wiegeabo
Omniposcient
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2002
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While the jolts and thrills are undeniably subject to the diminishing returns that plague most horror sequels, Paranormal Activity 3 is a surprisingly spine-tingling treat.
I get the feeling that after just one viewing, you might be exaggerating between what you saw in the movie and what was shown in the trailer....Only one or two of those scenes show up in the movie lol.
Everyone I know is too afraid to see this with me tonight... So I might be going to the midnight screening by myself. Do I have balls or what?![]()
Same thing happen to me when I saw the first Paranormal Activity film. I watched the film by myself with a great full crowd. It was one of the best theater experience I had in a long time.
I get the feeling that after just one viewing, you might be exaggerating between what you saw in the movie and what was shown in the trailer....
Either way, IMO....t:
My problem with the prequel:
In the original, Katie talks about her childhood ghost as if it is just a tiny memory from her childhood (save her vague suspicion that it started the fire, which is confirmed when she finds the picture). It's like something you see on Unsolved Mysteries, little things get moved here and there but nothing major. She definitely doesn't seem afraid of it and doesn't even really mind it until Micah starts using the Ouija Board.
This seems like it is turning it into the most hands-on haunting in the series, with the ghost brutally beating the psychic, dragging Katie's mom across rooms, etc.
I suppose it is a rather minor inconsistency. Oh well.
Really? Can you elaborate? Also, is there are any action in the "present?"
I have a feeling that this series is going to go in a crazy direction:
We never see the house burn down in PA3, although it's talked about consistently in the first two films. In my opinion, the house hasn't burned down yet. The grandmother is going to burn it down, put the bodies of the girls' mother and father in the house, and then "set it up" to make it look like the girls got out in time, but not their parents.
I see. Interesting. Thanks.
To be honest, it seems like the filmmakers are getting better at scaring the audience (which is why I see these movies anyway) but from a story perspective...yikes. All this talk of [blackout]cults and witches[/blackout] sounds awful.![]()
I personally think a running mythology was a mistake. This series just didn't lend itself to it. I think anthology films about various hauntings with no connection to one another would've been the way to go. Oh well, like I said, I go for the scares, not the story.