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That night, Veruca taps on her Digital Grimoire. Yes. We then cut Carlos at home where his sock monkey doll comes to life, while Becca is attacked by her spots trophies. Well, this escalated quickly. To cap it off, Rosie anime action figures/dolls/figures attack her. See, I told you anime was evil but who is laughing now?!

But only fiction can created the character and empathy needed for true horror to succeed; the film reclaims the personal absent necessarily from this documentary. I applaud directors Daniel Myrick Eduardo Sánchez for creating a complete phenomenon, forming a history and origin of a fictitious witch, using the medium of television and movie-making to birth this whole missing students and their supposed lost footage.

Eerie witch titter

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User Reviews

Originally airing on the Sci-Fi Channel the week before the release of THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT (1999), this fascinating look at the supposedly "true" legends of the Blair Witch, from the banishment of Elle Kedward, the drowning of little Eileen Treacle, and the massacre at Coffin Rock, to the 1941 murders committed by Rustin Parr, right up to the 1994 disappearances of Heather, Mike, and Josh, cleverly reels in viewers to this fictional mythology. Many who watched this later swore it was on The Learning Channel or Discovery, not Sci-Fi! In many respects, this short piece is far better than the actual feature film it was meant to promote.

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Permalink Michael_Elliott 9 March 2012

Curse of the Blair Witch (1999)

This is the TV special, which ended up leading to one of the biggest blockbusters of all time. This documentary build up the "legend" of the Blair Witch and also made people think that three filmmakers went into the woods to do a documentary on it and disappeared only to have their footage found later. This "footage" was released into theaters as THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT, which of course became a huge hit. I must admit that this feature was a lot more effective back when it was originally released but watching it all these years later at least kept me entertained due in large part to nostalgia. With that said, you still have to give this fake documentary credit for at least making up a good story to play along side the actual film. I thought there were some good stories here and the most important thing is that it actually built up interest in the film and that still rings true when viewed today. I thought the best aspect was the backstory on the legend of the Blair Witch as it managed to be quite creepy and the story itself is just so well told that you can't help but get caught up in it. What doesn't work so well are a few of the interviews and especially the stuff from a 70s TV show. At just 44-minutes the film sets itself up like one of the countless reality/docu-dramas that are all over the place today. For the most part it succeeds but once you know the truth it's hard to see it in the same way.

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Permalink 10 /10 mermatt 5 August 1999

This TV "documentary" is better than the movie -- and made by the same people. These are very talented people -- they have the folklore of witches down cold and they also have the patter and pattern of documentaries down equally cold. The use of interviews and the extended story of the witch and her curse all add up to the sense of a realistic story.

I haven't seen this kind of verisimilitude since Orson Welles' made people believe that Martians were landing in NJ. As a teacher and writer, I plan to use this show and the film in my drama classes to illustrate verisimilitude, atmosphere, and style. The fact that all of this is done so realistically has started a national debate as to whether this myth and the movie are real. What fun!

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Permalink 10 /10 arminio 20 June 2002

If I didn't know that this is mockumentary, I would definitely believe in every word they said there!

Movie is shoot so clever and good (which is reasonable because authors were fine documentary moviemakers before they did this and BWP) that is totally believable and real unless you read end credits where you can see that entire thing is fake :)

It is my favourite mockumentary, next to Jackson's "Forgotten Silver" which is funny and, in most scenes pretty obviously fake while this one is totally realistic.

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Permalink 9 /10 Scarecrow-88 13 August 2008 Warning: Spoilers

Brilliantly conceived fake documentary of the Blair Witch mythos, Burkittsville's past origins(..how the township of Blair became Burkittsville) regarding a witch banished to the woods by superstitious locals in Colonial times who is reported to haunt those very woods at least every 60 years, children disappearing, others dying. Also, this explores the footage found of three missing student filmmakers and their descent into the woods on the outskirts of Burkittsville. We get a series of interviews from actors portraying professors, a historian, sheriff, & detective. We get an eerie narrative voice summarizing the spooky recorded documents regarding past haunts of Elly, the Blair Witch and those who mention seeing, communicating, and obeying her(..such as the infamous child murdering hermit Rustin Parr, who proclaimed that voices directed his methods of execution). What I found stunningly believable were the interviews with those who either knew or were related to the three missing filmmakers. I remember watching this on the Sci-fi channel way back in '99 before The Blair Witch Project, and must say that "Curse.." and the movie are almost an essential package together. "Curse.." really adds to the marketing juggernaut that was The Blair Witch Project, giving the "lost footage" a rack to hang it's hat on. I applaud directors Daniel Myrick & Eduardo Sánchez for creating a complete phenomenon, forming a history and origin of a fictitious witch, using the medium of television and movie-making to birth this whole "missing students" and their supposed "lost footage." Sure, these guys were inspired by such as "Haxan"(..and I'm sure Deodato's "Cannibal Holocaust" was as well), but The Blair Witch Project, even if it doesn't give you a definite answer as to what happened to those college students who went into the Maryland woods never to return, still lives and breathes thanks to imaginative efforts like "Curse of the Blair Witch." Heck, the guys even had an old interview with Parr on B&W film stock(..looks like something culled from old crime footage), and this 70's archival interview with a hippie cultist with an astute knowledge of witchcraft. A Blair Witch tome, photos of the student filmmakers working with equipment. Old child and family photos of the lost filmmakers. These guys went out of their way to create the success that was The Blair Witch Project. Too bad neither filmmaker has quite lived up to The Blair Witch Project, making little genre films, but never quite achieving the same experience as The Blair Witch Project & Curse of the Blair Witch. Maybe it is a product of it's time, but it's influence is seen to this very day..it's undeniable. As a promotional tool, "Curse of the Blair Witch" excels, and, heck, some might say is as creepy if not in fact creepier that the film it's supposed to sell!

