Have you ever thought of looking into the legends and stories from around North West Queensland and Tasmania in Australia. There are 2 main stories that come up from things people have seen and indigenous dream time stories. I myself live in Mount Isa, Australia. And I've heard and seen questionable things in the bush. Mainly I remember seeing something move in the shadows near a cave, it's figure was short and stout but it was gone quick. An indigenous elder told me about the cave people who live around this area. A version of them is said to live in Tasmania as well. All over Australia you hear people talk about the Yowie and many people where I live have stories about times they encountered the Yowie.
I'm 42 from WV. My sister and her bf went to Burketsville MD to see the movie. We thought it was real actual found footage for quite awhile. Sis' bf was a journalism student btw. Also the 90s internet was luke the wild west.
@TheLoreLodge Another awesome show, I loved how you took something I care nothing about, horror movies and the Blaire Witch, and turned it into something I'm passionate about; history, folklore and the occult. I love your style and information. At what point am I allowed to start quoting or referencing you as source material?
Thanks for another great work as always, Aidan M. Never knew this topic could be as fascinating as you've made it. Noticed YT unsubbed you so I'll fix that promptly. BUT this comment is actually for Aidan T: You have gorgeous eyes. Your representation of the 90s (as someone who was there) is the first accurate representation I've seen so you also have a gorgeous brain. You need more screen time!
the movie appeared in baltimore only and just a few theatres. I loved it and saw it twice. You had to buy tickets in advance and was sold out. there was a real buzz and everyone was excited to see it. I can not remember a movie that had this much buzz. No cared whether it was real or not and was just terrific. Everyone stood in line to get in and i can not remember any movie that had this much buzz. Everyone came to have a great time and was not disappointed.
I had friends who watched this movie when it came out. They decided that the scariest part of the movie was when everyone ran out of cigarettes. That was a personal hell for them.
Fun Fact: The tall, pail figure that chased Heather, Mike, and Josh in the original was shot with a crew member dressed in a white body suit and running along side them. Josh was supposed to turn the camera when Heather yelled “what the F is that,” but forgot to.
Funny story about Burkettsville... my dad had a girlfriend that lived there and she told the story of a bunch of goth kids decending on her sleepy town right after the movie came out. There are wooded areas there and many times the police would get calls of these goth kids lost after going out into the woods to re-live the movie. They would wind up on desolate roads at all hours of the night. Interesting because the police said that there would be no real way to get lost in those woods as one mile in any general direction would lead to a road, but they were getting lost anyway. The town citizens decided to turn it into a money-making venture and made little Blair Witch trinkets and sell them from their porches to these naive goth kids running around town. The locals made up stories about their "wares" and where they were found, and of course, many of these kids were buying into the stories while buying the trinkets the locals were making at their kitchen tables. ...Just something funny about culture and society. Carry on, great vid guys!!!
@@A.Girl.Has.No.Name. Haha "NoName Girl" it would be there as a documentary as to the absolute sillyness of those who took the movie seriously... and sell better than the sequels! I like the way you think!
It's amazing that the budget for the film was only $35-$60k. But the Box office profit was around $250 Million!!! That's a stunning profit ratio. One of the most profitable movies of all time.
@mlw5665 - Just FYI, that's not an "America" thing. That's just an investment thing. Excessive profit goes to those who take on the excessive risks of a project. The cast and crew received 100% of their pay for their labor regardless of the success of the film. If it made 0$ at the box office, they received 100% of their pay. But in this case, it made 4000% (or whatever, in not crunching the numbers), and the cast and crew received 100% of their pay. The excess went to those investors who risked their money to make the film. *Note:* I say this not to criticize your comment, nor even justify this system. Just trying to explain how the investment and profit systems work. Because, when people understand it 1. The world makes much more sense, 2. They can work within it in way that benefits them more, and 3. If they think it needs change, can change it in ways that work rather than just "feeling that it is unfair."
I want to point out, Heather could read the map. She navigated them to all their points. It was only after they began being "stalked" they started being lost. With or without the map.
THANK YOU. It pisses me off, so much. Heather IS stubborn to their detriment but they consistently get lost because of the aforementioned shifting of time and possibly space that is central to the Blair Witch lore. They are in the time loop and can't get out!!
My favourite mock-umentary is "District 9". They made it in such a way that the viewer couldn't convince himself it was a documentary for too long, but just long enough that the dramatic and bizarre action footage that suddenly replaced it was absolutely hilarious to experience. It was also unpredictably sentimental and elicited a shower of complex feelings. I watched it a couple of times and took something else away from it each time, rare films were like that for me.
Loved that movie, it was actually heartfelt, and was an amazing way of getting around discussing the horrible conditions that people in South Africa are actually experiencing.
The girl I was dating at the time it was released was completely convinced Blair Witch Project was real. She didn't believe it wasn't until Heather did an interview on some random show.
I mean that sounds pretty crazy nowadays but anyone who grew up in the 90's when the internet wasn't very rampant, and these kinds of movies didn't really exist might not think too much about it. I had friends who were convinced it was real as well, it was just the innocence of the time, enjoy the silliness of those memories, the world will never be like that again I'd wager ;)
As a native Marylander, this movie was nuts. When it came out EVERYONE was heading to the hills to check out the myth. EVERYONE. Everyone had to go see where it was filmed, investigate the Blair witch, look into the history. It was the talk of the state. It was wild.
You guys nailed what it was like when the marketing campaign was happening. I was 20 and everybody was talking about it, although there was a fair amount of skepticism. My friends and I went back and forth as to whether it was real, or "made up." We didn't really have any familiarity with the term "found footage" at the time, although we did know of other adjacent types of films, such as Faces of Death, which none of us had seen, but everyone was aware that it existed. That's one thing that was wonderful about growing up before the internet; urban legends and local mythology could exist and there wasn't really any way to verify of debunk. We all got to enjoy hearing and telling stories, and taking part in spooky rites of passage.
