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closeThursday, Oct. 08, 2009
You'll want to see 'Paranormal Activity’
Paranormal Activity
***
R (strong language); 86 min.
Some movies are a more shared experience than others, and that’s certainly the case with Paranormal Activity, a micro-budget horror flick about things that go bump in the you-know-what in a nice new home.
It opened first in a handful of theaters. Now it’s opening wider, but the combination of the late hour and the horror-jazzed audience could make this minimalist chill-fest the new Blair Witch Project, or so Paramount hopes.
And at the right moments, it is genuinely hair-raising. Something about seeing terror through the viewfinder of a video camera lends it veracity. Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer, Blair Witch and Cloverfield cashed in on that phenomenon. So does the limply titled Paranormal Activity.
Katie (Katie Featherston) and Micah (Micah Sloat) are young, rising middle-class nonsophisticates who share a two-story house in a San Diego subdivision. But she’s hearing things. She’s "haunted," she insists. Her can-do beau wires up a new camcorder with night vision to record them, day and night, to see what is making all those noises. Micah isn’t buying her frights, and taunts whatever it is that’s scaring her.
Night after night, they gather video evidence that something is messing with their relationship, their sleep and the covers on their bed.
Movies of this price range ($15,000, they say) develop a legend based on their cost, one that sometimes obscures the actual film. This is more fun than most studio horror films that drop into theaters most weekends. Is it scarier? Occasionally.
But gather your friends, stay up past your bedtime, and catch Paranormal Activity as the midnight movie it is. If it doesn’t spoil your sleep, at least it’ll put a damper on any bedroom camcorder games you have planned.
Exclusive: AMC Parks at Arlington 18; Rave Northeast, Hurst; AMC NorthPark, Dallas; Cinemark West, Plano; Cinemark Legacy 24, Plano
— Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel
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