The Horror Thread - Part 4

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So what's everyones favorite?

In no particular order. . .

For slashers:

Halloween (1978), Halloween II (1981), and Halloween: H20

Friday The 13th Parts 1 through 4 (1980 to 1983)

A Nightmare On Elm Street 1 through 3

Black Christmas (1974)

Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)

For haunted house movies:

Poltergeist

The Conjuring

Paranormal Activity 1, 2, and 3

The Shining

Satanic Movies:

Rosemary's Baby

The Omen

The Exorcist

Science Fiction:

The Thing

Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (1978)

Alien

Stephen King's IT


That's all I can think of at the moment.
 
It looks like Rob Zombie is making another horror film. Didn't he say he was done with horror or directing completely? I can't really post the video since it's NSFW. The video goes through each film Zombie has directed. Then it ends with, "And now the next step in the journey" and a clown face with an evil laugh and at the bottom it says 3I. I'm thinking it's another House of a 1000 Corpses movie.

The teaser is kinda creepy too.
 
Well, he's best when he's doing those films... hopefully it changes style again, the second was amazing.
 
So what's everyones favorite?

1. A Tale of Two Sisters
2. Memento Mori
3. Sauna
4. Suspiria
5. Whispering Corridors
6. Noroi The Curse
7. I Saw the Devil
8. Carnival of Souls
9. Black Swan
10. Wishing Stairs
 
1. A Tale of Two Sisters
2. Memento Mori
3. Sauna
4. Suspiria
5. Whispering Corridors
6. Noroi The Curse
7. I Saw the Devil
8. Carnival of Souls
9. Black Swan
10. Wishing Stairs

Lots of Asian horror there. I like you. :woot:
 
Just watched You're Next. Not as good as its reviews, but ok to pass time. Lots of gore.
 
Watched Sx_Tape (2014), a found footage horror film from the director of Candyman about a couple making a sex tape in an abandoned mental hospital when things get found footage horror-y.

First of all...we learn in the opening minute or so of the film that [BLACKOUT]the boyfriend dies and the girl lives.[/BLACKOUT] Then we watch their story. That seemed like an odd choice to me, since we know the fate of the main characters before the found footage even starts. Why do movies do that?

The lead characters are pretty unlikable. We know that the girl paints, and the boyfriend is filming a movie about her painting...yet really the only thing he's filming are her body parts and some mostly public sex. Aside from that, they make a general nuisance of themselves around town, getting thrown out of stores and even one time repeatedly filming a couple, despite being told multiple times by management of the mall to stop...antagonizing the man to the point where he resorts to violence to get them to leave him alone. They even keep the cops busy by trespassing on private property. They think it would be a great idea to do an art show party with a dj in an abandoned mental hospital that used to do underground illegal abortions (plus forced lobotomies etc), and of course the idea gets them so turned on that they decide to have sex there (yes, while a cop is searching the property for them). Tell me again why I want them to live?

Oh...and after the couple run screaming from the hospital, they find that their car has been towed. They call some friends to pick them up...then all four of them go back into the hospital...apparently unconcerned about the possibility of the second car being towed. These "artists" who had earlier talked about the beauty of the natural urban decay (the real world policy of this stuff is to leave nothing but footprints, take nothing but pictures), now decide to graffiti tag the entire place with spray paint. The characters can't even be consistent on what should be a defining characteristic of an artist. One of the friends is even less likeable than the two stars.

Shouldn't I actually want the characters to survive what is about to happen to them???? Why do so few Horror movies grasp that simple concept?

However, some of this actually has a purpose...the movie is really an examination into their relationship (even though it takes on aspects on what happened at the hospital years before). He's a weak-willed suck-up with a selfish, attention craving girlfriend who probably cheats on him constantly and needs for every moment of every day to be about her. He seemed mostly desperate to make her happy from moment to moment (because if she isn't happy for 10 seconds, she'd run off with someone else) except for a few scenes where he's a blatant jerk, and in retrospect, those hurt the film because it works better with him being completely whipped. The girl seems to see her only value as being a sex object. The girl even instigates (I think) every sex scene in the film, then later all but accuses her boyfriend of raping her every time they have sex. The film would just work better if he was sympathetic instead of going back and forth between jerk and suck-up, because she is clearly damaged goods.

Notice I spent the entire review talking about how unlikeable they are. That's because the movie isn't suspenseful or scary.