Yeah! I was like 18 or so. And the only reason I knew it wasn't real. Is because my older sister had a dvd of a movie called "the last broadcast" so I had a very small idea what found footage was
That opening weekend people I knew definitely thought it was real and it scared the crap out of them. After that first day or so people started realizing it was fiction. I wish I had gone before it was confirmed as purely fictional.
Hi! I'm an anthropology student and the definition many of my classes rely on for magic is "any act, ritual, or item that is used to affect the natural world via the supernatural." I feel that it is a nice, clear definition that almost all practitioners agree with.
saying that the Appalachians and the Highlands were the same range "many many moons ago" might be the greatest description of geologic timescale ever. You are certainly, technicaly, right. I love it.
It doesn't make sense because the mountain ranges would have been connected millions of years ago. There were no witch worshiping Cults back then because there were no humans. So they could not have built a fairy Mound where Rustin Parr's house would someday stand.
True they same colour bricks are seen in New York and Scotland meaning the same clay was used to make them. I would guess the northern islands like Shetland were also part of it due to them being close to the north of Scotland.
Interesting little detail about the story of Molly, the part about where she lifts her left hand to the sky to curse the town. In many magical/occult practices "left hand magic" is often considered to be black, or dark, or bad/evil magic as opposed to "Right hand magic" being good or white magic. Hence the detail and why she would lift her left hand to the sky for the curse
I loved the movie so much, that 17 years after I first saw it I dragged my husband and daughter to where it was filmed (Seneca State Park, Maryland) We traveled all the way from Sweden. We also visited Burkittsville and the cemetery there. ( Also in the movie).
Lenardtown is a 10 minute drive from me. The curse had to be permanent and never ending construction on route 5. I swear 30 years and I have never seen that 3 mile strip of route 5 without cones, metal plates, uneven pavement, and random painted lines.
I saw this at a theater when it came out with a coworker. Now, I'm A country girl and spent a lot of time running through the woods at night as a teenager. I didn't think it was that scary. My coworker however, was a city girl and she was beyond freaked out.
I get what you’re saying. I grew up in the woods and still live in the woods. As a kid my brother and I would explore. What scares me are big cities. People are there and they are far more dangerous imo. I still walk my dogs and let them run in the woods twice a day.
My woods is a lot more damgerous apparently. Its black and there are holes and dips not to mention rocks and crags everywhere. Oh! And various animals that will not hesitate to attack you and have tried many times plus the occasional crackhead and unexplainable happenings. I carry a weapon at all times and am prepared and had to fight anything that attacks me. I’m brave but I’m not stupid so I’m staying in the light of my street lamp that covers the whole yard in a circle of light.
Saw it on a date in a little indie/art theater the weekend it came out. Totally packed. The hype and mystery was palpable… By the end of the movie, nobody said a word. Some were truly freaked out, some were dizzy from the camera movement, and some were just totally puzzled. Later that night I hung out with a friend… as I walked up to his house I remember actually feeling uneasy/creeped out. As a horror fan, I was impressed that a movie could still make me feel that way.
I always took it that Heather's failure to read the map as part of the witch's power. That Heather could read the map and knew the area well, but the witch could manipulate the environment to keep them lost.
My brain immediately went to the witch, actually being some sort of fae, and that they definitely went to another plane, much like how stepping into a fairy ring will bring you to the fairy realm. Kind of reminds me of the other mother Coraline theories on how the other mother might actually be some sort of fairy that needs the lives of people to stay alive herself. Really enjoyed this video :)
My absolute favorite Blaire Witch theory is the one from The Film Theorists channel, where they suggest that the whole scenario in the movie is the two guys plotting to kill the girl and succeding.
I honestly really liked that approach as well. I prefer to take the movie at face value, but that theory would make a great story as well. Especially if an entity actually pops-up to confuse things.
It's ridiculous how great your analysis at the end is. It reminds me of The Ritual, which has perhaps the scariest and coolest movie monster I've ever seen: big Leshy vibes. And it requires worshippers and sacrifices to remain powerful, forces people to choose between worship or death, there's time skips and memory manipulation...just a great movie. I haven't had that creep factor for a while, and just your description of this being tied to a malevolent Sidhe elevated the whole concept of the movies (and gave me the shivers). Well done!
I grew up in Leonardtown, within walking distance of where the Moll Dyer legend is based. We walked to her dilapidated home, which was just a tin roof on the ground and a stone chimney, many times as kids in the 90s. A few things: - There is a road called Moll Dyer Road in Leonardtown. If you were to take that road to the very end and then hike straight back off it, that's where the house was, deep in the woods and there were only foot paths/horse trails to get there - Where the house was were two above ground cement graves which, of course, people smashed holes into the side of. We could see in them and there were a few bones but for the most part animals or idiots got to them first - The rock in your picture is sitting at the Tudor Hall Manor and is a tourist attraction today, legend is you can run your hand over it and feel a hand print - My childhood home was in the forest where she allegedly died with her hand frozen to the rock, it was lowkey creepy at night, but mostly because there was very little else back there at the time - As you mentioned, there are a few different stories, but pretty sure the consensus was she lived "on the edge of town" because she was in an inter-racial marriage which wasn't easily accepted at that point in time - As far as I know... I'm not cursed
Growing up,the idea of living in a sparsely populated area seemed terrifying. Whenever I imagined it I pictured it being exactly like you described,holy shit that sounds scary😅
I also grew up in Leonardtown and remember hearing different stories about Moll Dyer. As a kid i remember thinking it was weird to have a road named after a witch.
Ditto. I went to Leonardtown high school. And I ran the group with all of the alt kids in it. We would visit the forest at night on occasion. It was creepy and fun.
