![]() WCĬalling “One Cut of the Dead” a scary movie is maybe a stretch, but the zombie comedy film is one of the most clever uses of the found footage format in recent memory. Its plot isn’t dissimilar to “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” but “Unfriended” is a slasher that knows how to place a classic formula in a new context to create something totally original and completely fun. ![]() Director Leo Gabriadze shows aptitude for making the limits of the format work, as the movie busts out pop-up ads, Chatroulette, Spotify, and a high-stakes virtual game of Never Have I Ever to keep the audience on edge. Every action seen in the film takes place on the computer screen of teenager Blair (Shelley Hennig), whose chat with her friend group via Skype goes off the rails when an anonymous user crashes the party and gets revenge on them for a prank on their friend Laura (Heather Sossaman) that cost her her life. One of the first Screenlife horror films, “Unfriended” is a surprisingly clever found footage film that committs fully to the bit. Image Credit: ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection With editorial contributions from Tambay Obenson and Eric Kohn. In honor of Halloween season, here are the 17 best found footage movies ever made, from the standard-bearers like “Blair Witch” and “Cannibal Holocaust” to under-seen low-budget wonders like “Lake Mungo” and “Be My Cat: A Film for Anne” to bonafide blockbusters like “Paranormal Activity” and “Cloverfield.” Plus, there’s all sorts of other very, very “real” treats in between. From an ill-fated movie that “ended” in a haunted forest to a suburban couple lost forever to dark forces, found footage is at its arguable best when toeing the line between fantasy and reality, bending it until it disappears. That’s the great trick of found footage: sometimes, just sometimes, if the films are really good and the people behind them are really adept at getting into the gag, they can convince audiences theirs truly is the “real world” being watching on the big screen. In the three decades since “The Blair Witch Project” changed the game, has anything become more scary and more omnipresent than devices that can record every inch of our world? What’s more, the famously reactive genre thrives when it feels most relevant. Horror filmmakers are notoriously canny creators, of course, having used whatever was available to craft all manner of scares long before technology caught up. And yet, the found footage technique has become so prevalent within the horror genre that it’s almost impossible to extricate the form from the fear it has inspired. ![]() Some film historians posit that the first found footage film was “The Connection”: an experimental joint by Shirley Clarke from 1961 about drug addicts (which is arguably horrific but definitely not a horror movie). The naturalistic approach to cinema doesn’t belong exclusively to the horror arena, believe it or not. From the collected clips of “V/H/S” to the harrowing ordeal captured in “Unfriended,” these frightening flicks feel at once like pieces of entertainment and physical proof of Hell on Earth. Whether it’s film “recovered” from a crime scene/disaster site or continuous “live video” watched in real time, found footage movies are among the most terrifying titles available to horror lovers.
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