I wish it didn’t cost me ten dollars to see you fail at filmmaking.
#The town real or fake 4k how to#
Why don’t you head back to Chapman University and learn how to put your camera on a tripod so I can look at your ridiculously unmotivated closeups without dramamine. Congratulations director, whose name I’m not even going to try and spell, you’ve proven yourself as a terrible documentarian, screenwriter, and director in one fell swoop. The director’s name is bigger than ‘Abigail Tyler’ on the pretentious three panel spread behind their interview. You know how I can tell the “documentary” footage is fake. I’ll bet the government wishes they just pumped out a steaming celluloid of Fourth Kind proportion back in the 50’s and maybe there wouldn’t be conspiracy theorists clinging to a god forsaken stretch of highway in Roswell, New Mexico. Aliens, your secret is safe with Hollywood.
#The town real or fake 4k movie#
While the tales of abduction could have been nightmarish bedtime stories passes around for years, they have instead been splattered carelessly across movie screens in a nationwide release. If I were aliens abducting fools in Alaska I would be so excited right now because the total F grade quality of this film. If there is any validity to this story at all (which I doubt) no one has created a more sucessful coverup for alien abduction than the combined terrible efforts of the director, editor, and director of photography. Let’s hope there’s a change of pace and the next ones to assuredly come out are substantially more convincing. With films like this and “Paranormal Activity” being widely distributed, the horror pseudo-documentaries might very well become fashionable (or, at least, profitable) again. Sure, but that’s because that information is only available inside the brains of paranormal researchers! It’s not something that could be found independent of their guidance and replicated in a film. Jones (embedded below), asserting that the footage used displays genuine signs of alien abductions. To further propagate the film’s cheap reliance on its dishonest tactic, Universal has released a featurette with “paranormal researcher” Marie D. The movie uses what it terms “aliases” throughout. What were those conclusions? That the winter climate and alcoholism were to blame for the disappearances of 24 people over 40 years.Īdditionally, All Business‘ article on the matter states that there isn’t even any evidence to support the movie’s main character ever existed at all. In 2006, the Anchorage Daily News did a story on the disappearances in Nome, Alaska (the town in which the film takes place) and provided the FBI’s conclusions about them. While the jury’s still out 100 percent, it’s safe to assume that the footage used and the alien abduction story upon which the film is based are a total crock. The new thriller “The Fourth Kind,” which opens with star Milla Jovovich speaking directly to the audience about the movie’s authenticity, has raised some suspicions about the credibility of its claims and supposedly “real” footage. Is “The Fourth Kind” real? Is the documentary footage shown in the film real or staged? In the wake of “Paranormal Activity,” is reality horror the new craze?