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9780609806456

Beyond Blair Witch: The Haunting of America from the Carlisle Witch to the Real Ghosts of Burkittsville

Beyond Blair Witch: The Haunting of America from the Carlisle Witch to the Real Ghosts of Burkittsville
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  • ISBN-13: 9780609806456
  • ISBN: 0609806459
  • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group

AUTHOR

Genge, Ngaire E.

SUMMARY

"It's just so real!" When The Blair Witch Project's principal actors appeared following the film's debut at Sundance, audiences gasped -- then cheered. Not because the three young actors had managed to clean up so well after an eight-day shoot -- without showers or regular meals -- in the backwoods of Maryland, but because they were alive at all! The Blair Witch Project, the "mockumentary" that was shot for a mere $25,000 (or $33,000, or $60,000, depending on which publication and expense sheet you read) and then went on to make nearly $1.6 million in its first weekend, makes much of its fictional "reality." Real actors contributed their names to the three fictional filmmakers. Those herky-jerky onscreen images, which remind at least one viewer per showing of a childhood tendency toward motion sickness, were shot by three amateurs. And Burkittsville, Maryland, much to the current consternation of its residents, is a real community. It's in Burkittsville that the fact and fantasy that mingled so successfully in The Blair Witch Project are most clearly separated once again. Just days after the film's release, the town council of Burkittsville voted to increase police presence in the tiny community, especially at the old graveyard where parts of The Blair Witch Project were shot (without the usual irksome location issues -- items such as permission from the town or the community's churches). A sudden influx of fans, all looking for the "historical" sites depicted in the film, overwhelmed residents and police officers, who found themselves confronted by frustrated people flatly refusing to believe that Blair Witch was nothing more than the imagining of Eduardo Sanchez and Daniel Myrick. One young woman publicly accused the town of "covering up the true events" to "avoid bad publicity"; her traveling companion, a self-declared neo-pagan, suggested that it was time for the community to "come clean," as Salem had, and, instead of "denying their history," that the residents of Burkittsville should "embrace their Wiccan past and erect a proper memorial to Elly Kedward." An exit survey outside the Bridge Theater revealed that seven of every ten viewers believed the legend of the Blair Witch. Five of every ten believed that the Blair Witch -- or at least Elly Kedward -- was a documented historical figure.Were directors Sanchez and Myrick such cinematic geniuses that they could hoodwink thousands? No. Not at all. As the two freely admit, they were as startled as anyone else when absolute strangers began publicly attesting to the film's validity. Claims that the Blair Witch was a real person left Sanchez and Myrick shaking their heads, delighted that their prerelease activities had generated the much-needed buzz to propel the film into general release but baffled by the vehemence brought to both sides of the argument. As they told anyone willing to listen, they were simply playing to a public already primed by nearly three hundred years of campfire tales that left listeners quivering in their sleeping bags to accept this story. Elly Kedward, their amalgamation of the central figures of so many of America's wicked witch legends, drew on a uniquely New World set of tales that, though repeated orally all over the eastern United States for three centuries, had yet to be showcased for the mass media. What Bram Stoker, Anne Rice, Poppy Z. Brite, and others had previously done for vampires, Sanchez and Myrick had now done for colonial witches. Their tale galvanized all the previously free-floating images, themes, and motifs one might expect of this genre into a single story, a story they then proceeded to present in a totally new format -- film -- using techniques that, though unnerving, proved a perfect partnership for their images. That Haxan Films couGenge, Ngaire E. is the author of 'Beyond Blair Witch: The Haunting of America from the Carlisle Witch to the Real Ghosts of Burkittsville' with ISBN 9780609806456 and ISBN 0609806459.

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