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Paranormal Activity (2007)

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From Time Out New York

Arriving on a wave of carefully orchestrated viral hype, Paranormal Activity lacks the conceptual elegance of its obvious precursor, The Blair Witch Project. The movie invites us into the home of a couple (Featherston and Sloat) conveniently saddled with the same names as the actors who play them. Katie suspects a haunting, so in what’s now a time-honored tradition, they’ve grabbed a camcorder and elected to film everything. While superior to inept would-be Blairs like Open Water, Paranormal Activity Oren Peli’s horror flick often has the feel of a film-school exercise in which the object is to wring maximum suspense from rudimentary tools.

Still, there aren’t many movies that have the power to scare you with the sound of a creaking door, and it’s hard not to admire the way Paranormal Activity makes a virtue of simplicity. The opening scenes, which suggest nothing so much as a mumblecore horror flick, are eye-gougingly boring and slapdash—but that’s the point. In its most effective steal, the film makes brilliant use of a stubbornly fixed camera: As we wait, trapped with the tripod in Micah and Katie’s bedroom, wondering what happened downstairs, it’s easy to forgive the movie’s crudeness.

Author: Ben Kenigsberg 2009-10-06 22:03:03

Time Out New York Issue 732: October 8 - 14, 2009


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