Blair Witch Project

Reviewed by: PincherMartin

July 31, 1999

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I saw the Blair Witch Project last night. It's a truly great horror film. At a time when so many movies are relying on computer-generated effects for landscapes, creatures, and even main characters, this short, inexpensive film shows that the best thrills are left to the imagination of the viewer.

The cast consists of three amateurs; the setting is an eastern woodland forest, located in Maryland, which in many instances most people would consider it a relatively unspooky place; the camera work is left to the amateur crew; the film is only 82 minutes long. Everything I have described would normally work against any movie wishing to appeal to a mass audience, but the result instead is likely to be this Summer's biggest hit after the turgid Phantom Menace.

Some parts of the movie in the beginning -- despite its short length -- move very slowly, but in retrospect I think this was a smart move by the film makers. The commonness of the conversation between the characters in the beginning gives a bigger payoff to the horrific sequences in the final 30 minutes. The final scene is so haunting that I'm still not able to put it out of my mind.

I have to disagree with Rask's complaint on the camera work. The herky-jerky movements of the hand-held cameras were essential to put the audience in the same disoriented state as the characters. We see nothing they do not see, and the erratic and jumpy pans of the black forest as the cameras search for whatever is out there in the dead of the night are some of the scariest scenes in recent filmdom.

 

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