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Fun Trailer for the Mockumentary Horror FOUND FOOTAGE: THE MAKING OF THE PATTERSON PROJECT — GeekTyrant
Fun Trailer for the Mockumentary Horror FOUND FOOTAGE: THE MAKING OF THE PATTERSON PROJECT — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time9 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Geek Tyrant

Fun Trailer for the Mockumentary Horror FOUND FOOTAGE: THE MAKING OF THE PATTERSON PROJECT — GeekTyrant

Vertical has released a trailer for fun looking fake documentary film titled Found Footage: The Making of the Patterson Project , which follows a crew of documentarians who chronicle an amateur filmmaker's journey to try to make the world's greatest found footage horror film. The film is a mockumentary horror movie 'about a budding filmmaker's attempt to produce his first feature, a found footage movie about Bigfoot. Through the eyes of an esteemed French documentary crew, the story follows his unlikely band of misfits as they struggle to keep the production afloat on a shoestring budget. 'All the while, mysterious and sinister occurrences begin to unfold behind the scenes, blurring the lines between movie magic and real life. As the shoot days get longer and scarier, the filmmakers quickly learn that they've stepped into a very real & very terrifying found footage horror film of their own.' The horror filmmakers Radio Silence ( Ready or Not, Scream ) are also presenting this "found footage" horror film this summer. It was directed by Max Tzannes, and stars Brennan Keel Cook, Dean Cameron, Chen Tang, Erika Vetter, and others. Found Footage: The Making of the Patterson Project will be released on VOD starting June 24th.

A24 Greenlights Kane Parsons' ‘The Backrooms,' with Chiwetel Ejiofor to Star
A24 Greenlights Kane Parsons' ‘The Backrooms,' with Chiwetel Ejiofor to Star

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

A24 Greenlights Kane Parsons' ‘The Backrooms,' with Chiwetel Ejiofor to Star

'The Backrooms,' the viral YouTube horror series that has amassed nearly 200 million views since debuting in 2022, is officially becoming a feature film. A24 has greenlit a movie based on the property directed by 19-year-old series creator Kane Parsons, who will be the youngest director in A24 history when the film enters production this summer. Chiwetel Ejiofor and Renate Reinsve will star in 'The Backrooms,' which is a co-production between A24 and Chernin Entertainment. James Wan and Shawn Levy will executive produce through their Atomic Monster and 21 Laps banners, respectively. Roberto Patino is also a producer. Chernin Entertainment, part of The North Road Company, will co-finance alongside A24. More from IndieWire Vicky Krieps Is Possessed by Her Dead Wife in Trailer for Psychological Drama 'Went Up the Hill' Mel Brooks to Return to 'Spaceballs' Sequel as Yogurt While plot details for the film have been kept under wraps, the YouTube series used the found-footage format to gradually build a horror universe about liminal spaces that exist in our world without fully conforming to our reality. The slow builds and homemade special effects helped the eerie videos build a loyal following. A24's feature take on 'The Backrooms,' which was first announced in 2023, has been cited as one of Hollywood's most significant investments in intellectual property that emerged from the internet. In Vol. 005 of the In Development newsletter from IndieWire's Future of Filmmaking, editor-in-chief Dana Harris-Bridson argued that Parsons represents the new archetype for indie film success in the 2020s. 'This sounds like a 21st-century riff on the Sundance wunderkind, but A24 didn't buy a short from a promising high school filmmaker. It bought an ecosystem,' she wrote of his success. 'Scalable IP, with a built-in fanbase. Proof of engagement. Potential for merch, spin-offs, and platform-native storytelling. It's a lot less romantic than the '90s story, in which credit-card debt is burned away by a life-altering festival premiere that sends buyers huddling in the lobby to craft eight-figure offers. However, we can't believe in that folktale if we also believe in the internet. Thirty years ago, a rapturous reception was the only tool distributors had to project future results. In reality, the digital revolution in filmmaking happened at the same time as all the other digital revolutions. Today, no one relies on analog instinct for pretty much the same reason that you don't have a landline.'No release date for 'The Backrooms' has been announced. Best of IndieWire Guillermo del Toro's Favorite Movies: 56 Films the Director Wants You to See 'Song of the South': 14 Things to Know About Disney's Most Controversial Movie Nicolas Winding Refn's Favorite Films: 37 Movies the Director Wants You to See

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