logo
qnetwork
Home
Chat
News
Reviews
Contact Us

 

Paranormal Activity
Director: Oren Peli
Screenplay: Oren Peli
Stars: Katie Featherston (Katie), Micah Sloat (Micah), Mark Fredrichs (The Psychic), Amber Armstrong, Randy McDowell, Ashley Palmer, Tim Piper
MPAA Rating: R
Year of Release: 2007 / 2009
Country: U.S.
Paranormal Activity
Paranormal Activity Riding a wave of buzz generated by celebrity Twitters, great word-of-mouth, and a unique marketing strategy in which Paramount released the film in only a few venues and then set up a web site allowing for viewers to “demand” that it be given a wide release, Paranormal Activity lives up to its reputation as one of the scariest movies in years, which it accomplishes not with big shocks or grabby special effects, but via a slowly escalating sense of dread that preys on our most basic fears. Stephen King once wrote that making horror is a lot like martial arts: finding vulnerable points and pressing, which is a perfect description of what this ultra-low-budget but extraordinarily clever film about a demonic haunting does. Those who have ever felt the hairs on the back of their neck raise up for no particular reason, or have heard a strange noise in the middle of the night that may or may not have been the ice maker, or have felt somehow exposed if their foot is sticking out from under the sheet at night will find Paranormal Activity absolutely bone-chilling.

Shot over a week for $11,000 by first-time feature writer/director Oren Peli, Paranormal Activity was originally purchased by Paramount in 2007 with the idea that they would remake it as a glossy star vehicle and dump the original on DVD, a decision that was wisely discarded since Hollywood actors could only detract from the film’s effectiveness, which is deeply rooted in a perception of reality that quickly makes you forget you’re watching a movie. Like The Blair Witch Project (1999), Cloverfield (2007), and Quarantine (2008), the film’s visual and narrative conceit is that we are watching purportedly found footage shot by those we see on-screen, which is emphasized here via a lack of opening credits or even a studio logo and a simple disclaimer thanking the families of Katie Featherston and Micah Sloat and the San Diego Police Department.

Katie and Micah are a young couple (she’s a grad student and he’s a day trader) who have had some strange experiences since moving into a two-story San Diego townhouse together. Micah has decided to deal with the problem by buying a videocamera and recording software for his computer in the hopes of capturing whatever activity (paranormal or otherwise) is happening in their house. Thus, we get shaky home-movie-quality footage of the couple at home, which serves the dual function of both sketching in background information about the potential haunting while also developing Katie and Micah as characters (with the exception of the film’s opening shot, which ventures as far as the driveway, the entire film takes place within the confines of the home). Katie clearly believes that something supernatural is happening, while Micah remains guardedly skeptical; she asks a psychic (Mark Fredrichs) to come to the house and give his opinion, which turns out to be anything but reassuring (let’s just say that he feels out of his league and suggests that they contact a demonologist).

The film’s escalating sense of dread and suspense is ingeniously structured around grainy, bluish-gray footage recorded from a tripod in Katie and Micah’s bedroom at night while they are sleeping. The banality of the fixed camera, devoid of any sense of aesthetic flourish or artistic pretense, heightens the sense of reality as our attention is torn between watching Katie and Micah sleep on the right-hand side of the screen and the doorway on the left-hand, through which we can barely make out the dim outlines of the hall and the top of the stairway. The unknown quality of the darkness just beyond the door frame--in which anything could be lurking--quickly becomes a source of almost unbearable tension, and the fact that it is shot with a wide-angle lens that ever so slightly distorts the image only increases the unsettling quality of these sequences. A display at the bottom right-hand corner of the screen informs us of the time, and we watch with baited breath for something to happen. At times the footage speeds up, creating an eerie sense of uncanny movement that we recognize is the result of fast-forwarding, but still seems unduly unnatural, while at other times it plays in agonizing real time. It is so simple, yet I cannot recall any image from another horror film that so succinctly and effectively conveys the sense of impending victimhood and aligns us with it. We might as well be in the bed with them.

Watching Katie and Micha’s slumbering forms on one side of the screen while looking back to the gaping doorway is a stark remind of how vulnerable we all are while sleeping, and the fact that this shot is repeated over and over again throughout the film with increasingly frightening results is its true genius. In fact, the film only gives in to unnecessary flourish in its final shot, which is the one moment in the entire movie where I was suddenly aware that I was actually watching a movie. Without giving too much away, let me say that it could have ended with just a bone-chilling smile, but instead it goes into the maw, which is simply too reminiscent of other J-horror-inspired shockers. Even with this modest stumble in the final frames, Paranormal Activity is a genuinely chilling experience into which it is all too easy to project our own fears and insecurities--always the hallmark of great horror.

Overall Rating: (3.5)

Thoughts? E-mail James Kendrick

All images copyright © Paramount Pictures


Eat Pray Love 
The Expendables 
Piranha 3D 
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World 
Machete 
Kick-Ass 
The Last Exorcism 
Titanic  
Black Orpheus  
Forrest Gump  
Kalifornia [Blu-Ray]
Underworld  
Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom  
Machine Gun McCain [Blu-Ray]
Aliens: Director's Cut 
Eyeborgs [Blu-Ray]
Salvatore Giuliano  
The Killer Inside Me 
After.Life [Blu-Ray]
Crumb  
Escape From New York [Blu-Ray]
The Last Command  
The Other Guys 
Winter's Bone 
The White Ribbon [Blu-Ray]

Infrastructure projects to be built with Obama bil...
US president Barack Obama has announced his government will spend billions of dollars to build huge infrastructure projects in the country, to create jobs and boost confidence in the American economy.
North Korea getting ready to change leader
North Korea has supposedly prepared a meeting between members of the ruling communist party.
Australian government finally decided
The Australian government has been returned after help form two Independent members, Tony Windsor and Rob Oakeshott.

More Headlines
Lily Allen offers support to Kanye West
Actress Lily Allen has offered support to Kanye West after the rapper took aim at himself in a series of bizarre online rants.
50k pounds a year salary 'can buy you true happine...
All those who say money can't buy happiness may have to bite their tongues, as a new study by American scientists suggests that 50,000 pounds can buy you all the joy you need.
Quran burning idiotic and dangerous
WASHINGTON — Attorney General Eric Holder is calling the planned burning of the Quran at a Florida church idiotic and dangerous. That's the word from religious leaders who met with Holder...

More Headlines

Select Headlines to Display:  Entertainment News Music News Sad But True TV News

Where would you like to go on your next vacation?