work; Mordechai is not a traditional spirit. Sam is getting worse, itching and adjusting himself. Dean wonders if they could just take the sigil off the wall, but that will not kill it. The HellHound website uploaded last night's video, so even more people are thinking about Mordechai. Dean thinks of a way to kill it, and stands up to head to a copy store. Sam follows, complaining he is allergic to their soap, but Dean's laughter clues him in that Dean pulled a prank.

In their camper, Harry does not want to go back, but Ed points out that Harry is a ghost hunter, and convinces him. There is a pounding on the door, and the Winchester brothers want to talk with them. Dean tells them to shut down their website, but Ed says they have an obligation to their fans and the truth. Sam "slips" about that thing, but convinces Dean to leave, so Harry and Ed chase after the boys agreeing to shut down the website for the information. Finally, Dean and Sam hand over the "death certificate" stating that death was a self-inflicted gunshot wound, that he is terrified of them, and if you shoot him with wrought-iron rounds, you can kill him. They race back to their camper, excited on new information to post to the website.

As Dean and Sam wait for the boys to post it on their website and enough people view it so that it becomes real, they go out to eat. Dean keeps pulling a cord, causing an annoying fisherman to laugh and annoy Sam. Sam is on his laptop checking to see if Ed and Harry posted the information, which they did, changing the legend. Sam figures by nightfall iron rounds will work, killing Mordechai, and they toast with their beers. Dean takes a drink of his beer, only to find he cannot put the bottle down because Sam superglued it to Dean's hand. Sam pulls the cord to the annoying fisherman laugh, to specifically laugh at Dean.

It is night, and cops are patrolling the house. They hear laughter coming from nearby. When they find it, it is the annoying laughing fisherman from the restaurant the Winchesters were previously in. This gives the Winchesters the distraction they need to get into the Hell House. Alert, they begin to sweep the house with guns, Dean complaining he barely has enough skin on his palm.

Dean and Sam hear a voice, spinning to take aim, but it turns out to be Ed and Harry. The four of them hear a scraping noise, and the brothers take up position once more, with Ed and Harry crowding behind them. Mordechai comes bursting out, so Dean and Sam start firing. Nothing happens, but Mordechai disappears again. Dean and Sam sweep the rest of the rooms, while Harry wants to check if they got Mordechai on film. Mordechai reappears to break the camera from Harry's hands. Dean and Sam race back, and question if they had posted the story, but Ed and Harry tell them the server crashed, so the new legend will not manifest. Harry and Ed try to leave, but Mordechai attacks them. Sam comes to their rescue, allowing them to escape, but Sam gets in trouble himself. Meanwhile Dean has been busy tossing out flammable liquid over the kitchen and the main room. Dean races to Sam's rescue, spraying an aerosol he has ignited. Sam pauses in the main room, but Dean explains he is improvising, tossing the lighter back into the room and catching everything on fire. They race from the burning house, stopping to see Mordechai disappear. Sam questions Dean's logic of burning the house down, but Dean explains no one will go in anymore, and without a house to haunt, Mordechai will not exist. If the legend changes Dean says they will just come back. Sam wonders how many things they have hunted existed, just because people believed in them.

The next night the brothers go back to see Harry and Ed, who are busy packing up to head to Hollywood. They received a phone call that morning from a producer who wants to option the movie rights to Hell House, maybe let them write it, and create the RPG. The brothers wish them luck, and say goodbye. After they pull out, Sam confesses he is the one who pranked them with the call from the Hollywood producer. They got a laugh, and then Dean confesses he has put a dead fish in their back seat. They both laugh again. Sam asks for a truce in their prank war, which Dean agrees to for the next 100 miles. They climb in the Impala and leave.