I’ve lived in Leonardtown for 17 yrs and I find it interesting that the time the town of Leonardtown began “respecting” Moll Dyervis around the same time the town began growing and becoming more successful
Moll Dyer is just a tale with no actual records of the incident. Meanwhile no one mentioned Rebecca Fowler the only person actually convicted and executed in Maryland on October 9th 1685. It's documented and you can visit her grave in the historic St Mary's City cemetery.
Fun tie in, the name Blair comes from the Scottish Gaelic word "Blàr", used in a lot of place names. It means Plain, Meadow, or Field, just as another connection to the Cloverfield franchise. Also, Blair Castle in Scotland has a bunch of history with witchcraft and witch trials.
I wish the ending to the 2016 film was Lisa getting out of the house successfully into daylight, possibly through a portal (which would explain the light that came through the house from outside) so she celebrates her freedom... but she walks to town, only to find someone/see the town and find out that she's traveled back in time, either to the 1940s or earlier like 1690s or whatever lol. If she traveled back far enough, she could even "become the witch" lol. That'd be cool.
I am 37 and I saw this movie opening weekend and visited the website prior. I was blown away by the experience at the time being only 13. I still watch it around fall/ halloween every year. There's something about it that pulls you in. I'm still waiting for a proper sequel that gets back to the original roots. Great video, love the cult theory and parallel worlds!!
The ARG's of the early internet days were insane because nobody knew what was real. I still remember looking at Freakylinks thinking we were uncovering a huge mystery
I hate to be “that guy” but there was a third group of people in Maryland during the 1888. Freed Africans, Maryland was a slave holding state for a very long time. There were the descendants of Enslaved Africans and Caribbean Peoples who not only had traditions of tribal faiths but also Islam pasted down along the enforced Christianity. Thank you for dedication to educating people.
I think the Blair Witch Project was the first Horror Movie I ever watched intentionally as an elementary school child. It was because my drama teacher wanted me to learn about improv acting. I still question her choices but I did end up a horror fan, so I guess it worked out somehow.
I didn’t watch it until I was an adult, but the quality of the acting was my biggest takeaway, all of them did a phenomenal job of making the premise believable
lol I was in middle school when it came out and really wanted to see it. I snuck downstairs and watched it in the middle of the night before the tape had to go back to Movie Gallery (woof that sentence dates me). It ended with me, on the couch in the pitch dark, entirely too frightened to go get the tape out of the VCR and put it back. This is sadly one case where I was not kind and did not rewind. XD First R rated movie I ever saw.
@@imshinycaptain lmao that is almost exactly my experience watching The Ring. I know they're totally different movies, but the comment fully sent me back in time to regretting every second of putting a rental VHS in the VCR alone in the basement at night. Sorry rental place, I definitely didn't rewind that one, I just ran off like a coward baby XD
I really love family Guy's joke about this movie. It was Brian sitting in the theater with a blind guy watching Blair witch project and he's describing the movie to the blind guy and he says "okay so they're in the woods, the camera is moving around, nothing's happening, they're looking for a witch or something; I don't know, I wasn't listening. Nothing's happening, nothing's happening, something about a map, nothing's happening. Aaaand It's over; a lot of people in the theater look pissed."😂😂😂
@Gonk Nah, as a horror movie fan (even the bad ones), BWP was super boring and a massive let down. The remake in 2016 was also bad, but at least things actually happened that might’ve been scary if you were 10
@Gonk How can I be "incorrect" about an opinion? It is my opinion that BWP is boring and thus a bad movie. It is my opinion that the worst thing a movie can be is boring. Even objectively bad films can be entertaining and thus "better" movies or more accurately more enjoyable and feel like less of a letdown. If you enjoyed that movie, I respect your opinion and would prefer to agree with you, I just don't. My opinion is that the film suffers from the eight deadly words: "I don't care what happens to these people." Thus, there's no tension for me and no stakes, so no investment and much boredom. What scares it does have might be more interesting in a better film, but here it just fails to keep my attention. I'm probably not alone in that feeling, but even if I am, please don't make assumptions about me or my imagination just because I didn't enjoy the same movie you did.
I work with an older gal, her parents listened to War of the Worlds as it happened. She said her mother vowed to punch Orson Welles if she ever met him. They were living in a very rural area, and the farmers that heard the broadcast were freaking out, watching the sky with their guns ready. It was so realistic and convincing because they didn't have any other means of receiving information. They only bought newspapers when they traveled in to town, what they heard on the radio was "real-time news" and they trusted what they heard. That stunt caused such terror that her parents recounted the story and she recounted the story and her kids... I'm sure hers isn't the only family that held such a grudge against Welles.
What seems ridiculous for the present wasn't so much back there. With the 19th century a century of a unbelievable progress so it seems that every science fiction is only a matter of time. With that experience space travel wasn't such a ridicule idea. And even there was even theories about civilization on a different planet (like Mars) to astronomical observations of seemingly artifical structures on the surface. Today aliens travelling through space and maybe looking for worlds to conquer and colonize being an absurd idea (based on the knowledge of space travel and distances we have now) was very likely at least thinkable option. Would it have been different from what the indigenous people of the americas experienced when the europeans arrived at their shores? That their beyond the horizon is a whole other world, with totally different people in posession of technological advancements unbelievable and they appear seemingly out of thin air. When you think this through for a moment: In alien Invasion like played out in War of the Worlds is not so much different.
I love listening to Legolas Aiden talk about how film making works. As someone who works in the industry it’s nice to hear someone explain it in a non condescending way 😊
I watched this movie when it came out. I was in high school and under the impression it was real and the crew was missing. I remember being extremely creeped out and feeling like I’d watched a snuff film or something I wasn’t supposed to watch
I grew up right near Burkettsville, and while the original movie scared the hell out of me when I first watched at like 10, as an adult I find it really funny. The ridge near there is only like a mile or two across, so if you walked in any direction but along the ridge for more than a few hours you'd run into farmland or a highway or something, and even on the ridge, youd eventually hit the river or a trail. So some fae nonsense is really the only way someone actually could get lost there
If they played into the local angle more with kids that "grew up there" and showed off the true landscape, they could have used that to their advantage. Honestly, I think fae nonsense makes it scarier
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Anyone else remember The Faces of Death? That was another one we all got obsessed with. It wasn't exactly found footage, but they presented the film like a documentary. It was fun! Especially to watch in the older theaters they had before regal Cinemas took over.
