The Past The Past

Twitch-O-Meter: Reel Vs. Real

Posted by Collin Armstrong at 8:08am.

Posted in Twitch-O-Meter .

Despite a hefty amount of publicity heaped upon Cloverfield’s “found footage” approach to the kaiju genre, audience members at the screening attended by yours truly were still audibly alarmed when the film began in bars and tone.  J.J. Abrams and Co. never made it their (stated) goal to fool the public en masse into what they were seeing was real, and there was little chance they could’ve even if they had tried based on the fantastic nature of the project, but they did do a pretty neat job of using a reality-based aesthetic to drive Cloverfield’s otherwise pedestrian story.

In light of the film’s warm critical reception and boffo box office over its opening weekend, this edition of the ToM will focus on a few other projects that posit fantastically heightened versions of our own reality by way of grafting familiar visual techniques onto unfamiliar situations.

Ghostwatch - a notorious Halloween hoax perpetrated by the BBC back in 1991, Ghostwatch front-loaded audience expectations about whether what they were seeing was real by staffing the televised investigation of a fictional haunted house with nationally known news personalities, including venerable presenter Michael Parkinson, and giving little indication beyond an end credit crawl teeming with actors and writers, that it was all a sham.  Brief consideration lays bare the program’s stagier elements, but there’s no denying Watch’s ability to conjure atmosphere amid the strange sensation that what you’re watching looks and sounds, at times, very real.

Special Bulletin - long out-of-print and criminally underseen, this early MFTV effort from director Ed Zwick presents a “you are there!” scenario in which a reporter and camera person are kidnapped by a group demanding the dismantling of a cache of nuclear warheads in South Carolina.  Part of the Threads / The Day After crowd of nuclear scare pics from the early ‘80s, Zwick’s film packs an immediacy which heightens tension throughout, and is graced with strong performances and exceptional editing.  NBC would do right by re-issuing this title – the rogue brigade whose demands drive Bulletin’s narrative are perhaps an even more relevant point of discussion today.

Without Warning - a cheesy TV movie (starring Loni Anderson, no less!) is “interrupted” by a breaking news report – meteorite impacts have been recorded around the globe.  The coverage continues as bizarre phenomena mounts and governments spiral into panic.  Warning takes a page from Ghostwatch’s playbook by casting former NBC correspondent Sander Vanocur as the anchor of the fictional newsdesk which guides us through the narrative.  A tad melodramatic and populated by recognizable TV actors, Warning still proves the power of aesthetic by keeping its viewers off-balance, filtering the fantastic through everyday media.

Gang Tapes - like Cloverfield, Tapes plays itself off as “found” footage, in this case offering viewers the recorded contents of a stolen camcorder which accompanies a South Central youth through a rambling, ultimately tragic weekend.  Tapes benefits by being a little rougher around the edges than Cloverfield and thus closer to what you or I might capture behind the lens, and it doesn’t hang its painstaking docu look and feel on an overly cinematic arc laced with too-observant wit; what tends to get lost in Cloverfield stays front and center here – you really feel as though you’re watching someone’s “life” play out before you.

The Last Horror Movie - shock-mock-doc from the UK owes much to Man Bites Dog, and although it doesn’t quite scale that film’s more formal heights, it does manage to spin one helluva creepy yarn around the haphazardly captured, sadistic exploits of serial killer Max Parry – presented here as having been “taped over” a lame teen slasher pic.  The slice-of-life sections of the film, wherein Parry dotes over his sister’s kids and cooks elaborate meals for friends, lure viewers into an uncomfortable zone wherein not every serial killer opts to dance naked in front of a mirror or design Rube Goldberg-worthy traps to ensnare his or her prey, but rather look – and for the most part – act a lot like you and me.

The list of these sorts of pics goes on for some time, and many offer unique experiences unto themselves.  I’ve purposefully avoided touchstones like The Blair Witch Project, Cannibal Holocaust, and Man Bites Dog in an attempt to highlight the variety of creative stabs at feigning reality on screen.  What other examples are there?  What works for you, what doesn’t?

 

Reader Comments

  1. dac1138 01/24/2008 @ 10:38am

    My Little Eye also did a commendable job with this idea. Not a masterpieces by any stretch but solid and consistent in it’s visual premise (the web cams).

  2. colinr 01/24/2008 @ 11:46am

    The Last Broadcast is also a mention.

  3. Swarez 01/24/2008 @ 2:19pm

    Strange that you only mention Man Bites Dog in one sentence. That’s probably the best Mocumentary ever made on the subject of serial killers.

  4. petcor80 01/24/2008 @ 2:22pm

    guinea pig: flowers of flesh and blood was once investigated because Charlie Sheen thought he had seen a real snuff movie. the August Underground movies also want to look real… there is actually a whole “fake snuff” subgenre in between those two movies

  5. Collin Armstrong 01/24/2008 @ 4:14pm

    Well, I kind of wanted to hit some that people might be less aware of - I agree MBD is a small masterpiece.

  6. Peter K. 01/24/2008 @ 11:43pm

    Anyone seen Peter Jackson’s fantastic Forgotten Silver. Its not horror or anything, but it apparently angered a lot of people in New Zealand after they discovered the back story behind the film. I don’t want to give much away (as its fun to experience it cold). Its a great ‘documentary’.

  7. Swarez 01/25/2008 @ 2:51am

    Yes Forgotten Silver is a rarely seen little gem that apparently fooled allot of people. The DVD is very nice and has a good making of documentary on how they pulled this off.

  8. DVDBoxSet 01/28/2008 @ 1:17pm

    Forgotten Silver is a good pick, as are the first two Guinea Pig films. I could list off other fake snuff films as well, and another film I love that I want to mention so badly but would just hate to spoil for anyone (it’s extremely unclear whether or not the footage is real until the end). But my absolute favorite is probably Nanook of the North. So tricky.

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