Music

  • Blue Oyster Cult - Fire of Unknown Origin
    the song on the radio Dean is singing
  • Blue Oyster Cult - Burnin' for You
    plays when Dean and Sam interview the kids, and also at the end of the episode, when they leave the trailer park
  • Zach Tempest - Slow Death
    plays when Dean and Sam go to the music store to talk to Craig for the first time
  • Zach Tempest - Anthem
    plays when Dean and Sam go to the music store to talk to Craig for the second time
  • Rex Hobart and The Misery Boys - Point of No Return
    plays while Dean and Sam are talking about the Tulpa in the diner
  • The Waco Brothers - Fast Train Down
    plays in the restaurant when Dean gets his hand glued to his beer

Trivia

Writing the Episode

  • Eric Kripke wanted to explore on how the urban legends are created and spread, on how they become real. On top of that, the episode ended up being hilarious. It became very meta.Supernatural The Official Companion Season 1, p. 90-91
  • "It was the self-fulfilling prophecy of this prank that I found so fascinating. It was really a metaphor for urban legends in the first place. All urban legends are just stories that people tell to scare or warn each other. If they're told enough, if they're whispered through a friend of a friend, these things take on a life of their own and become real." - Eric KripkeSupernatural The Official Companion Season 1, p. 95
  • An example of assumptions that takes on an ominous tone is the jar of jam that is found in the basement. You do not really know what is in it, yet Dean teases Sam to eat it. It could be anything - jam or blood. So is it okay to eat, or would eating it kill you?Supernatural The Official Companion Season 1, p. 91
  • A humorous guitar line started in the Pilot with just the two brothers together, and it is used well in 'Hell House'.
  • The writer, Trey Callaway, also wrote I Still Know What You Did Last Summer , a movie that has a hook-handed killer.Supernatural The Official Companion Season 1, p. 46

Filming

  • In the "Previously" intro, there is a line from Dean talking with Sam at the campfire that was filmed, but never made it into the final cut of Wendigo. Dean: "This is Dad's book." There is some controversy as to what the exact line is. Some people hear "This was Dad's book."; others hear "This is Dad's book." In the Closed Captioning on the DVD, it is "was"; the admin hears "is".
  • Sam and Dean stay at Wyeth's Western Inn in Richardson, Texas. The room features a Wild West theme.
  • After receiving endless requests to show "less on", a scene was added to show off Jared's naked body. Eric Kripke never intended for the boys to be quite as naked as they've become known to be on the show.
  • The set of haunted house was a "creepy old abandoned house in the middle of nowhere. Anything that you can visualize as being creepy, that's what we'd bring to this set." - Set decorator George NeumanSupernatural The Official Companion Season 1, p. 91
  • The look for Ed and Harry was trying to make them look silly. A little bit geeky without going overboard.Supernatural The Official Companion Season 1, p. 91

Other

  • The Meaning of the Episode Title: "Hell House" describes the setting.
  • The subtitles on the DVD sections are:
    1. Hanging in the rafters.
    2. Rats and rock salt.
    3. 10,000 web surfers.
    4. Mordechai.
    5. Movie deal.
    6. End Credits.
  • This was the first Supernatural episode to air on a Thursday night. Previous to this episode, Supernatural had its regular timeslot on Tuesday nights.
  • The location of this episode, Richardson, Texas, is Jensen Ackles' home town. However, the real city of Richardson is a major suburb located within the Dallas metroplex, not a rural town as depicted in the episode.
  • TCU is Texas Christian University. April 14 and 15 were the days the university was closed for Easter break, and the days Dana would be home to pull the prank.
  • The website in this episode, "HellHound's Lair" was an actual tie-in website created by the producers of the show. It was created as a cross-media product to be visited online. On it were the pictures from the character's ghost encounter and stories submitted by fans. Fans are allowed to submit their own scary stories with the understanding that they will not be paid if any ideas are used by the show. However the URL to the website now redirects to the official CW website.
  • The pranks depicted in the episode are as follows:
    1. 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.
    2. Dean mentions putting Nair in Sam's shampoo bottle as part of a prank war when they were younger.
    3. Sam turns the car radio's volume all the way up, startling Dean with a tango song.
    4. Dean puts itching powder in Sam's underwear while he's in the shower.
    5. Sam glues Dean's hand to a beer bottle.
    6. Sam calls Ed and Harry, pretending to be a producer offering them a movie.
    7. Dean puts a dead fish on the back seat of Ed and Harry's car.
  • This episode was based on a true story by writer Trey Callaway. As a kid in Texas, he and some friends went to an abandoned barn and painted the inside with red paint. They painted the table, added chains, and then began to spread the story they had found a place where all these murders happened. That it was true. Other kids went to check it out, and started scaring each other. One girl thought a specter attacked her, and was chasing her. She was so scared she ran away frantic and fell and broke her leg. The police were called in to investigate whether something actually happened.Supernatural The Official Companion Season 1, p. 95
  • Kripke has always enjoyed researching American folklore and urban legends. "It was the kernel of the show that initially fascinated me. I think it's fascinating from a cultural place, from an academic place. Some of my favorite fan letters are from people who have been turned on to urban legends because of the show. One teacher wrote me that she used Supernatural as a way to teach her class on a unit on urban legends and American folklore, which to me was about the highest compliment anyone ever paid me." - Eric KripkeSupernatural The Official Companion Season 1, p. 93
  • The Supernatural The Official Companion Season 1 has "Slow Death" and Anthem credited as Extreme Music. However, in listening to the episode, it is Zach Tempest that performed the piece. Extreme Music is a music production company that solicits material for use in TV, film, games, etc.
  • Supernatural.tv: Inside the Legend: Hell House

