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Found Footage

"I'm an apex predator."

Chronicle

Recording fate

Fragile teen Andrew leads a troubled life, both at home and school. His mother is dying, his father an abusive alcoholic, and bullies harass him on the daily. When Andrew, his sympathetic cousin, Matt, and enthusiastic Steve find a mysterious object one night, all three of their lives change- but for worse or better?

Chronicle also makes inventive use of its found-footage cinematography, switching from one perspective to another when necessary, allowing for each and every actor to shine in their individual roles. The movie opens with Andrew’s father beating on his door, barking orders for him to come outside. Immediately, we’re thrust into the cruel reality Chronicle rarely shines away from, and also gives the lead character a reason to keep recording, to archive his experiences: both the good and bad.

Chronicle is a blistering character study of three people under vastly different circumstances. All three of the teenagers are portrayed realistically, their decisions ranging from the impulsive to the tragic, and remains one of the genre’s top, expertly-crafted films today.

Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan

Mockumentary

In a post-9/11 world, hilariously socially-inept Borat is on a mission to document the cultural landscape of an America plagued by ignorance and bigotry. Borat, an inept, Kazakhstani news reporter, narrates the film with hilariously tasteless dialogue, making it both horrifically inappropriate as well as endlessly quotable. While the movie’s setups may be scripted, the reactions are genuine.

Borat (a character created and played by Sacha Baron-Cohen) and his crew contacted various organizations- feminist groups, dinner clubs- posing as a touring Kazakhstan film crew. Not knowing of their true nature, the institutions let them into their homes; as expected, chaos ensues.

The crew encounters just about every type of American you can think of, from the worst (racists) to the modest (Pamela Anderson, who ultimately becomes the object of Borat’s obsession) to everything else inbetween. Even if the movie is 11 years old, it remains just as sharp now as it was in its 2006 premiere… and perhaps even more relevant.

Cloverfield

Hand-held catastrophe

Reeling in at a runtime of 1 hour and 30 minutes, the tightly-knit Cloverfield archives an unknown alien race attacking a terrified New York City. The film is entirely cataloged entirely through the handheld video camera of one group of friends as they hide, run, and try to save one of their own, all of them trapped and petrified right in the center of the city under crisis. The camera jitters and jumps frequently, often moving up and down with our characters as the run, but this feels less like a gimmick and more a unique way of telling a familiar story.

Background and development for our heroes are short, but provide just enough to let the viewer resonate with them fully, engaging the audience in many more ways than one.


 RATING SCALE: 
 

The rating scale is as follows:

10/10- Stellar, no flaws, masterpiece.

9/10- Fantastic, little to no flaws.

8/10- Excellent, only a few negatives.

7/10- Very good, not too many mistakes.

6/10- Good, enjoyable, but there are a handful of flaws.

5/10- Average, weak, not recommended.

4/10- Very weak, plenty of flaws.

3/10- Bad, lots of awful aspects.

2/10- Terrible, a melting pot of flaws.

1/10- One of the worst of its kind.

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