By the way...yes...a ghost attacks the camera, like in the first Paranormal Activity. It was stupid there, and is stupid here.

Also, both the electric and water are working (but only when needed for the plot) in this long abandoned hospital.

OH YEAH...at the end of the movie, after the whole thing is over...there is a completely unrelated scene...that is supposed to be at the end of the tape but not recorded over. It plays NO role in the plot of the film...it's completely unrelated...but shows a "shocking" moment that I groaned at. And this is the final scene in the movie! And it had NOTHING to do with anything that happened before it! Ugh!
 
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I was reading an interview with the director of a recent very low budget indie movie called Axeman where he was saying that he loved all of the old slashers, but they were all so limited...so he wanted to make the ultimate slasher killer with Axeman. So...I couldn't resist...and watched the movie.

The killer wears no mask. It's some retired NBA player, so he's tall...but its just his face. And he's no actor. In fact, it looks like he's smiling half the time as he is slowly walking and doing bad exaggerations. This guy isn't redefining the way slasher walk or carry themselves, put it that way. It's just so bad...and not helped by the fact that we can see his very normal looking smiling face.

There is little to no back story on the killer (beyond a few urban legends thrown out in conversation)...except that he's called Axeman...despite not really using an axe much to kill his victims. In fact...I'm running through the kills in my head...did he use an axe on any of them??? I guess he had to have.

The point is...slasher killer movies are still fairly plentiful if you look. There are some that catch on a bit, like Chromeskull and Hatchet...but for the love of all that is holy...if you have a generic, unmasked slasher with no back story to explain him, don't call him the ultimate slasher killer, while giving a subtle insult to "limited" characters like Jason and Freddy.

Also...good lord, the characters! At least TRY to develop something beyond "fat horny comic relief" and "everyone else at this reunion of friends hates each other."
 
HALLOWEENBOXSET.jpg

If you’re following us on Twitter, we’ve already told you that 2014 was going to be a big year for Halloween and we’re really excited to announce the OFFICIAL HALLOWEEN BOX SET which is ‘Coming Home’ September 23rd, 2014. And we’ll save you the suspense, YES the producer’s cut of Halloween The Curse of Michael Myers is included… as is so much more. Stay Tuned for more details which will be available soon and we’ll let you know the minute you can pre-order the set!!!
Here’s the Official release.
THE ONE THAT STARTED IT ALL…
ANCHOR BAY ENTERTAINMENT AND SCREAM FACTORY™, IN AN UNPRECEDENTED PARTNERSHIP, PROUDLY UNVEIL HALLOWEEN THE COMPLETE COLLECTION BLU-RAY™ BOX SETS

Limited Edition 15-Disc Deluxe and 10-Disc Edition Brings Together ALL The Halloween Feature Films In One Massive Set For the First Time EVER; All-New Bonus Features, Collectible Packaging, and 40-Page Book Make This THE Blu-ray™ Box Set Event of 2014!
Last year, the horror classic Halloween celebrated 35 years of terror for those willing to partake in its vision of unrelenting horror. But that was only the beginning of the celebration. What producers Moustapha Akkad, Debra Hill and Irwin Yablans, writer/director John Carpenter and stars Jamie Lee Curtis & Donald Pleasence started in 1978 has transformed into one of the most durable, iconic – and copiously studied — horror film franchises ever created. Before Jason, before Freddy, and before Jigsaw, there was…Michael. Over the years, audiences have lived and relived the terrors of Michael Myers through ten feature films, as well as various re-edits and alternate versions. Yet to date, the complete saga of Michael Myers could only be told in pieces, in individual DVD and Blu-ray™ releases, with the rights spread across multiple home entertainment studios.
Until now…
Through the unprecedented collaboration of rival home entertainment companies Anchor Bay Entertainment and Scream Factory – the leading purveyors in horror home entertainment –Halloween The Complete Collection Blu-ray™ box sets arrive September 23rd.
For the legions of Halloween fans, the Deluxe Edition boasts 15 discs and contains all the Halloween feature films – Halloween, Halloween II, Halloween III: Season of the Witch, Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers, Halloween H20, Halloween: Resurrection, Rob Zombie’s Halloween and Halloween II. The set includes the NEVER BEFORE RELEASED producers cut of Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers as well as the ultra-rare network TV version of the original Halloween, the network TV version of Halloween II, plus the unrated versions of Rob Zombie’s Halloween and Halloween II.
It is packed with hours of BRAND NEW bonus features including new interviews with cast and crew from the entire franchise! In response to years of fan feedback, the first Halloween will now also include the original mono audio track and the set will include both versions of the original Halloween-the original Blu-ray™ release and the recently remastered 35th Anniversary version with the mono track added back in! It also comes with a limited edition 40-page book written by Michael Gingold of Fangoria Magazine. The collectible packaging will include a newly commissioned illustration on the outer case and each film will be in its own black Blu-ray™ case with the original theatrical one sheet as the key art. This deluxe set carries an SRP of $169.99.
“This compilation is the ultimate collector’s item for fans of the Halloween films and a testament to all the wonderful talent that have worked on them,” remarked Malek Akkad, President of Trancas International Films and son of series producer Moustapha Akkad. “The partnership between Anchor Bay Entertainment and Scream Factory to present fans for the first time with all the Halloween films in one definitive package is a tribute to everyone – including my father – who made these films the terrifying classics they are today.”
The 10-disc Edition includes the original theatrical versions of the Halloween films and will include select bonus features. SRP is $129.99.
Both sets pre-book August 27 and will be distributed by Anchor Bay Entertainment with bonus features developed and created by Scream Factory and Anchor Bay.
Artwork and bonus features to be announced in the next couple of months.
Halloween The Complete Collection Blu-ray™ box sets contain the following classics:

