Hello folks. I'm thinking of making this an ongoing event in the Entertainment section. Topics will range from different types of movies to reviews to discussion on a films cultural imact. Today I will be posting a review of one of my favorite movies: Paranormal Activity (2007).
In anticipation for the fourth installment in the blockbuster series, I took to watching the previous three Paranormal Activity films again. After watching them all, I've gathered my thoughts for a review on the best of the series, the first. Director Oren Peli did what any independent director is hopeful for: he took a simple premise, limited funds, and two actors to create one of the most financially benefical movies in history. The story itself is something any trained eye has seen before, because, let's face it, horror movies have a specific genre to work within. All quality ghost/haunted house movies, ranging from Poltergeist to the Amityville Horror, have an endearing quality that sticks out. Amityville had strong performances from it's actors, along with the cutting reality that this story is based, albeit somewhat, on a true story. Poltergeist had an original idea and executed it well, and has aged as somewhat of a cult classic among fans of the genre. So for a film in this genre to stick out, it has to have that "it" factor. Insert the handy dandy hand-held cam-corder. The idea isn't completely original, in fact it had been used roughly 8 years prior in the fantastically succesful film, "The Blair Witch Project". But it's use, and what it choosed to show, made the film much more impactful.
When you're working with a limited budget, every penny counts. Oren Peli knew this, and used all of the tricks in the book to pull of an effective, cheap thriller. The effects were used sparringly, yet in a very smart way. By keeping it simple, Peli created a more realistic and satisfying film. In fact, watching the film itself isn't the scary part. It's the night after that becomes a struggle. The fear of things that go "bump" in the night, as they call it, taps into a primal fear. The fear that we're not alone, that something is watching us and we're not aware. In a sense, the sequels take this away from this particular film. While they're creative in presentation and still quality films themselves, the cloud the plot, to a point where it becomes an elaborate scheme, as opposed to something that could happen to anyone. In this sense, the first film is the only one to evoke such a strong feeling. Much credit should be given to Katie Featherston and Micah Sloat. When the story relies so much on realistically portraying an incident, acting becomes an intergral part of the film making process. Both Sloat and Featherston give exquisite performances, capturing the terror in every shot.
Paranormal Activity is a film everyone should at least give a chance to. Whether horror is your genre or not, it's an important film in terms of quality film making on a budget. I appluad director Oren Peli and the cast for deliviring a film that had no right to be as good as it was.
I give Paranormal Activity **** out of five stars.