With its concrete cracked, paint peeling, insides rotting, and backyard pool turned black from neglect, the fixer-upper that Angie Hill bought in 2006 was a total nightmare. But really this was fitting. After all, this was the house where Freddy Kruger tormented teens in the fictional suburb of Springwood, Ohio, in the 1984 slasher classic A Nightmare on Elm Street. But over the past several years, Hill has worked hard to transform this battered building with a checkered past into a lovely home. And it can be yours for just $2.1 million dollars. On the outside, it's still reminiscent of the place where A Nightmare on Elm Street's heroine Nancy Thomas battled her need to sleep as well as the serial killer Krueger. However, Hill told AOL that she essentially gutted the inside, replacing "every piece of wood" and reworking the floor plan. (You can see a slide show of the transformation...
- 2/4/2013
- cinemablend.com
Looking for a new home in Los Angeles? Maybe you should buy the house from A Nightmare on Elm Street. The original house used in the 1984 Wes Craven classic is now for sale and we have all the details, along with a number of photos. The house was originally built in 1919 and Freddy Krueger fans will instantly recognize the outside from the movie. Current owner Angie Hill purchased the home in 2006 and it required serious indoor renovations to a…...
- 2/4/2013
- Horrorbid
Looking for a new home in Los Angeles? Maybe you should buy the house from A Nightmare on Elm Street. The original house used in the 1984 Wes Craven classic is now for sale and we have all the details, along with a number of photos.
The house was originally built in 1919 and Freddy Krueger fans will instantly recognize the outside from the movie. Current owner Angie Hill purchased the home in 2006 and it required serious indoor renovations to address neglect from the previous owner. As you’ll be able to tell from the pictures below, the inside of the house has been almost completely rebuilt and rearranged, but it doesn’t change the fact that this house is part of horror movie history and the outside has remained mostly the same.
The house is located on 1428 North Genesee Avenue with a current asking price of $2.1 million. If this is something you may be interested in,...
The house was originally built in 1919 and Freddy Krueger fans will instantly recognize the outside from the movie. Current owner Angie Hill purchased the home in 2006 and it required serious indoor renovations to address neglect from the previous owner. As you’ll be able to tell from the pictures below, the inside of the house has been almost completely rebuilt and rearranged, but it doesn’t change the fact that this house is part of horror movie history and the outside has remained mostly the same.
The house is located on 1428 North Genesee Avenue with a current asking price of $2.1 million. If this is something you may be interested in,...
- 2/2/2013
- by Jonathan James
- DailyDead
One person's nightmare is another's dream home, and that's literally true in the case of a certain house at 1428 Elm Street. A Los Angeles realtor has announced that the house where Wes Craven filmed the original 1984 A Nightmare on Elm Street – and fictional home to the film's heroine Nancy Thompson (Heather Langenkamp) and her onscreen family – is now on the market. A cool $2.1 million will get you into this sweet and (we're assuming) totally-not-cursed property in Hollywood suburb Spaulding Square, which was bought in 2006 by current owner Angie Hill and renovated from the ground up. The original facade as seen in the movie is still recognizable, but the house now has three bedrooms, three and a quarter bathrooms, a pool, a guesthouse with kitchen and bathroom, built-ins, a master suite with a super fancy tub, and walnut floors. There's no mention of a furnace in the basement, however, and as...
- 2/2/2013
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
Lots of chatter this week about live web series, but who says scripted series can't have a little live streaming fun too? The Legend of Neil dropped its season 2 finale (above) yesterday and followed it up with a live chat last night on UStream with the cast that drew over 10,000 total viewers. First watch the episode to see if the show's involuntary protagonist Neil/Link (Tony Janning) will ever get princess Zelda (Angie Hill) out of the hands of the evil Lord Gannon and his lackey Wizrobe. Highlights from the live chat, which featured Janning and co-creator Sandeep Parikh and cast members Felicia Day, Angie Hill, Mike Rose and Eric Acosta will be posted on Atom later today. Legend of Neil is clearly the online network's biggest original series hit so far—check out the tagline under the Atom.com logo (right). The Comedy Central owned site is doing their part to market the series,...
- 10/21/2009
- by Marc Hustvedt
- Tubefilter.com
Online musicals are all the rage, and we probably have the Whedon clan to thank for that. Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog gets a lot of credit for pushing web video forward, and you can't help but notice its inspiration in The Legend of Neil's new season with the release of Episode 3 (above) today on Atom.com. (Warning, the video is potentially Nsfw, well, depending on where you work.) Neil creators Sandeep Parikh and Tony Janning, who stars as Neil in the series, gave a preview of the episode last month at a live screening. In what be the raunchiest appearance on screen to date by Felicia Day (The Guild, Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog), Day returns as the fairy finding herself is a spot of trouble with Ganon (Scott Chernoff). And as if it needed more of a Whedon/Dr. Horrible connection, we learned that Maurissa Tancharoen sings the voice...
- 8/24/2009
- by Marc Hustvedt
- Tubefilter.com
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