Many found-footage horror movies are frightening, but some use their unique perspective to deliver stories that feel disturbingly real.
One of the best things about the found footage genre can also be one of its most frustrating. By its very nature, classic found footage movies can never answer all your questions because the camera ...
The found footage format has evolved significantly over time, from the early days of Cannibal Holocaust to modern smartphone-centric tales like Host. What makes the subgenre so compelling is its ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. FAIRMONT — In 1987, three friends vanished on a road trip to West Virginia. Thirty four years later, footage of their final ...
In the annals of horror, the found footage subgenre has undoubtedly garnered a dedicated fandom, but it remains slightly niche; consider the hundreds of films in the genre that are released annually, ...
Jasneet Singh is a writer who finally has a platform to indulge in long rants about small moments on TV and film in overwhelming detail. With a literature background, she is drawn to the narrative ...
Chris VanderKaay (director/writer/actor) will join via Zoom for a Q&A about the film and Found Footage genre talk moderated by Dread Central’s Preston Fassel after the screening! Chris Vander Kaay, a ...
Found footage horror movies aim to be unsettling, but few are so disturbing that some viewers can’t finish them. A 2007 entry into the genre blurred the lines between fiction and reality so well that ...
Found-footage horror movies are a relatively new sub-genre, with the controversial 1980 movie Cannibal Holocaust regularly cited as the first of its kind. Ever since, the likes of Daniel Myrick and ...