
This film takes advantage of the advances in technology, with digital headsets and a drone used by the characters, but director Adam Wingard is, for the most part, content to regurgitate the same old, same old: strange noises outside the tents at night, stick men suspended from the trees, piles of rocks, the characters seemingly walking in circles, and a frantic finale in a creepy old house covered in children's hand-prints.
#BLAIR WITCH 2016 MOVIE#
This reboot for the Blair Witch franchise smacks of laziness and greed, the makers simply rehashing the original movie for a new generation. Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 might not have been a very good sequel, but at least it tried to do something a little different to the first film. When found video footage surfaces on YouTube showing what might be a fleeting glimpse of Heather, James leads a group of friends to Burkittsville, and into the woods supposedly inhabited by the Blair Witch. Over fifteen years have passed since the mysterious disappearance of Heather Donahue in the Black Hills Forest, but her brother James (James Allen McCune) still hasn't given up hope of finding her alive. It's a reminder that Hollywood is completely afraid to back original horror and this mockery of the original doesn't deserve the Blair Witch name. It's an all too perfect example of the sort of garbage horror that gets brought to the big screen while terrific movies go almost unnoticed on some streaming site that a few hundred people get to see. I'm sounding a lot grumpier than I intended to, but this movie makes me mad. All of it leads to a house in the middle of nowhere, with a camera-shaking chase through random scenes of horror, more loud noises and crashes and tantalizing glimpses of a bad monster that we're probably better off having not seen in its' entirety but since viewers seem to be too unimaginative now to see a movie and have to imagine the monster rather than see it, we have to be given something. Now, replace all of the subtlety of the original for loud noises and witches who have now become X-men villains, capable of ripping tents up out of the ground and knocking over trees. Replace that with instant terror that takes almost no time to build right, then endless shots of the characters walking around screaming each others names. Now, take these boring people and stick them out in the woods with no building sense of dread, at all. The tragic hero looking for lost loved one.

The characters in this one are as cardboard as it comes. The trio in the original have their annoying habits, but they are likable people with personalities. Whether you liked the original film, or not, it definitely starts out with a much more interesting cast. Then again, when I see the younger reviewers on this site tear apart the original BLAIR WITCH as boring and "unscary", then maybe I get a better understanding of the adderall-fueled legions that this movie was trying to target. This movie seems to completely misunderstand everything that made the original terrifying and replace it with dumbed down horror for brainless fans. I thought this could legitimately have a chance to be good, but man was I wrong. I was excited when it was announced that a sequel/remake was coming. This was much more psychological, an intense fear-driven journey through into truly frightening territory. This was horror that was that was not in your face with a villain or brutal deaths. Even more, the style of horror was something that my younger, novice horror mind was not yet used to.
#BLAIR WITCH 2016 FULL#
Nowadays, indie horror is packed full of found footage, but this was revolutionary to us. If you are too young to remember, it's release then you really can't understand the impact that it had.

It had become a mockery of itself by the 90s, though, and we were all so hungry for something fresh to re-kindle horror and this movie took the world by storm.

Having grown up in the era of the slasher film, I was more used to horror being much more blatant and gory. I saw it on a date, as a matter of fact, and was blown away. I was in my late teens when THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT came out. Being the age that I am, though, makes me also right in the wheelhouse of the generation who adored the original. I know, as I push past 40 years old, that I am not exactly the target demographic for teenage horror any longer. I simply cannot fathom what some of the horror blogs and websites appreciated about this movie when they gave it such rave reviews. Frankly, I've never much been impressed with his work before this and after seeing this travesty I'm even less impressed. Adam Wingard is considered by many in the horror community to be one of the best young directors coming up right now.
