The Blair Witch Project Movie Review
The Blair Witch Project Review

"The Blair Witch Project" Overview

Rating: R
1999
Cast and Crew
Director : Daniel Myrick,Eduardo SánchezProducer : Robin Cowie,Gregg Hale
Screenwiter : Daniel Myrick,Eduardo Sánchez
Starring : Heather Donahue,Michael C. Williams,Joshua Leonard
The Blair Witch Project has the bizarre distinction of being the first horror
film ever to give me nightmares before having seen it. The nightmares will
probably continue for awhile, even though Blair Witch is not, contrary to the
reports I’ve heard, the scariest movie ever made.
Not even close. The conceit of The Blair Witch Project is this: Three eager
filmmakers go into the woods of Maryland in search of material for a project
about “The Blair Witch,” a supposed woman who was exiled from the town of Blair
during the witch trial era.
And today, the Blair Witch continues to ply her trade, as interviews at the
film’s beginning make clear – stories of massacred children and haunted houses
have left a lasting impression on the residents of Burkittsville (formerly
Blair, MD). All of this sets the stage for us, plus a textual prologue telling
us that these filmmakers vanished, and what we are watching is the footage they
shot, discovered in the woods a year later.
So we know up front that something evil is afoot, and in the 90 minutes of
“discovered footage” we get to see plenty of it. The trouble starts when the
trio gets lost, and their turmoil gets worse every day (as they seem to be
hiking in circles) and every night, when ... something begins playing cruel
tricks on them.
Captured on videotape, black and white 16mm, and (I think) color 8mm, Blair
Witch is compelling as a faux documentary. (And yes, none of this is true,
although most of the people in line and sitting around us weren’t aware of
that.)
But is this movie scary? In a word, and on the whole, no. Possibly a victim
of its own hype, like Star Wars, Blair Witch has plenty of atmosphere and
creepy scenes (mostly unseen voices in the woods), but it isn’t that
frightening. My wife is a big wimp, and she only grabbed my arm twice. Not
until the grand finale does the Witch trot out the Big Guns, and I will admit
that the final images on screen are some of the scariest I’ve ever seen.
Still, two minutes of footage does not a stellar movie make. The other 88 are
okay, and often funny, but it ain’t horror. However, for the horror buff or
indie film fan, this is a great example of something, well, off the beaten path.
They went to the woods to suck the marrow out of life.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