Halloween (1978)
Director: John Carpenter
The original indie blockbuster that launched a thousand cuts…Halloween stars Jamie Lee Curtis (A Fish Called Wanda, True Lies) in her debut role. Anyone who’s ever watched a horror film in the last 35 years knows the story of Michael Myers, who as a child, butchered his sister with a kitchen knife. Committed to a mental institution and watched over by Dr. Loomis (Donald Pleasance, Halloween II, IV & V, Fantastic Voyage), he engineers his escape 15 years later, returning to his hometown of Haddonfield, Illinois on Halloween night to terrorize anyone who gets in his way, including babysitter Laurie Strode (Curtis). Co-starring P.J. Soles (Carrie, Stripes, Rock ‘n Roll High School), Kyle Richards (The Watcher in the Woods, Eaten Alive), Nancy Loomis (Carpenter’s Assault On Precinct 13, The Fog), Charles Cyphers (Escape From New York, The Fog) and Brian Andrews (The Great Santini, Three O’Clock High), Halloween also cemented the careers of many behind the camera including Carpenter, Cundey, producer Debra Hill and film editor/production designer Tommy Lee Wallace (Halloween III: Season of the Witch, “It”).

Halloween II (1981)
Director: Rick Rosenthal
Picking up exactly where the first film left off, Halloween II follows the same ill-fated characters as they once again encounter the knife-wielding maniac they thought they had left for dead. It seems the inhuman Michael Myers is still very much alive and out for more revenge as he stalks the deserted halls of the Haddonfield Memorial Hospital. As he gets closer to his main target, Dr. Loomis (Donald Pleasence) discovers the chilling mystery behind the crazed psychopath’s actions. Written by John Carpenter and Debra Hill, Halloween II is a spine-tingling dark ride into the scariest night of the year.
Exclusively on the Deluxe Set: Halloween II (1981) Network Television Version
Airing on network TV since the early 80’s, the TV cut features several new scenes and additional cut scenes as well as an alternate ending from the theatrical version.

Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)
Director: Tommy Lee Wallace
When a terrified toy salesman is mysteriously attacked and brought to the hospital, babbling and clutching the year’s most popular Halloween costume — an eerie pumpkin mask — Dr. Daniel Challis (Tom Atkins, The Fog, Night Of The Creeps) is thrust into a terrifying Halloween nightmare. Working with the salesman’s daughter, Ellie (Stacey Nelkin), Daniel traces the mask to the Silver Shamrock Novelties company and its founder, Conal Cochran (Dan O’Herlihy, RoboCop). Ellie and Daniel uncover Cochran’s shocking Halloween plan and must stop him before trick-or-treaters across the country are kept from ever coming home in this terrifying thriller from writer/director Tommy Lee Wallace (Stephen King’s It).

Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (1988)
Director: Dwight H. Little
A decade ago, he butchered 16 people trying to get to his sister. He was shot and incinerated, but still the entity that Dr. Sam Loomis (the legendary Donald Pleasence) calls “Evil on two legs” would not die. Tonight, Michael Myers has come home again…to kill! This time, Michael returns to Haddonfield for Jamie Lloyd (Scream Queen Danielle Harris of Halloween 5 and Hatchett II and III) – the orphaned daughter of Laurie Strode – and her babysitter Rachel (Ellie Cornell of Halloween 5 and House of the Dead). Can Loomis stop Michael before the unholy slaughter reaches his innocent young niece? Michael Pataki, Sasha Jenson and Kathleen Kinmont co-star in this smash sequel that marked the long-awaited return to the original storyline and remains infamous for its startling twist ending and graphic violence.

Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers (1989)
Director: Dominique Othenin-Girard
Because Hell would not have him, Michael Myers survived the mine explosion thought to have killed him. One year later, his traumatized young niece Jamie (Danielle Harris of Halloween 4) is horrified to discover she has a telepathic bond with her evil Uncle…and that Uncle Michael is on his way back to Haddonfield. But Dr. Loomis (the late, great Donald Pleasence) has a new plan to destroy The Boogey Man in his childhood home using Jamie as bait. Tonight, the carnage begins again: Michael Myers is back with a vengeance! Ellie Cornell and Beau Starr return for this hit sequel that features grisly gore by Greg Nicotero (“The Walking Dead”).

Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (1995)
Director: Joe Chappelle
In a single horrifying night, Michael Myers’ masked reign of terror changed Halloween forever! Now, six years after he was presumed dead in a fire, Myers has returned to kill again – and this time there’s no escape! As the homicidal fury builds to a spine-tingling climax, the long-hidden secrets of the screen’s most maniacal murderer are revealed…with shocking results! Starring a thrilling cast including legendary Donald Pleasence (Halloween) and Paul Rudd (Anchorman).
Exclusively on the Deluxe Set Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (1995)Producer’s Cut
The so-called “Producer’s Cut of Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers (aka Halloween 666), was a workprint of the original film.

Halloween H20: 20 Years Later (1998)
Director: Steve Miner
This smart and suspenseful thriller scares up a bone-chilling good time with original scream queen Jamie Lee Curtis (True Lies, Halloween I & II) and a hot cast of hip young stars! Now the headmistress of a private school, Laurie Strode (Curtis) is still struggling with the horrifying, 20-year-old memories of the maniacal killer Michael Myers…when he suddenly reappears with a vengeance! And this Halloween, his terror will strike a whole new generation! Laurie’s rebellious son (Josh Hartnett – The Faculty, 30 Days of Night), his girlfriend (Golden Globe Winner Michelle Williams – My Week with Marilyn), and the school security guard (LL Cool J – CBS’s “NCIS Los Angeles” will become Michael’s newest victims unless Laurie can conquer her greatest fears and put evil in its place once and for all! The time has come again for you to experience the frightening fun of Halloween – the motion picture series that totally redefined terror.

Halloween: Resurrection (2002)
Director: Rick Rosenthal
Original Halloween I & II alums star Jamie Lee Curtis (You Again) and director Rick Rosenthal are back and joined by Busta Rhymes and Tyra Banks in the terrifying Halloween: Resurrection, another installment in the electrifying horror film series. The reality programmers at DangerTainment (Rhymes, Banks) have selected Rudy (Sean Patrick Thomas, The Fountain), Bill (Thomas Ian Nicholas, American Pie), Jen (“Battlestar Galactica’s” Katee Sackhoff) and a group of thrill-seeking teenagers to spend one fun-filled night in the childhood home of serial killer Michael Meyers. But the planned live broadcast turns deadly when their evening of excitement becomes a night of horror as Michael himself decides to crash the party.

Halloween (2007)
Director: Rob Zombie
What happens when one legendary horror filmmaker tackles a horror film icon? A new chapter in the legend is born! Rob Zombie (Lords of Salem, The Devil’s Rejects) reinvents the ultimate slasher classic, unleashing Michael Myers for a bloody rollercoaster of a rampage like fans have never seen. Including a retelling of the original story that unfolds at a breakneck pace, as well as a chilling new introduction that finally reveals the secrets behind Myers’ disturbing childhood, Halloween breathes new life into one of film history’s most terrifying tales. Presenting both the original theatrical version and the unrated feature with director’s commentary, thrilling bonus features including deleted scenes and an alternate ending, and an exhaustive 4 1/2 hour documentary giving a behind the scenes look at how Zombie created “the scariest Halloween to date” (Debbie Rochon, Fangoria Radio).

