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The blair witch project 1999 trailer
The blair witch project 1999 trailer











the blair witch project 1999 trailer the blair witch project 1999 trailer
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In today’s online movie culture, The Blair Witch Project’s promos would have been pored over, dissected and debated ad nauseam - and its illegitimate claims almost certainly exposed - long before it reached multiplexes.

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And with its footage largely hidden from previews, online-fostered rumors and innuendoes were able to be the primary driver behind its “This really happened!” hype.

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And in the ensuing decades, countless scary movies (from Paranormal Activity to The Fourth Kind to The Conjuring) similarly strove to enhance their scares by pushing the idea “it’s not just a movie.” Still, even if a few other films had previously employed its “Is-it-real?” gimmick, The Blair Witch Project was the first mainstream effort to fully embrace a fake-documentary style with a full internet campaign as backup. The Blair Witch Project was hardly the first horror film to try to pass off its action as “real.” Twenty-five years earlier, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre opened with narrated text claiming that its Ed Gein-inspired events had actually taken place. It gave moviegoers the sense that, far from passive viewers, they were amateur sleuths - even as the site capitalized on the fact that at that time, its phony stories couldn’t be fact-checked/debunked through a simple Google search, nor could fans at the time yet compare notes or share information via Facebook or Twitter. The site’s purpose was to legitimize the film’s story through “genuine” supporting media evidence, as well as to make intrepid web surfers who were scouring the internet for clues feel like they were discovering a true story that simply hadn’t yet received national attention. The studio set up a website, that provided articles and news-report videos about the “missing campers” and other Blair Witch-related incidents. And it’s a trick that worked to an astounding degree. The trick, as it were, was to make audiences think the film’s material - presented as recently discovered video footage shot by three fledgling filmmakers on the hunt for the “Blair Witch” - actually happened. Their strategy relied on oblique teases that revealed little about the film’s plot, all while providing copious tidbits about a “legend of the Blair Witch” in the Maryland woods (the film was shot in the state’s Seneca Creek State Park). In 1999, a year after the movie’s Sundance Film Festival premiere, Artisan purchased the film for approximately $1 million and, with the aid of Myrick and Sánchez, promptly set about using the then-fledgling internet for a totally of-the-moment marketing campaign. The Blair Witch Project (Photo: Lionsgate)













The blair witch project 1999 trailer