Over the years we’ve seen all manner of movie monsters grace the silver screen. But when it comes to picking a personal favourite, I had to go with one you didn’t actually see.
The Blair Witch Project opened in the summer of 1999 to much fanfare. The plot was simple: three filmmakers go into the Black Hills of Maryland to film a documentary on a local legend and are never seen again. One year later, their footage is found.
The ad campaign featured faux missing person posters of the cast, and to this day there are some people who still believe the film is real. (FYI, it’s not.) All of this helped to make TBWP a huge commercial success. Critically, the film was appreciated for serving up something different than the usual slasher-horror fare, while some people took issue with things such as the shaky-cam footage, to the fact that the film’s ending offers little in the way of closure (something I personally liked about it).
Much like the spectral presence seen (or rather, not seen) in Robert Wise’s masterpiece, The Haunting, the effect of scaring the audience in The Blair Witch Project is done through visual suggestion and sound effects. When Heather is peeking outside the tent with her video camera, all we can see is trees about three feet ahead, but what we can hear, from somewhere much deeper in the woods, is the sound of branches snapping. It’s a simple effect, but a disturbing one, especially if you’ve ever been out camping and heard something similar.
Even if you didn’t like the film, or found the shaky-cam nauseating, you can’t deny the effect The Blair Witch Project has had on horror cinema. From Heather’s close-up confessional, to the image of stickmen hanging in the trees, to the slew of “found footage” films that followed, like Cloverfield, REC, Paranormal Activity, and Apollo 18.
Personally I still think there’s something to be said for a monster who can instill that level of fear without ever appearing in a single frame of film. All I know is when my wife and I go up north to our cabin getaway, I’m still afraid of waking up one morning and finding piles of rocks outside our door.