Halloween 2 (2009)
Director: Rob Zombie
Rob Zombie’s H2 (Halloween) picks up at the exact moment that 2007′s box-office smash, Halloween stopped and follows the aftermath of Michael Myers’s (Tyler Mane) murderous rampage through the eyes of heroine Laurie Strode (Scout Taylor Compton). Evil has a new destiny. Michael Myers is back in this terrifying sequel to Rob Zombie’s visionary re-imagining of Halloween which grossed almost $80 million worldwide. It is that time of year again, and Michael Myers has returned home to sleepy Haddonfield, Illinois to take care of some unfinished family business. Unleashing a trail of terror that only horror master Zombie can, Myers will stop at nothing to bring closure to the secrets of his twisted past. But the town’s got an unlikely new hero, if they can only stay alive long enough to stop the unstoppable.

One of these days I will get these collections for Myers, Krueger, Voorhees, Chucky, maybe Scream/TCM, and Saw! One day!
 
Wow, pretty cool they could come together to release this for the fans. Even the Producer's Cut, they held nothing back.
 
It looks like Rob Zombie is making another horror film. Didn't he say he was done with horror or directing completely? I can't really post the video since it's NSFW. The video goes through each film Zombie has directed. Then it ends with, "And now the next step in the journey" and a clown face with an evil laugh and at the bottom it says 3I.I'm thinking it's another House of a 1000 Corpses movie.

The teaser is kinda creepy too.

I seem to recall something like that, too, but I guess he changed his mind? No clue. I didn't watch his last one, any improvement from his other stuff? I'll probably just skip this one, too, if it's another House movie. The first I consider amongst the worst films ever made, and the second is passable but still nothing worth watching.

I've said before and will always say that Zombie has such a unique style, but I don't know what the hell he thinks with writing this ****. If he could team up with a good screenwriter, he could produce something golden.
 
I was reading an interview with the director of a recent very low budget indie movie called Axeman where he was saying that he loved all of the old slashers, but they were all so limited...so he wanted to make the ultimate slasher killer with Axeman. So...I couldn't resist...and watched the movie.

The killer wears no mask. It's some retired NBA player, so he's tall...but its just his face. And he's no actor. In fact, it looks like he's smiling half the time as he is slowly walking and doing bad exaggerations. This guy isn't redefining the way slasher walk or carry themselves, put it that way. It's just so bad...and not helped by the fact that we can see his very normal looking smiling face.

There is little to no back story on the killer (beyond a few urban legends thrown out in conversation)...except that he's called Axeman...despite not really using an axe much to kill his victims. In fact...I'm running through the kills in my head...did he use an axe on any of them??? I guess he had to have.

The point is...slasher killer movies are still fairly plentiful if you look. There are some that catch on a bit, like Chromeskull and Hatchet...but for the love of all that is holy...if you have a generic, unmasked slasher with no back story to explain him, don't call him the ultimate slasher killer, while giving a subtle insult to "limited" characters like Jason and Freddy.

Also...good lord, the characters! At least TRY to develop something beyond "fat horny comic relief" and "everyone else at this reunion of friends hates each other."

agreed. and i too had the misfortune of watching Axeman.
 
Watched Sx_Tape (2014), a found footage horror film from the director of Candyman about a couple making a sex tape in an abandoned mental hospital when things get found footage horror-y.

First of all...we learn in the opening minute or so of the film that [BLACKOUT]the boyfriend dies and the girl lives.[/BLACKOUT] Then we watch their story. That seemed like an odd choice to me, since we know the fate of the main characters before the found footage even starts. Why do movies do that?

The lead characters are pretty unlikable. We know that the girl paints, and the boyfriend is filming a movie about her painting...yet really the only thing he's filming are her body parts and some mostly public sex. Aside from that, they make a general nuisance of themselves around town, getting thrown out of stores and even one time repeatedly filming a couple, despite being told multiple times by management of the mall to stop...antagonizing the man to the point where he resorts to violence to get them to leave him alone. They even keep the cops busy by trespassing on private property. They think it would be a great idea to do an art show party with a dj in an abandoned mental hospital that used to do underground illegal abortions (plus forced lobotomies etc), and of course the idea gets them so turned on that they decide to have sex there (yes, while a cop is searching the property for them). Tell me again why I want them to live?

