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"The Blair Witch Project" | page 1, 2
For a cinema vérité horror story to work, the cast has to make you
forget it's acting, a feat that Heather Donahue, Michael C. Williams and Joshua
Leonard -- in particular Donahue -- accomplish with an eerie agility.
"Method" filmmakers Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez made "Blair
Witch" by having the cast go into the woods and camp for a week, giving
them only rudimentary information on what was going to happen each day. It's
a concept that makes Steven Spielberg's "Saving Private Ryan" boot camp sound like Club Med, but the results speak
for themselves: What we see on the screen are three people who look
genuinely scared out of their minds, proving that fear isn't
manifested only in shrieking, slasher-flick bursts. Sure, Heather can scream like
a banshee, but she also shows the nuances of fear in subtler, more
unsettling ways. In the soon-to-be-famous scene in the tent, the camera is
uncomfortably tight on her nose and right eye as she tries to calmly
apologize for everything that's occurred. Her voice quivers, her eyes leak
tears and she croaks out what she seems to truly believe is her final message ("I love you, Mom ...") as she helplessly waits for the horror to
escalate. And escalate it does, building to an excruciatingly slow
crescendo, and leading ultimately to the most memorably disturbing final image
in a movie since the 1988 Dutch thriller "The Vanishing." "The Blair Witch Project" is not a perfect film, and there are times when the viewer may
ardently wish for less setup and quicker payoffs. And despite the
movie's realism, there are significant and frustrating holes in logic: Why do the
young makers of a documentary on the Blair Witch spend so little time actually talking
about her? Why does Heather pack a book called "How to Stay Alive in the Woods" and then never
use it? And why, even when they're running away in terror, do they take their cameras everywhere? Despite these occasional lapses, "The Blair Witch Project" still emerges as
a fascinating, unforgettable mystery. The film leaves
us, like the filmmakers, abandoned in the woods, with no one there to save
us. And Heather's terrified "What was that?" is up to us to answer.
Days after, you may still be replaying certain scenes in your head, puzzling over
their exact significance. In what may be a first in cross-media storytelling, the movie's creators, sensing the intense curiosity it might provoke, have
offered some ingenious alternative sources of further information. There's a
spooky- Even without the supplemental story lines, though, "The Blair Witch Project" stands on its own,
the most inventive and genuinely frightening horror movie to appear in years. "Scream" may
have revitalized the genre by giving it wry, self-referential wit, but
"Blair Witch" does it by proving that there's nothing scarier than looking
fear in the face. It is, quite simply, a movie you have to see, and
preferably with a friend. Because this is a film you're going to need to
talk about when it's over, and afterward you definitely won't want to walk home alone.
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About the writer Table Talk Sound off Related Salon stories Method man "The Blair Witch Project" co-star Joshua Leonard on method filmmaking and other terrifying games of conscience.
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