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Permalink 9 /10 Michael-76 4 September 1999

I saw the movie before Is aw this TV special, though now I wish I had done in in reverse order. I was far more scared and intrigued after watching the TV special than I was after I saw the movie, which was good but fairly disappointing. Even if you hated the movie itself, please give this TV special a chance. It has many details and answers many questions than the movie does not.

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Permalink 8 /10 Tweekums 12 October 2016 Warning: Spoilers

This faux documentary, originally shown in the run-up to the release of 'The Blair Witch Project' and helped create the belief that that film was in fact real. It tells us how the three student filmmakers who feature in that film had gone to Burkittsville, Maryland, to investigate the legend of the Blair Witch then disappear in the woods never to be seen again, and how their recordings were discovered a year later. This also goes into the legend and goes into some detail when discussing various events linked to the Blair Witch. Various 'experts' are interviewed and give their views; some appear sceptical others seem to believe the commonly held details of the story.

Unfortunately I watched this after watching the film; I think it would have added to the sense of dread if I'd seen this first as the various details mentioned in the film are explained in detail here. These details are discussed in such a matter of fact way that people could be expected to believe much of it is real or at the very least that there must be a real Blair Witch legend that inspired the film there isn't. There is also a believable use of re-enactments; historical evidence and even 'archive footage' of a convicted killer who was linked to the legend. I watched this immediately after watching the film and really enjoyed the way it the way it gave us details of the legend. Overall I thought this was an impressive companion piece to the film; it is well worth watching even if you don't usually bother watching DVD extras.

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Permalink 10 /10 bethc_frith 30 January 2013 Warning: Spoilers

CONTAINS SPOILER Well firstly I'm a massive fan of the film Blair Witch project, i first saw it when it was out at the cinema and i thought it was excllent, really scary and to this day i don't think any other horror film has come close to being as cleverly done ( the marketing was genius!) I first saw the curse of the Blair witch on the bonus footage of the DVD of the Blair witch.I was utterly gripped! It was so incredibly eerie it really put the jitters up me (i might add i'm not easily spooked and i was watching it in broad daylight too!).

Even from the opening sequence i got chills up my spine, everything about this documentary is spot on for me, even down to the female narrators voice.

I thought it very clever how they continued with the whole "this is a true story" angle. I enjoyed the back stories of Eileen Treacle who was dragged into the river by an unseen entity and the letters to the sheriff who supposedly refused to believe there were paranormal reasons behind the students disappearance.

I actually found this documentary scarier than the film itself. An absolute must see for Blair witch fans! 13 years after the film was made and i still get shivers down my spine!

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Permalink alice liddell 8 November 1999

It is a favourite sport among 'sophisticated' Europeans to laugh at gullible Americans, and it is a pastime, I'm ashamed to admit, I've indulged in myself. Ho ho! we chortle when we read about audiences feeling sick at such a tame film as THE EXORCIST. Hee hee! we titter as reports come of spectators needing psychiatrists after THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT. But I for one envy American faith. Sometimes cynicism can be so tiring, and I'm really jealous of Americans who were genuinely scared watching BLAIR.

Apparently this mockumentary played a large part in the film's mythology - I don't know how true this is. As I mentioned in my review, I was scared witless by BLAIR, and felt great anguish for some time after it. Watching CURSE was of great therepeutic value - shorn of the big screen and the mechanics of the horror film, I was able to dominate the material, to emasculate its very real hold on me.

I think this mockumentary both weakens and strengthens the film. Without having seen it, the film is extraordinarily rich and suggestive, playing havoc with the viewer who carries no preconceptions (like myself). Being not quite sure what to expect only increases the tension and the terror. If I'd seen this mockumentary, I don't think I'd have been as scared. I'd have known too much, many things would have been explained (or at least graspable), overarching theories would have been more easily explicable.

Not knowing too profoundly about the legend helps the film. However, it is also chilling in that the students therefore move from one set of bearings (map, compass), to another (the forest's enchanted circle, the signifiers of the Blair Witch myth). The mockumentary strengthens the film by showing us the outside world of the events, the context and apparatus from which the students disappeared, making their trauma less abstract, more real. It is so rational and comforting, filled with family, friends, and experts, that it makes the disappearance all the more bewildering and shocking.

It is alleged that this mockumentary was shown for real on a factual US television station. While I find this hard to believe, I've been asking myself how I'd have dealt with it in those conditions. I'm not surprised people were taken in - it's brilliantly made and acted, a spot-on recreation of a certain kind of programme-making, right down to the amusingly portentous music, used like double spacing after a paragraph. The only false note is the 1940s footage of the killer, which clearly looks like it was filmed recently.

If I'd seen this mockumentary - and I generally avoid UNSOLVED MYSTERIES-type TV - I don't think I'd have been as moved as I was at the film. The story itself is very compelling, and I love the whole creation of a myth to the extent that I can't believe now that the Blair Witch never existed.

But only fiction can created the character and empathy needed for true horror to succeed; the film reclaims the personal absent (necessarily) from this 'documentary'. CURSE has other points to make - the idea of both history and documentary (the recording of that history) as fabrication; the persistant cultural fear of independent women; the tensions and perversions of small town life; the Gothic strangeness, regardless of the supernatural, or life on the US margins; the deep failure of American masculinity, from Heather's film school teacher to the Sherrif. A lovely document, vastly preferable to THE X-FILES.

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