I love stories about Fae Folk immigrating to North America (or factoring in that they were already here because Under the Mountain or Under Hill etc can include a mountain range that was connected in Pangea. Which is a wild connection I hadn’t seen explored before) and the ways that gets weird. Having “witchcraft” stories not be about Christianity is extremely refreshing for a storytelling perspective. Absolutely desperate for narratives focusing on the potential of Faerie Rules.
@@lunarvision honestly Fairy/Fae/Faerie legends vary depending on their source and can get fully wild when it comes to how we feel like interpreting how that extends to modern day, people who emigrated, multicultural interactions etc. and Lore Lodge always brings so much research to the table so I hope so too!
Your theories on being out of time remind me of the Lovecraft story about the witch house where the math student starts dealing with a witch because of the odd geometry of her room that he lives in. I never knew about the connection to Celtic lore and whatnot, but it gives that story some added dimension (sorry, bad pun).
That was freaking crazy and awesome at the same time!Never would have thought you can get so much out of something that doesn't show much Blair Witch Project is one movie that always creeped me out, and I still can't put my finger on way exactly.
I remember going to see it and actually believed it to be true! My friends and I came out of the theater with plans to go look for the witch. Being from Pittsburgh and having family in Baltimore it was only a few hours away. We were so pissed to find out it was all bullsh!t...great video guys, really good topic!!!
Writing in the form of letters or travel journals is one of the oldest forms of writing, I think quite a few ancient books were framed as travel journals
The most popular ancient Mythos is made of the same basic narratives: Atlantis is completely based on a literature philosophical dialogue with one participant claiming that he has old knowledge he heard from this guy and this guy was there and there and learned it from this egyptian priest. Insane how good this narrative principle works out over the centuries.
It's hard for a lot of younger people to appreciate how hard the marketing for this went. I remember at the time there was a split between people who insisted it was totally real and people who thought it was totally fake. It was hard to know what to believe at a time when the internet was still quite new if you were the target demographic for this movie who was into urban legends, unsolved mysteries and other creepy stuff and really bought into it. Even as someone who isn't a huge fan of the movie I still find it amazing how well the marketing was done.
I was in high school when The Blair Witch Project came out and the description of the era is really hilarious to me! Now I know how my dad felt when people talked about his childhood/adolescence lmfao
I really like the idea of fleshing out lore that is only revealed to a small extent through a story. It's like solving a mystery, kind of like piecing together what happened to someone who never came back from the woods. You did a helluva job filling in the blanks. Nice work, sir.
New headcannon; the Blaire Witch Project and The Ritual share the same universe where old myths are dying out and desparately trying to maintain themselves, but only the scary ones can because they're the ones willing/capable of doing horrible stuff to people to stay alive.
Born in Leonardtown and raised in St. Mary's County, this legend is a big part of the culture in the area. The rock upon which her hand was frozen is a tourist attraction and sat outside our old jail in front of the courthouse for years until it was moved to Tudor Hall Mansion. Adian got alot of the points correct. There was a plague/sickness afflicting the town at the same time a bad harvest had happened. On top of that, it was a very harsh winter, and when Molly (Moll as well, its a common nickname for her in the area) Dyer was driven out of her home, the mob knew it was effectively a death sentence. There was an episode of sime tv show on the weather channel of all places that covered the legend too. All of us folk in the area got a chuckle at that. Very cool of the Lore Lodge covering a story from my hometown. Love the content. Keep it up!
I just started my freshman year in high school when this movie came out. The movie scared the hell out of me because I thought it was real. I think it neat to see how the found footage fims fluenced other film makers to make their movies in this format. Look how they did in Grave Encounters 1 and 2 and As Above and So Below and The Chernobyl Diaries and so on.
I know this means nothing but Heather doesn't get them lost. She's following the map accurately. They get lost because of supernatural shenanigans, NOT poor survival skills. It's literally down by them going in a loop when walling straight in one direction all day. I'm surrey, this was just annoying me
I loved the flow of this video, it felt like it was much more engaging than usual. Also, having Thorny hop in to cover that section was really good. Definitely need to pop him in for some topics more often. You guys have really come a long way in everything. Love seeing the growth.
I think one of my favorite theories is that the things that the groups see are each other. The lights and fast movement Heather's group see is the drone and modern technology, which is part of why they scream 'What the f*ck was that!' and the stuff the 2016 group sees is Heather's group looking disheveled and like they'd spent weeks in the brush, since they had. The forest had a mind of its own.
From what I recall, heather was navigating correctly but the boys couldn’t understand that going from point A to B to C looks different from going from C to A, because they’re not retracing their steps. They refused to go with her and she decided to follow them instead of splitting up
Man. Awesome and well-informed theory! I can’t say I’m educated enough on the topic to opine, but I just wanted to say: this movie SUPREMELY scared me when I first saw it. I was at my cousins’ house in the upper peninsula of Michigan, in a house surrounded by thick woods. Beautiful area, but I couldn’t work up the nerve to walk outside at night, as you couldn’t see through the trees almost at all. The PERFECT setting for a young teenager to get scared shitless at that movie.
I renember living in a house with similar architecture as a teenager, when the film came out. And i remember there being red paint childrens handprints on the walls of the stairwell leading down to the basement. Always terrified me. Then my father told me it was my handprints and he let me and my friends do them with my friends when he was renovating. . .