Oh...and after the couple run screaming from the hospital, they find that their car has been towed. They call some friends to pick them up...then all four of them go back into the hospital...apparently unconcerned about the possibility of the second car being towed. These "artists" who had earlier talked about the beauty of the natural urban decay (the real world policy of this stuff is to leave nothing but footprints, take nothing but pictures), now decide to graffiti tag the entire place with spray paint. The characters can't even be consistent on what should be a defining characteristic of an artist. One of the friends is even less likeable than the two stars.

Shouldn't I actually want the characters to survive what is about to happen to them???? Why do so few Horror movies grasp that simple concept?

However, some of this actually has a purpose...the movie is really an examination into their relationship (even though it takes on aspects on what happened at the hospital years before). He's a weak-willed suck-up with a selfish, attention craving girlfriend who probably cheats on him constantly and needs for every moment of every day to be about her. He seemed mostly desperate to make her happy from moment to moment (because if she isn't happy for 10 seconds, she'd run off with someone else) except for a few scenes where he's a blatant jerk, and in retrospect, those hurt the film because it works better with him being completely whipped. The girl seems to see her only value as being a sex object. The girl even instigates (I think) every sex scene in the film, then later all but accuses her boyfriend of raping her every time they have sex. The film would just work better if he was sympathetic instead of going back and forth between jerk and suck-up, because she is clearly damaged goods.

Notice I spent the entire review talking about how unlikeable they are. That's because the movie isn't suspenseful or scary.

By the way...yes...a ghost attacks the camera, like in the first Paranormal Activity. It was stupid there, and is stupid here.

Also, both the electric and water are working (but only when needed for the plot) in this long abandoned hospital.

OH YEAH...at the end of the movie, after the whole thing is over...there is a completely unrelated scene...that is supposed to be at the end of the tape but not recorded over. It plays NO role in the plot of the film...it's completely unrelated...but shows a "shocking" moment that I groaned at. And this is the final scene in the movie! And it had NOTHING to do with anything that happened before it! Ugh!

i know that i'm the old man yelling at kids to get off my lawn, but the found footage gimmick needs to die and fast; before it claims another horror movie.
 
I seem to recall something like that, too, but I guess he changed his mind? No clue. I didn't watch his last one, any improvement from his other stuff? I'll probably just skip this one, too, if it's another House movie. The first I consider amongst the worst films ever made, and the second is passable but still nothing worth watching.

I've said before and will always say that Zombie has such a unique style, but I don't know what the hell he thinks with writing this ****. If he could team up with a good screenwriter, he could produce something golden.

I dig his style too, but only H1 and TDRs impressed me. Ho1KC is just too... out there? Never saw TLoS or H2.

I'll look forward to see what he does next.
 
Yeah, it was too out there. Should've stayed out there, too.
 
i know that i'm the old man yelling at kids to get off my lawn, but the found footage gimmick needs to die and fast; before it claims another horror movie.

I actually wouldn't even mind the shaky camera if they just never bothered to refer to the cameraman and trusted me to accept that a movie was happening with a low budget. But with found footage, they have to repeatedly explain why the camera is filming, and jump through hoops to get all the right shots. Conversations have to be forced into scenes to explain what is going on etc.
 
I love the concept, but it's only been done well like 2-3 times. I would like to see it done with a serial killer though.
 
Wasn't that kinda done with Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon?

imo, that wasn't found footage. that was a documentary within a horror movie. and it probably would have sucked as a straight-horror movie. the appeal was that they were paying homage to and mocking the genre. remove the satire angle and i think you wind up with an inferior movie.
 
I love the concept, but it's only been done well like 2-3 times. I would like to see it done with a serial killer though.

It would be difficult to do. I suppose if done by the POV of the killer it would work. Maybe something like Laid To Rest, but with the whole movie being shot by Chrome Skull's camera mounted on his shoulder. Unfortunately, the all so important element of developing likeable and sympathetic characters to be the victims. I suppose they could be recording themselves separately for some reason, and whoever "found" the footage could edit them together into a cohesive story.
 
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