Director: Daniel Myrick, Eduardo Sanchez
Stars: Heather Donahue, Michael C. Williams, Joshua Leonard, Bob Griffin
Combining Hi-8 video with black-and-white 16 mm film, this film presents
a raw look at what can happen when college students forego common sense
and enter the world of voodoo and witchcraft. Presented as a
straightforward documentary, the film opens with a title card explaining
that in 1994, three students went into the Maryland back woods to do a
film project on the Blair Witch incidents.
These kids were never seen
again, and the film you are about to see is from their recovered
equipment,
found in the woods a
year later. The entire movie documents their adventures leading up to
their final minutes. The Blair Witch incident, as we initially learn
from the local town elders, is an old legend about a group of witches
who tortured and killed several children many years ago. Everyone in
town knows the story and they're all sketchy on the details. Out in the
woods and away from their parked car (and civilization), what starts as a
school exercise turns into a nightmare when the three kids lose their
map. Forced to spend extra days finding their way out, the kids then
start to hear horrific sounds outside their tents in the pitch-black
middle of night. They also find strange artifacts from (what can only
be) the Blair Witch, still living in the woods. Frightened, they
desperately try to find their way out of the woods, with no luck. Slowly
these students start to unravel, knowing they have no way of getting
out, no food, and it's getting cold. Each night they are confronted with
shrieking and sounds so haunting that they are convinced someone is
following them, and they quickly begin to fear for their lives. The film
premiered in the midnight movie section at the 1999 Sundance Film
Festival. ~ Chris Gore, Rovi
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