Really love the explanation of how the War of the Worlds broadcast was a sort of precursor to Found Footage as a concept in film. Like, I have been aware of the infamy of that broadcast for years and have studied film a bit myself and know about the whole found footage phenomena, but I never made the connection between the two. Thank you for sharing your insight Aiden!
The Molly Dyer story was so cool the first time I heard it and I’m actually a county over from Leonardtown and last I went down to Leonardtown I actually saw the Moll Dyer Rock it’s pretty eerie. The plaque and local legend says if you touch it you are now cursed by Molly Dyer. To keep people from touching it, it’s covered in a 4x4 plexiglass on the top.
Please please please do a video about John Carpenters The Thing? I know it's been done to death, but I love to imagine the implications of how the world would react if two arctic research stations were destroyed in some unknown horror
The game also has a lot of lore additions. It takes place 2 years after the original movie. In it you're haunted by multiple stretched out entities that are scared of bright enough lights and a bare white tree on a mound is where you first encounter them (could be another Unseelie fae connection). You travel through time a lot more openly as well (a major mechanic in-game is using a camera and cassettes to reverse events, find a missing person's report from 4 years in the future, there's a part where you're speaking over a radio and there's a discrepancy on how light out it is in the moment, you find corpses that couldn't be as old as they seem to be, and a major plot point I won't spoil here). You also get a former police dog turned emotional support dog, named Bullet. He is a good boy and helps you solve puzzles and you need to be nice to him to get the 'good' ending. The entire plot and major events are listed on Wikipedia, if anyone's interested but not into stealth horror games.
Oh man, that dog seems like the best thing about the game! Granted, I've only seen gameplay videos, but idea of implementing a dog as an emotional support in a horror game is an awesome idea.
This was fun! I saw the first one (only) as soon as it came out. I found out a couple days later that the footage was fake. I was pissed! My boyfriend at the time was upset too, but he was trying to play it off. He said, " the scariest thing about that movie is how not one of them had a sense of direction!" I thought that was pretty good
Ghosts don't like being mocked by a character that accidentally describes them. The Ringu flims where plagued with folk seeing paranormal activity with Ringu 0 being the most infamous.
Aiden did amazing! I was enthralled by the knowledge he was shoving into my brain cavity. I hope he comes back eventually for more stuff like this. It’s cool, the dynamic of knowledge between you two. Very cool, keep up the good work guys!
Even with you breaking down the process on how a film gets made, most people will still not understand how many moving parts there are pre, post, & during filming. I'm an accountant & Executive Assistant to the CFO of a Baltimore, Md. based production company. I basically make sure everyone like actors, crew, & vendors are paid, plus work/location permits & insurance is handled ahead of time. And, don't get me started on union vs. non-union shoots. Due to this and because I was born, raised, & currently live in Maryland, I found this video very interesting! I definitely remember the Blair Witch craze, but I question the Pearl Jam reference. Anyway, you did a great job of laying out the basic principles. 👍❤ Love ya guys!
A tulpa works for the third movie...but with all of the thought/energy that went into setting up the lore for the first movie, I actually wonder what you'd find at the original location, even now.
I never believed it was real but I sure as heck wasn’t going camping any time soon. Credit to the actress who played Heather for that scene she ad libbed where she apologized to everyone’s mom, to the camera, while being utterly terrified. In the theatre I saw it in, at points in the movie where the screen would go entirely black for a couple of seconds, the theatre went entirely black. No safety lights, nothing. Pitch black. It was awesome
Hi! I’m an Irish practitioner from Maryland. The thing about Celtic practices it is absolutely passed down in ancestry. I work with the Morrigan and since I was a little girl I’ve known things. It’s in our DNA and mostly can’t be explained and isn’t talked about it’s understood from aunt to aunt mom to daughter to son etc. the Irish were infamous for not keeping records because it’s innate. We have always just inhabited the gifts and used them in spiritual practices without keeping notes. I started researching druids and Beltane without ever knowing anything about these topics. I grew up Catholic so my parents didn’t believe anything other than their church beliefs but my grandparents came from Belfast back in the 40’s. Anyway I live in Germantown which is where parts of the movie were filmed (the woods were in Germantown not Burkittsville). I’ve always loved the movie and fun fact I managed a property one of the directors , Roberto Sanchez, owned. Small world. This was a great analysis and breakdown of the movie. New subscriber✨🇮🇪☘️
Okay literally though the appalachias having parts in scotland makes so much sense given appalachian folklore and the amount of irish/scottish people that ended up here. It's like they were drawn to it.
That was a wonderful explanation of a movie which I found curious but very obnoxious to watch, the very few scenes I saw of it. When filming is too obnoxious, I can't watch. One of the mainstream shows on regular TV (before cable was popular - yes, I'm older) was shot where the camera veered around, and I could not watch it because it made me dizzy. I forgot what show it was, but the next year, they stopped doing that because everyone complained, proving I wasn't the only one affected. I used to get motion sickness in the round theater at Disneyland.
I am insulted by the description of imagining going to see the movie in 1999 😂 It scared the absolute SHIT out of me!! We definitely thought it was real. And I worked at a summer camp in Maryland about an hour from Burkittsville. I did not sleep that night
I don't know how anyone thought this movie was real. Maybe I was just older and had enough life experience to roll my eyes, even if I liked the movie at the time. It was reported as an entertainment mockumentary, not hard news coverage of lost and murdered students.
@@Gonk I didn't say the movie wasn't scary. In fact, I said I enjoyed the movie at the time, although not after a second viewing later in life. What I said was it is hard to understand why anyone would think it was real, other than based loosely on real events.
@@Gonkyou can't even grasp context then go onto rubbish a post that's completely valid, just because you can't read properly. Get over yourself, and deal with your lack of illiteracy. Maybe if you spent less time playing games, you would have been educated much better.
