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Seven Found Footage Movies That Don’t Get Enough Credit

Behind the Mask

Found footage movies generally get a bad rap. Many viewers complain about them, pointing out how overused and terrible the format is when, in reality, the found footage craze is, for all intents and purposes, over. Horror has moved on.

We’re not getting nearly as many of them as we did in years past, which, for most people is seen as a good thing. But now that the market is less saturated, it’s easier to look back on some found footage features to see what actually stood out among the bunch.

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It’s a tough style to get right. When found footage really took off, every movie was designed to fit that format and it’s not something that works for every film. Most features don’t need to be found footage. It can reek of insincerity and studio interference when a film is forced to fit that style.

There was a time when we were just getting the (terrible) found footage versions of Rosemary’s Baby, Back to the Future, E.T., etc, all of which subsequently led to the inevitable bursting of the FF bubble. It also made FF harder to get right, but that didn’t mean nobody ever did.

Here are my picks for seven found footage movies worth another look:

V/H/S/2

The first V/H/S divided audiences. It is, admittedly, kind of uneven. But this sequel is, thankfully, a better movie in almost every aspect. While the original had the intensity of “Amateur Night” this one ramps up the intensity of every segment. It’s a shame that certain fans haven’t given it the benefit of the doubt, because it does top the original.

VHS 2 banner Digging Up the Marrow

Adam Green’s Digging Up the Marrow doesn’t really count, as it’s more of a mockumentary, but the two formats are very often lumped together. Regardless, Green’s latest is often overlooked. It’s a strong film with some interesting surprises and they clearly had a lot of fun running with the joke and playing up the mythology, which is surprisingly imaginative.

Adam Green and Ray Wise in Digging up the MarrowThe Houses October Built

Another combination of found footage and mockumentary, The Houses October Built is creepy on many levels. It’s never clear what’s actually going on, if anything is going on. But there’s so much dread hanging over it, it’s like a Creepypasta being told directly to the screen. Is it real? Do these kinds of things happen in professional haunted houses? The movie doesn’t really answer these questions, leaving you with a lot to wonder about after it’s over. Great for sparking morbid research.

Spooky mask from Houses October Built.Lake Mungo

More people need to see Lake Mungo. It’s garnered some critical acclaim, but few horror fans actually seem to have caught it, which is a real shame because it’s absolutely worth the watch. There’s so much going on, from the family’s attempt to deal with their tragic loss to the events that occur afterward. Is it supernatural? Or is the family imagining a paranormal scenario in an effort to keep their child alive in their own minds?

Alice Palmer goes missing at Lake Mungo and her body is washed up hours and hours later.Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon

Fans of this movie are so excited and so passionate about it that I often find myself thinking there are more of them than there actually are. But it’s so good. It’s one of my absolute favorites of the 2000s and is so worth checking out. It’s a total deconstruction of slashers in a way that is done with the utmost respect.

Nathan Baesel as the titular character in Scott Glosserman's Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon.Man Bites Dog

Behind the Mask often draws unfair comparisons to this terrific French film, about a documentary crew following a killer. Tonally, the two are entirely different. This is a completely different approach to black comedy. But it’s still scary. It’s as though the audience are dropped into Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer and forced to go along with it. There’s something interesting and genuinely disturbing about that.

French horror film Man Bites DogThe Last Broadcast

It might be a little rough around the edges, it might not be the first found footage horror, but everything that The Blair Witch Project did in terms of furthering the idea of found footage and trying to make the audience believe in what was happening was first accomplished by The Last Broadcast. Substitute the Blair Witch for the Jersey Devil and you’re left with two shockingly similar features. Amazingly, this one only beat Blair Witch by a year. Just from that perspective, it’s well worth a watch. But it’s also pretty interesting and spooky on its own.

The Last Broadcast

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Written by Nat Brehmer
In addition to contributing to Wicked Horror, Nathaniel Brehmer has also written for Horror Bid, HorrorDomain, Dread Central, Bloody Disgusting, We Got This Covered, and more. He has also had fiction published in Sanitarium Magazine, Hello Horror, Bloodbond and more. He currently lives in Florida with his wife and his black cat, Poe.
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