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Date: 6/21/2004 7:47:00 PM From Authorid: 15070 I heard that when they were making this movie, they really dropped the actors in the middle of the forest, with only one days script at a time. I heard the fights that they had were real, just like the fear was real too. I think this is a very creepy film. |
Date: 6/21/2004 7:55:00 PM From Authorid: 62753 something wasn't right with that film! Lizard-1 |
Date: 6/21/2004 8:04:00 PM
From Authorid: 62753
FROM THE CNN NEWSDESK -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Shot on a shoestring Fact and fiction: 'Blair Witch' team gets happy ending CLIPS FROM "BLAIR WITCH" "Confession" 1.5Mb QuickTime movie "Rude Awakening" 1.7Mb QuickTime movie ALSO: Burkittsville, Virginia braces for 'Blair Witch' exposure July 15, 1999 Web posted at: 5:13 p.m. EDT (2113 GMT) By Paul Clinton Turner Entertainment Report Correspondent (CNN) -- Part of the advertising campaign for the new film "The Blair Witch Project" includes this statement: "On October 21, 1994, three filmmakers, Heather Donahue, Joshua Leonard and Michael Williams, hiked into the Black Forest of Maryland to shoot a documentary film on a local legend called 'Blair Witch' and were never seen or heard from again." Sounds like a real-life story, doesn't it? That's what the filmmakers and Artisan Entertainment want you to think. Last August, before the film ever hit the festival circuit, the two co-directors, co-writers and co-editors of the film -- Eduardo Sánchez and Daniel Myrick -- alumni of the University of Central Florida in Orlando -- launched a Web site, www.blairwitch.com. There, they posted an entire mythology and evil history of the supposed 200-year-old "Blair Witch" legend, complete with drawings, old photos and journals. Every bit of it is fake. Then, the three members of the supposed documentary crew were unavailable when the press was invited to Los Angeles to interview Myrick and Sánchez. After all, they were dead. Weren't they? Apparently Artisan Entertainment -- which bought the film in an all-night bidding session the night it premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, last January -- decided to continue the gimmick. Artisan dished out a reported $1 million for the movie. No one will confirm this at the moment, but the film's entire budget is said to have been only some $25,000. Actors Heather Donahue and Joshua Leonard Surviving the 'Witch' "People come up to us all the time and say, 'We're so glad you're alive.' To me that's a real gauge that it worked," says the film's female cast member, Heather Donahue. She's an actress, not a documentary filmmaker. And she's alive, as are the other two "documentary film-crew members," actors Joshua Leonard and Michael Williams. Donahue and Leonard did do a few interviews the day the film was sold. Both actors knew something special was happening at the first screening in Park City. "None of us anticipated a reaction like this," says Leonard. "I could have come here doing interviews with the Park City Gazette and been happy." "I was like, 'Oh my God, it's crazy,'" Donahue says. "It's like a very sort of raw film. It was hard to know how audiences were going to respond to that." The wondering is over. "The Blair Witch Project" is one of the most highly anticipated independent films of the summer. "Our goal was to kind of blur the line between reality and acting and take them to the edge." says Sánchez. "The actors were out there from the first shot of the movie 'til the end shot. They were out there -- they camped out there, they ate out there, they went to the bathroom out there, they did everything." Everything, including shooting the actual film. Leonard was the main cameraman with a large 16mm camera. Williams acted as soundman, using a digital recorder. And Donahue had a Hi-8 video camera she used to shoot behind-the-scenes tape. "Blair Witch" was shot entirely on location in Maryland in eight days. The actors were only told the basic concept of the story. Then with cameras at the ready, they were put into frightening situations created by Sánchez and Myrick. The actors improvised and filmed each other through it all. In order to have as little contact as possible with the actors during the making of the film, Sánchez and Myrick used a Global Positioning System (GPS) device to keep in touch with their actors. "We'd send them little directing notes," says Sánchez, "along with food and fresh batteries and fresh rolls of film and video cassettes. We just led them around the woods with the GPS -- one of those trackers that has wave points in it. And they'd go from one point to the next and we'd have things set up for them, you know, things for them to experience there." The result is a stark film with hard-to-decipher images, shaky camera work and a soundtrack full of shrieks and mumbled dialogue. The film is also frightening, even though there's no violence and no blood. "We took pretty much just every limitation that independent, low-budget films have, and used it as our strength," says Sánchez: "Shaky camera, no lights, improvised dialog, you know. I mean, we don't show anything." Filmmakers Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez The check arrives No one seems to have thought they'd make any money with this project. The actors were paid, but Donahue says, "It was about the same money as temping or bartending. Your usual. It didn't take money away, which is good, because that's what most projects of this type do. My financial situation didn't change. It was seamless poverty." Donahue talks about the industry's equivalent phrase to "The check's in the mail" in such situations. "'You get deferred pay,'" she says, citing the standard line. "Oh sure," she says, laughing at an actor's customary response to the promise. But now that the film has sold, she really has gotten deferred pay. "I don't know anyone who ever got deferred pay. I'm the first of my friends to ever actually get a deferred paycheck." Sánchez and Myrick say they were down to their last dime while making this film. "We had every major utility shut off," laughs Sánchez. "We basically financed everything through credit cards and a couple of private investors. But it was tough. We've been living paycheck to paycheck." But now, things are looking up for these young filmmakers. They've got one of the hottest movies of the summer coming out, and a first-look deal with Artisan Entertainment. They're writing a comedy with a friend, David Brown, to be called "Heart of Love." "It's kind of a wacky comedy," says Myrick, "something that hasn't been seen in a long time." Donahue, Williams and Leonard are also ready for their next acting projects. Now all they have to do is convince casting directors they're still alive. |
Date: 6/21/2004 8:05:00 PM From Authorid: 62753 hope it helps, lizard-1 |
Date: 6/21/2004 8:05:00 PM From Authorid: 62753 wow that was long! LIZARD-1 |
Date: 6/21/2004 8:20:00 PM From Authorid: 24003 I hated that movie lol |
Date: 6/21/2004 8:34:00 PM From Authorid: 15070 thank you for the information. I actually liked the film. I saw it in the theater, and I thought the build-up to the end was very intense. People either loved the film, or hated it. There seems to be no middle ground. |
Date: 6/21/2004 8:48:00 PM From Authorid: 61811 never sawthe movie but i kinda want to. lol |
Date: 6/21/2004 9:12:00 PM From Authorid: 15157 I thought they made much much more than that and they are still raking in some dough! |
Date: 6/22/2004 12:08:00 AM From Authorid: 10722 Actually, they did make more than that, ALOT more. |
Date: 6/22/2004 1:32:00 AM From Authorid: 28193 I really liked the movie. It was clever, and psychologically thrilling. |
Date: 5/19/2005 11:59:00 AM From Authorid: 7574 I didn't think it was that bad of a film. Still haven't seen the second one. |
Date: 10/15/2006 4:12:00 AM From Authorid: 51292 Hmm interesting..I thought this movie was okay to. The second one I didnt like at all! |
Date: 10/18/2008 3:33:00 AM From Authorid: 42945 Sorry I didn't like the movie, but that's just me... |
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