Paranormal Activity (2007) [Blu-ray]
Horror | Mystery | Thriller
You demanded it and now the surprise hit critics call "one of the scariest movies of all time"* can be experienced in the most terrifying place of all...your home.
After a young, middle-class couple moves into what seems like a typical suburban house, they become increasingly disturbed by a presence that may or may not be demonic but is certainly most active in the middle of the night. Especially while they
sleep.
Paranormal Activity builds suspense all the way to the shocking ending. Roger Ebert calls it "truly scary." Go ahead, we dare you to watch it at home...at least you can leave the lights on.
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, December 30, 2009 -- You cannot run from this. -- Sometimes, big things come in small packages. Paranormal Activity, the latest micro-budget film to make it big, is a
one-trick cinematic pony that lacks the glitz and glamour of its high-dollar brethren but beats out many of its contemporaries where it counts the most: simple know-how. With a reported budget that couldn't even buy a base model 2010 Ford Focus and a cast
and crew list that reads like a random collection of names rather than Hollywood regulars, Paranormal Activity went on to earn well over $100,000,000 at the domestic box office and became the surprise word-of-mouth hit of the year. In fact, this is
probably one of the best movies, dollar for dollar, of all time, though it still doesn't beat out El Mariachi and its $7,000 budget. Still, first-time Director Oren Peli gets the most out of his movie with a home camera, a few actors, one set, and
plenty of spine-tingling tension. It's not a perfect movie, but Paranormal Activity is an amazing experience all things considered, a true "little engine that could" sort of fairy tale that proves once and for all that name stars, big special
effects, and fancy production values rarely make up for the absence of plot and smartly-crafted storytelling.
Micah (Micah Sloat) has purchased a home video camera in hopes of substantiating the claims and capturing footage of the hauntings his live-in girlfriend Katie (Katie Featherston) has been experiencing since childhood. An ever-present addition to their
lives, the camera documents their every move, both during the daytime and, more importantly, as they sleep at night. In addition to the camera, the couple hires a psychic (Mark Fredrichs) who confirms the presence of a demon in the house. As the days turn
to weeks, random and seemingly inconsequential occurrences -- keys found on the floor or a door that moves by itself -- turn into far more frightening encounters with the supposed demon, each night becoming more terrifying and every new experience
furthering the divide that's threatening the stability of Micah's and Katie's strained relationship. With both at wits end and frightened of the unknown, it seems only inevitable that somehow, someway, the paranormal activity that's come to define the
couple's life will eventually tear them apart.
What is Paranormal Activity? Is it a byproduct of a generation drawn to reality voyeurism? An effort to inject some much-needed verve into the Horror genre? A wannabe copycat of the none-too-scary The Blair Witch Project? A combination of
the three? Or something else entirely? Whatever it is and whatever the filmmakers had in mind, there's no denying that the film's strengths -- which includes an absurdly simple yet strongly-realized plot -- far outweigh the various technical shortcomings.
In fact, there's not really any one time in the movie where it seems distractingly lacking in any one technical area. From the poor picture quality to the garbled sound, it all fits in with the established tone and voyeuristic feel of the movie, the
viewer easily and readily accepting the film's style and limited technical expertise as merely a part of the surprisingly engaging story. In fact, Paranormal Activity makes filmmaking -- or better said here shooting video -- the center of
attention. The camera is a primary character in the film; not only is it a de facto audience member -- seeing and hearing only what the audience sees and hears -- but it's also central to the story, a point of contention between the characters, and a
constant that's often made an integral object in the story, whether in unraveling the secrets behind the "paranormal activity" or serving as a mere documenting tool for some future endeavor.
The film's drawbacks, then, are few and forgivable. As movies of this sort go, it never feels particularly real. In comparison to something like Cloverfield, Paranormal Activity somehow feels a bit staged and phony, but the movie doesn't
necessarily suffer as a result. Cloverfield's bigger budget and more expansive story allowed it to create an entire world -- rather than a single home and a pair of minds -- that finds itself in the midst of chaos captured via amateur home video, a
far broader and more complex endeavor than that found in Paranormal Activity. Additionally, the film suffers because its primary characters aren't particularly likable. Vulgar, goofy, and argumentative, the script attempts to slowly paint them as
becoming more and more irritable with both the situation and with one another, and ultimately turn that irritability into paranoia. It works well enough, but in the process the characters seem more like cobbled-together shells that lack much in the way of
soul and spirit, but again, not necessarily to the detriment of the film's overall feel. Indeed, neither problem seems the least bit of a hindrance to Paranormal Activity's greatest strengths: anticipation and fear of the unknown. With every
nighttime scene comes a feeling of dread, like the deadly silence is consistently on the verge of exploding into sheer terror, and whether it comes or not, it's the calm and not necessarily the storm that sells the terror of the story. Creaking
floorboards, loud crashes, moving sheets, or cracked pictures just don't compete with the sheer terror of the mysteries behind them and the anticipation of what may or may not be lurking in the shadows.
It's amazing what a good story and a bit of talent can do. Overcoming what seems the biggest hurdle in Hollywood today -- money -- and delivering a movie that was not only a surprise and justifiable smash hit but a worthwhile project and a solid entry
into the annals of Horror filmmaking, Paranormal Activity proves two things: that story comes first, and audiences will still spend their hard-earned money on a good movie, regardless of its budget, cast, crew, special effects, or in this case,
lack thereof. Certainly, there are big-budget, large-scale effects films that do take the time to weave a strong story, but Paranormal Activity recalls a time when a movie had to rely almost absolutely on its own merits and not the technical
expertise of a detached team of computer graphic specialists to dazzle audiences. No doubt there's bound to be a rash of copycat films that likely won't be as good as this in an effort to cash in on the low-risk, high-reward potential, but maybe one of
them will be yet another diamond in the rough. Paramount's Blu-ray release of Paranormal Activity offers technical presentations that aren't impressive but are reflective of the movie's built-in limitations. Where this release truly stumbles is in
the absence of special features. Offering but a second cut of the film with an alternate ending and a digital copy, fans are likely to be less than enthused about this package. Recommended as a rental first and foremost until the price drops to a level
that's more on par with a practically featureless release.
[CSW] -2-- It is an okay one-time movie - unsettling.
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