Pop Culture

  • Dean: Aw, what's the matter Sammy? Afraid you're going to get a little Nair in your shampoo again, huh?
    Nair is a popular hair removal product made by Church & Dwight.
  • Dean: Ah, good for you Morrissey.
    Morrissey is a British singer and lyricist, best known as the lyricist and vocalist for the Smithers during the 1980s.

  • The name Ed Zeddmore and Harry Spangler are a reference to the characters Winston Zeddmore and Dr. Egon Spengler from Ghostbusters.
  • Dean: That's all you got? That's weak. That is bush league.
    The term "bush league" has a literal meaning as well as an idiomatic meaning. It originated as a term for minor league baseball, which is often played in rural towns that are sometimes referred to as "the sticks" or "the bush". The term "bush league" has come to refer to anything that is considered amateurish in nature or of lesser quality, rather than being of the highest professional quality.
  • Dean: Who ya gonna call!
    It's a popular quote from the movie Ghostbusters and Ghostbusters II. Ghostbusters is a 1984 American supernatural comedy film, which follows three eccentric parapsychologists in New York City who start a ghost-catching business, which booms and requires a fourth ghostbuster. The sequel is Ghostbusters II (1989), which follows the further adventures of the four parapsychologists and their organization which combats paranormal activities.
  • Dean: Arghh! I hate rats.
    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 played Han Solo in Star Wars, a character Dean has been related to by series producer Eric Kripke.
  • Ed: No. Would John Edward go? No, we've lost the cops. Let's find our center and get some work done, okay? All right?
    John Edward is a psychic medium and was the star of the show Crossing Over with John Edward, from 1999 to 2004.
  • Ed: Sweet Lord...
    Harry: ...of the Rings. RUN!!!
    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.
  • Dean: Tell me Craig, you, uh, you into BOC? Or just scaring the hell outta people?
    BOC stand for Blue Oyster Cult, whose hook-and-cross appeared on the episode. The logo itself is tied to the Greek Titan, Kronos. Blue Oyster Cult's music is also used in several Supernatural episodes. See Music.
  • Ed: This stuff here... this is our ticket to the big time. Fame... money... sex. With girls. Okay? Be brave. Okay. WWBD. What Would Buffy Do. Huh?
    Harry: (whispers) 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, which is an American TV series with a young woman "Vampire Slayer", who is exceptionally strong and is "called" to fight evil.

  • The door to Ed and Harry's trailer has several bumper stickers. They say "Paranormal Scouting Unit," "Step into the Light Carol Ann" (a reference to the movie Poltergeist), "I'd Rather Be Surfing," "Clean House - Get Exorcized," and "Visualize Using Your Turn Signals."
  • Dean: Ah, would you look at that! Action figures in their original packaging. What a shock.
    Action figures are small replicas of heroes, and are toys for children to play with. However, certain series of action figure would collect high prices if they were still in their original packaging, and never played with.
  • Ed: (whispers) The power of Christ compels you. (yelling) THE POWER OF CHRIST COMPELS YOU!!!
    A line taken from the 1973 movie The Exorcist, from the Roman Catholic rite of exorcism.
  • Harry: And create the RPG.
    Ed: Oh.
    Dean: The what?
    Ed: Role playing game.
    A role-playing game is a game in which players assume the roles of characters in a fictional setting. Players take responsibility for acting out these roles within a narrative, either through literal acting or through a process of structured decision-making or character development. There are many different forms of RPGs: tabletop, live action (LARP), large online (MMORPG), as well as numerous single-player video and computer games.

Species

  • Human
  • Tulpa