Oh dang, I don’t blame you!! 😱 I grew up going camping; but for a time after watching the movie, I had no desire to go anywhere near woods, ha ha. 🫣 Your mind can play tricks on you when you’re deep in the woods and it’s dark.
This insistence that Heather kept getting them lost despite all the obvious inferences to supernatural forces being at work is so incredibly frustrating. Maybe, just maybe, it wasn’t her fault? That never fucking seems to occur to anyone.
I think it's the only reasonable explanation as to how they walked in the same direction all day and ended up back at the same spot. The idea that she was so incompetent that she couldn't follow a compass bearing is ridiculous. Given how desperate they were to get out of the woods by that point, plus the row she had with Mike about the map and not trusting anyone else with the compass, the idea that she would have botched such a simple responsibility so profoundly is absurd.
This was such a fantastic video. While I've never fully watched any of the series, I do remember bits and pieces. I really like how you broke it down into parts of history of witches of that area, lore from a movie prospective, the film history (nice addition of having Mr Thornbury step in), lore from a "real" prospective, and then a what it really sounds like it could be if true. Great work!
Great video. Really appreciate you taking a a serious, academic approach to analyzing something totally fictional and thinking about it's place or relationship to existing lore. Stories are important to and deserve at least some serious treatment.
Special memories of this movie. Was 12 in '99 when I saw it on vhs rental during a weekend sleepover at my buddies while his parents were out of town. His sister and her friend who were 2 grades older were also there. Girls were petrified and the inclement weather basically drove them to sleeping in the same room, and for two nights I shared a sleeping bag with the sister's friend getting makeout lessons and other life skills. Still see her around occasionally and she always gets a big smile and calls me "hero". Great movie!
I'm loving this video! It was awesome to hear more about the filming/media and how that made such an impact. Im extremely impressed! Great job guys!!! 🎉❤
1:07:42 If you read the material that was uploaded I think before the film, there’s Heathers diary, and over there she mentions that she has been “sending energies” towards the witch before going to the forest. There are a lot of interesting things in those diaries!
The only part of Blare Witch that is done correctly is that the monster is never explained. The quickest way to defuse the horror aspect of horror is to explain what's happening or what the monster is.
Or shown! And that part was completely by accident. Though, to be fair, it's pretty thoroughly explained in The Curse of the Blair Witch. Still though, not EXPLAINABLE.
Yep. To this day The Blair Witch Project still holds a lot of creepy mysteries, even though it’s been talked to death. I mean, here we are now! So many strange and unsettling little “clues” peppered throughout the film, and it’s lore… But all very ambiguous. It allows your imagination to run wild.
That's the best and most terrifying thing, not knowing what it is exactly, who or what that something looks like. But in the most recent Blair witch they show the witch 😑😑 killed the mystery behind it
This movie absolutely scarred me for months. We used to camping every summer, from May to August. Always exploring the woods, creeks, etc. And the fact that it was never about a witch, but something very real, shivers & nightmares. LOL
the blair witch project was the first horror movie i ever watched and now years later I've seen hundreds of horror films and bwp is still one of my top favorites. i know it's not a perfect film, i know a lot of people didn't find it scary or interesting and i get why. but it terrified me the first watch and it still does now. idk why, it's just always had a special place in my heart. I always thought that as the movie goes on and the scenes get choppier and less focused, you can really see, hear, and feel the characters losing hope and losing their minds from the ongoing terror they're experiencing. the characters are hard to like, theyre annoying, and they're real. i found it very immersive. and that famous last shot, and the way you never get an answer,, it's just a continuation of the cycle that these kids were trying to document and maybe even solve...idk I just love it lmao
My best friend and I have been obsessed with this move since we were 10. I can still tell you exactly where I was and what I was doing when I found out that it wasn't actually real lol. We live semi-close to Burkittsville and have visited the graveyard and have plans to do the Seneca Creek State Park heritage hike that explores filming locations in the woods next year.
Me and my friend watched this film when this film first was released over here in Ireland on VHS in house, we were both 12 years of age. I knew it was a film and deep down ⬇ knew that if it was real, the police would find the bodies and solve the mystery. Not for my friend, he genuinely believed it was real and he was way more terrified than me. In the end of the film when he's standing in the corner I actually closed my eyes and all I could hear was the screaming, my friend who kept his eyes open literally has never been the same since. It destroyed his mind. I still see him now and again but he's not doing too good. Films can wreck people if watched too young.
I went to visit my parents and my brother still lived at home with them. He was telling me about this movie and I had no clue what he was talking about but agreed to go see it that day with him. Went back to my parents place after in shock 😂. Never had we seen anything like it and it freaked us out.
Glad you covered all of this. I'm a huge Blair Witch fan. I wish that elongated stretched figure who they show in the 2016 film at the very end sequence there are a few brief frames would have been a cool witch. Like a long legged figure.
I wasn't expecting an episode about this, nor to see other Aiden on screen! This is awesome! But as a man with a film degree myself, and a big nerd on The War Of The Worlds, I must comment on one thing: The War Of The Worlds broadcast fiasco was a myth, as far as my research has gone. The newspapers reported that people were going mad and calling into police stations, arming themselves and stockpiling food for the invasion, when in actuality that didn't happen and maybe three people were actually convinced it was a real broadcast. At most, people thought it was real, kept listening till the end to get all the info, only to realise when the credits rolled that it was a show and then called a bunch of people to complain. This either was purposely warped by papers wanting a sensational headline, or it was misinterpreted by the media as genuine concern. It's an urban myth, and I'm surprised people are still parroting it. Unless I'm wrong and the disproving has been disproved, which could be likely... Honestly, since one of you is a film and media buff and the other one is a student of culture and lore, I think it'd be great if you did a video about how alien folklore was influenced by H.G. Wells and The War Of The Worlds. The idea that aliens come from Mars, invade Earth, are associated with the colour green, are more advanced than humans, the concept of the energy weapon, the use of chemical weapons in warfare, aliens using humans as a food source, terraforming... these were all ideas that originate with Wells and his book, or at least were put into pop culture firmly by his book if he didn't invent them. He also predicted The Tank, The Second World War, he pushed the concept of an Invisible Man and time travel into the pop cultural zeitgeist, and even influenced Winston Churchill with his writing.
