Not exact matches
Now
footage from the 1950s isn't exactly easy to come by, but judging from this trailer the film makers have not only
found plenty of good stuff, but it looks like
much of it is in colour too.
I
found it terribly interesting that the Swedish team that took
much of the historical
footage of this film caused an international incident by highlighting race tensions in the U.S. which resulted in a recalling of ambassadors.
Invoking both Hitchcock's grasp of psychological drama and Spielberg's genre storytelling precision, producer JJ Abrams and first - time director Dan Trachtenberg don't so
much forge a followup to but rather adopt as a reference point the 2008
found -
footage monster movie Cloverfield.
Nevertheless, a few weeks ago I watched Patrick Brice and Mark Duplass's Creep 2, and after letting the film sink in for a bit, I'm now convinced that the cinematic holy grail of
found -
footage is
much closer than I thought, and here's why...
A
found footage film that ended with pretty
much all of its characters, perhaps even a city, dying.
By this point it's obvious how
much the film owes itself to The Blair Witch Project, as it goes through more or less the exact same story beats as the
found footage classic.
Perhaps the most intriguing thing of this remake is that this will be a
much more faithful adaptation of King's first novel because there is going to be an element of
found footage to the film which makes perfect sense if you have read the novel.
Whereas that movie jumped on a current trend in its approach (
found footage), Dan Trachtenberg's film feels
much more old - fashioned in its style, recalling genre pictures of the «50s and «60s.
Things are
much more centered on
found -
footage concepts.
«The Conjuring» very
much feels like a 1970s horror film, before slashers were haunting teenage dreams and well before
found footage became the way to make a story feel real.
The latter viewed an undead attack through the eye of a home video camera and treated the result as «
found footage» — a great post - «Blair Witch» embellishment, considering how
much of horror's effectiveness lies in what you don't see.
Ti West's
found -
footage horror flick «The Sacrament» is not always great, but it's
much better than most of its genre counterparts.
And now we have the superhero /
found footage hybrid of Chronicle, pumping in some
much needed new blood.
Whether for aesthetic, didactic or political purpose, for me the
found footage essay is where
much of the best work is being done right now.
Devilishly crafty and expertly focused, it fell in with the usual suspects of
found footage horror, even though it was so
much more than just another point and shoot, «gotcha!»
It's a wonderful idea, but director Hanna Polak either didn't get the
footage she needed or couldn't
find the movie in the editing room; whatever the case, the film has a listlessness that steals
much of its power.
Documenting the evil growing inside two ten - year old twins, writer - director Christopher Denham's Home Movie creates a completely believable film in the
much - maligned
found footage genre, using mostly faux - Camcorder
footage shot during holidays or special celebrations — those times when people do actually film things they want to keep as memories.
Most
footage of the war was shot in black and white, but the filmmakers spent two years on a world - wide search of any existing color film that might exist and what they
found was that
much of it was practically pristine since it had never been seen before.
My take: While some people
found the first trailer for X-Men: Apocalypse to be underwhelming, I liked it, and I like this spot, too, even though it doesn't show us
much new
footage.
Along with cute animal
footage you'll also
find DIYs, step by step tutorials, vlogs, reviews and
much more animal related fun!
Much changed during the development of Destiny 1 - so much so that concept art and footage for what eventually became the Taken King expansion's Dreadnought location, the Reef social space added in the House of Wolves DLC plus the European Dead Zone area finally found in Destiny 2, were all glimpsed prior to Destiny 1's lau
Much changed during the development of Destiny 1 - so
much so that concept art and footage for what eventually became the Taken King expansion's Dreadnought location, the Reef social space added in the House of Wolves DLC plus the European Dead Zone area finally found in Destiny 2, were all glimpsed prior to Destiny 1's lau
much so that concept art and
footage for what eventually became the Taken King expansion's Dreadnought location, the Reef social space added in the House of Wolves DLC plus the European Dead Zone area finally
found in Destiny 2, were all glimpsed prior to Destiny 1's launch.
Much of the gameplay
footage was
found when the owner decided to stream it over Twitch to a friend.
In the past decade, what I've been working on pretty
much as a constant thing is
found footage.
If all the little intertitles and disconnected
found footage feel like too
much to sort out, just sit back and enjoy its time capsule aspects and goofy humor.
Along with cute animal
footage you'll also
find DIYs, step by step tutorials, vlogs, reviews and
much more animal related fun!