Posted 3 minutes agoSubscribe to BuzzFeed Daily NewsletterCaret Down23 Really, Really, Really, Creepy Hollywood CoincidencesYou can't convince me there wasn't something wrong with Brittany Murphy's house.by Hannah MarderBuzzFeed StaffFacebookPinterestLink 1. We all remember Brittany Murphy's tragic death in 2009, just before Christmas. The official cause was pneumonia, but iron deficiency anemia and multiple drug intoxication (OTC medication and her prescribed medications) also contributed. But then, less than six months later, her husband, Simon Monjack, died of pneumonia and anemia in the same house. Michael Bezjian / WireImage via Getty Images It's likely Murphy would've survived if she'd sought medical care in the days prior, though according to Monjack, Murphy knew she was dying and didn't seek care. The HBO documentary, What Happened, Brittany Murphy?, alleges that it was Monjack's controlling behavior that was to blame for Murphy not getting medical attention. According to Monjack, Murphy hated the house and thought it was "unlucky." Britney Spears had previously owned the home and reportedly left the house due to bad spirits, according to her former makeup artist. Monjack's mother later claimed there was severe mold in the house that caused Monjack to hallucinate, and Murphy's mother later also came to believe the mold theory. However, the coroners did not find evidence of mold in either autopsy. Gregg DeGuire / WireImage via Getty Images 2. James Dean famously died at age 24 after crashing his Porsche into a Sedan at an intersection. Dean was actually on his way to a car race at the time in his new $7000 Porsche - and here's where it gets creepy. Dean had dined with acting legend Alec Guinness one week before, and Dean had shown Guinness the convertible, telling him it could do 150mph. Guinness asked if he'd driven it yet, and Dean said no. "Some strange thing came over me. Some almost different voice," Guinness recalled. He says he told Dean not to ever get into the car, then looked at his watch. "I said, 'If you get into that car at all, it's now Thursday (Friday, actually), 10 o'clock at night and by 10 o'clock at night next Thursday, you'll be dead if you get into that car.'" Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images, Hulton Archive / Getty Images Dean did not listen and died on Thursday. "It was one of those odd things. It was a very, very odd, spooky experience," Guinness said. In a set of further creepy coincidences, there were rumors that Dean's car was haunted. First, it crushed the legs of a nearby mechanic after rolling off the back of a truck following the accident. Next, after the car's parts were unassembled and placed in other cars, many of those cars were a part of deadly crashes. And a truck transporting the car's base frame skidded into a deadly crash. To top it all off, the rest of the car's remains apparently disappeared from the crash scene. Bettmann / Bettmann Archive via Getty Images 3. And of course, Paul Walker's death in a vehicle accident - in which he was going over 100mph - felt especially eerie in the light of the franchise he was best known for: the street-racing series Fast and Furious. Universal / courtesy Everett Collection 4. It's difficult to find the original source, but John Lennon apparently told a reporter in 1965 that "We'll either go in a plane crash or we'll be popped off by some loony." In 1980, Lennon was shot and killed by a fan "seeking fame" (though he later said it was due to jealousy), Mark David Chapman. Eerily, Lennon also whispered the "shoot me" parts of The Beatles' "Come Together." Frank Edwards/Fotos International / Getty Images, Donaldson Collection / Getty Images 5. Princess Diana was reportedly afraid she would be killed in a car accident. Her butler, Paul Burrell, said she wrote him a note claiming someone had a plot to cause "an accident in my car, brake failure and serious head injury in order to make the path clear for Charles to marry." This concern was corroborated by Majesty magazine's editor-in-chief, the Royal watcher Ingrid Seward. King Charles III was actually questioned over the letter, but investigators found no other evidence to suggest Charles could've done such a thing. The famous 1997 accident that killed Diana (along with two other occupants of the car) was officially caused by the driver's speed and the fact that he was driving under the influence. Terry Fincher/Princess Diana Archive / Getty Images 6. This is a much older example, but Mark Twain actually predicted his own death...and he was right. After being born around the time of Haley's Comet's perihelion, he claimed he'd die when Haley's Comet next came back. "I came in with Halley's Comet in 1835. It is coming again next year, and I expect to go out with it," he said in 1909. "The Almighty has said, no doubt: 'Now here are these two unaccountable freaks; they came in together, they must go out together.'" His death came a day after Haley's Comet's next perihelion, on A