Iirc there were a few people who freaked out and did call in, but it was only a small handful, while the news blew it up to EVERYONE freaking out with only a small handful not doing so. There were some people, who iirc, did believe it to be real, but they mostly just called to ask their friends and relatives if it was real, was told it wasn't and then the complains were about how scared people had been and a few people did call u nto complain to the station that broadcasted. I'm not 100% I'm correct, I can only tell you what I believe happened based on what I remember. So not completely false, but massively blown up
@@SpectrumAnalysis I think you did for the most part, I mostly felt the need to add that most of the people who called in was to complain, I didn't think your comment mentioned that a lot :) I hope you didn't take it was me trying to "speak" over you, if that makes sense, just wanted to add my 2 cents
@@SpectrumAnalysis I might just have missed it? I'm not entirely certain, I just felt you didn't mention it enough for some reason. I might just have missed it. I'm glad you took it well! I get so worried when commenting because I know I sometimes come across as a little aggressive and I'm not really good at the / mood indicators :)
Having a witch with powers over space and time is similar to Keziah Mason Mason from H.P. Lovecraft's Dreams in the witch house. You can also find the concept of a malign force twisting the road so characters can't escape in the Revelations of Glaaki.
I think the only way film makers could replicate the marketing of The Blair Witch Project today, would be to make a film called The Blair Alt-Right Project.
Loved the video!! Thanks Aiden for the deep dive into found footage genere and thanks to Aiden for trying to figure out what the "witch" actually is. The mind messing and cult theory reminds me a lot of another horror movie from2017 - The Ritual
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Have you ever thought of looking into the legends and stories from around North West Queensland and Tasmania in Australia. There are 2 main stories that come up from things people have seen and indigenous dream time stories. I myself live in Mount Isa, Australia. And I've heard and seen questionable things in the bush. Mainly I remember seeing something move in the shadows near a cave, it's figure was short and stout but it was gone quick. An indigenous elder told me about the cave people who live around this area. A version of them is said to live in Tasmania as well. All over Australia you hear people talk about the Yowie and many people where I live have stories about times they encountered the Yowie.
I'm 42 from WV. My sister and her bf went to Burketsville MD to see the movie. We thought it was real actual found footage for quite awhile. Sis' bf was a journalism student btw. Also the 90s internet was luke the wild west.
@TheLoreLodge Another awesome show, I loved how you took something I care nothing about, horror movies and the Blaire Witch, and turned it into something I'm passionate about; history, folklore and the occult. I love your style and information. At what point am I allowed to start quoting or referencing you as source material?
Thanks for another great work as always, Aidan M. Never knew this topic could be as fascinating as you've made it. Noticed YT unsubbed you so I'll fix that promptly.
BUT this comment is actually for Aidan T: You have gorgeous eyes. Your representation of the 90s (as someone who was there) is the first accurate representation I've seen so you also have a gorgeous brain. You need more screen time!
the movie appeared in baltimore only and just a few theatres. I loved it and saw it twice. You had to buy
tickets in advance and was sold out. there was a real buzz and everyone was excited to see it.
I can not remember a movie that had this much buzz. No cared whether it was real or not and was just
terrific. Everyone stood in line to get in and i can not remember any movie that had this much buzz.
Everyone came to have a great time and was not disappointed.
I had friends who watched this movie when it came out. They decided that the scariest part of the movie was when everyone ran out of cigarettes. That was a personal hell for them.
Hahaha! Relateable.
Truly hell on earth.
Lmoa
RIP😢
🤣
Fun Fact: The tall, pail figure that chased Heather, Mike, and Josh in the original was shot with a crew member dressed in a white body suit and running along side them. Josh was supposed to turn the camera when Heather yelled “what the F is that,” but forgot to.
Whatever it was, it did the job, cuz we got scared 😱 in the theater , and on way driving home - so we sure loved this movie ;)
Yeah I heard about this. Crazy how one little turn or actually not doing that turn changed the whike movie.
@@slwtgfYeah, me and my girlfriend were scared shitless afterwards.
"Pail"? Seriously? It's "pale".
@ it’s a TH-cam comment, lighten up Francis
Funny story about Burkettsville... my dad had a girlfriend that lived there and she told the story of a bunch of goth kids decending on her sleepy town right after the movie came out. There are wooded areas there and many times the police would get calls of these goth kids lost after going out into the woods to re-live the movie. They would wind up on desolate roads at all hours of the night. Interesting because the police said that there would be no real way to get lost in those woods as one mile in any general direction would lead to a road, but they were getting lost anyway. The town citizens decided to turn it into a money-making venture and made little Blair Witch trinkets and sell them from their porches to these naive goth kids running around town. The locals made up stories about their "wares" and where they were found, and of course, many of these kids were buying into the stories while buying the trinkets the locals were making at their kitchen tables.
...Just something funny about culture and society.
Carry on, great vid guys!!!
City folk lmao
Sounds like the sequel lol
@@A.Girl.Has.No.Name. Haha "NoName Girl" it would be there as a documentary as to the absolute sillyness of those who took the movie seriously... and sell better than the sequels!
I like the way you think!
@@Caffeinated_Acrobatthere was no mention that they were all from a city. More likely locals
@@luminous3357 I don't know, I grew up a city kid, that sounds a lot like what city goth kids'd believe.
It's amazing that the budget for the film was only $35-$60k. But the Box office profit was around $250 Million!!! That's a stunning profit ratio. One of the most profitable movies of all time.
Almost none of which benefited the actual creators and workers. Welcome to America
Beat out by paranormal activity.
