Blaire Witch Review
By: Mikki • Essay • 475 Words • December 10, 2009 • 1,018 Views
Essay title: Blaire Witch Review
Blaire Witch” Film Critique
John Murray
April 4th, 2006
There are few horror movies I see that are able to scare me. I really enjoy horror films, but most of them simply do not scare me. Those that do are hard to come by. So, though I am a strong fan of horror movies, there are very few horror movies I actually enjoy. “Blaire Witch” was definitely one of the few.
I’ve been hearing about the movie “Blaire Witch” for many years now, but it wasn’t until Film and Video that I got around to actually seeing it. Some people said “Blaire Witch” was cheesy. Some people said “Blaire Witch” was a letdown. A lot of others said it had the worst ending to a film they’d ever seen. The rest s*#% their pants. I can proudly said I was one of the ones s*#%ing their pants. The main reason I found this film so scary over others (some of which had budgets of millions and millions of dollars), was because of its realism. This film was made entirely with its home cameras and loose script (or lack there of) purely for the effect of making everything in the movie appear to be real, as if it actually happened. In fact, many rednecks today still believe that “Blaire Witch” is a true controversial mystery, waiting to be uncovered in the "haunted" woods. Now, I know this film is fiction and not fact, but that doesn’t mean it didn’t scare me. The fact that it was used with cheap cameras, and had completely no script at all, made it more believable and frightening. Too many films today put so much money