Found footage horror movies have a way of making fiction feel terrifyingly real. In this video, we're ranking five of the ...
Found footage movies are among the trickiest subgenres of horror to get right. At worst, shaky camera cinematography and ...
Perhaps one of the riskiest tropes in filmmaking is applying found-footage as a way of storytelling. Telling a story through a camera that can't sit still, or shot through terrible lighting, is a ...
Found footage horror works best when it stays strange, unsettling, and a little underground. Here is why the genre should ...
On this day in horror history, The Poughkeepsie Tapes premiered at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival. The found footage chiller is directed by John Erick Dowdle and considered by some fans to be one of ...
One of the most terrifying found footage horror movies of recent years is getting a new remake. The remake will retell the story of one of South Korea's most successful horror features. What found ...
The tropes and clichés of the found-footage genre are well-known and often frustrating to many viewers: the requisite opening half-hour of hanging out with the characters to establish the format's ...
Jasneet Singh is a writer who finally has a platform to indulge in long rants about small moments on TV and film in overwhelming detail. With a literature background, she is drawn to the narrative ...
Found footage horror movies aim to be unsettling, but few are so disturbing that some viewers can’t finish them. A 2007 entry into the genre blurred the lines between fiction and reality so well that ...