@@mlw5665well without distributors it wouldnt of gotten that big
@mlw5665 - Just FYI, that's not an "America" thing. That's just an investment thing. Excessive profit goes to those who take on the excessive risks of a project.
The cast and crew received 100% of their pay for their labor regardless of the success of the film.
If it made 0$ at the box office, they received 100% of their pay. But in this case, it made 4000% (or whatever, in not crunching the numbers), and the cast and crew received 100% of their pay.
The excess went to those investors who risked their money to make the film.
*Note:* I say this not to criticize your comment, nor even justify this system. Just trying to explain how the investment and profit systems work. Because, when people understand it 1. The world makes much more sense, 2. They can work within it in way that benefits them more, and 3. If they think it needs change, can change it in ways that work rather than just "feeling that it is unfair."
Amazing how much profit you get when you don't pay the actual crew and actors anything near what they're owed, huh
I want to point out, Heather could read the map. She navigated them to all their points. It was only after they began being "stalked" they started being lost. With or without the map.
THANK YOU justice for Heather 😤
THANK YOU. It pisses me off, so much. Heather IS stubborn to their detriment but they consistently get lost because of the aforementioned shifting of time and possibly space that is central to the Blair Witch lore. They are in the time loop and can't get out!!
“ I kicked that map in the creek” 😂
I remember it this way also. Getting lost was because they were being hunted. Getting lost was supernatural, not poor navigation.
I want to point out, Heather led them to their deaths with and without a map. They are dead because of her.
My favourite mock-umentary is "District 9". They made it in such a way that the viewer couldn't convince himself it was a documentary for too long, but just long enough that the dramatic and bizarre action footage that suddenly replaced it was absolutely hilarious to experience. It was also unpredictably sentimental and elicited a shower of complex feelings. I watched it a couple of times and took something else away from it each time, rare films were like that for me.
I loved the prawns 🖤
My daughter loves that one too!
Great film!
Loved that movie, it was actually heartfelt, and was an amazing way of getting around discussing the horrible conditions that people in South Africa are actually experiencing.
Recently rewatched it myself and I'm still shocked that we didn't get a sequel.
Where is Christopher and his son!?
The girl I was dating at the time it was released was completely convinced Blair Witch Project was real. She didn't believe it wasn't until Heather did an interview on some random show.
I mean that sounds pretty crazy nowadays but anyone who grew up in the 90's when the internet wasn't very rampant, and these kinds of movies didn't really exist might not think too much about it. I had friends who were convinced it was real as well, it was just the innocence of the time, enjoy the silliness of those memories, the world will never be like that again I'd wager ;)
@@coffeeandcupcakes7310People believing fake things are real is more prevalent now than it's ever been, actually.
@-Zer0Dark- if my 71 y/o father is any indication, you're right.
@-Zer0Dark- tbf the quality of fake things has improved too which doesn't help lol
@@bondickleidk, the bible is pretty old and *shouldn't* have been changed, plenty of people believe that.
As a native Marylander, this movie was nuts. When it came out EVERYONE was heading to the hills to check out the myth. EVERYONE. Everyone had to go see where it was filmed, investigate the Blair witch, look into the history. It was the talk of the state. It was wild.
You guys nailed what it was like when the marketing campaign was happening. I was 20 and everybody was talking about it, although there was a fair amount of skepticism. My friends and I went back and forth as to whether it was real, or "made up." We didn't really have any familiarity with the term "found footage" at the time, although we did know of other adjacent types of films, such as Faces of Death, which none of us had seen, but everyone was aware that it existed. That's one thing that was wonderful about growing up before the internet; urban legends and local mythology could exist and there wasn't really any way to verify of debunk. We all got to enjoy hearing and telling stories, and taking part in spooky rites of passage.
Hell yeah to all this
Yeah! I was like 18 or so. And the only reason I knew it wasn't real. Is because my older sister had a dvd of a movie called "the last broadcast" so I had a very small idea what found footage was
Saw Faces of Death in my teens. From what everyone was saying about it I thought it was pretty tame.
That opening weekend people I knew definitely thought it was real and it scared the crap out of them. After that first day or so people started realizing it was fiction. I wish I had gone before it was confirmed as purely fictional.
I was 19,otherwise that’s exactly what I would have said. Thanks for saving me the time😅👏
Hi! I'm an anthropology student and the definition many of my classes rely on for magic is "any act, ritual, or item that is used to affect the natural world via the supernatural." I feel that it is a nice, clear definition that almost all practitioners agree with.
saying that the Appalachians and the Highlands were the same range "many many moons ago" might be the greatest description of geologic timescale ever. You are certainly, technicaly, right. I love it.
Was Shetland part of the same piece?!
It doesn't make sense because the mountain ranges would have been connected millions of years ago. There were no witch worshiping Cults back then because there were no humans. So they could not have built a fairy Mound where Rustin Parr's house would someday stand.
True they same colour bricks are seen in New York and Scotland meaning the same clay was used to make them.
I would guess the northern islands like Shetland were also part of it due to them being close to the north of Scotland.
@@geehammer1511 all of it is - there is literally a documentary on youtube about it.
Interesting little detail about the story of Molly, the part about where she lifts her left hand to the sky to curse the town.
In many magical/occult practices "left hand magic" is often considered to be black, or dark, or bad/evil magic as opposed to "Right hand magic" being good or white magic. Hence the detail and why she would lift her left hand to the sky for the curse
I loved the movie so much, that 17 years after I first saw it I dragged my husband and daughter to where it was filmed (Seneca State Park, Maryland) We traveled all the way from Sweden. We also visited Burkittsville and the cemetery there. ( Also in the movie).
I live on the mountain above Burkittsville. Never seen anything in 50 ears.
@@laurasexton7450 I have to laugh You "Never seen anything in 50 ears?" You must have been a very bad ear doctor. So sorry but I just couldn't resist.
As a Maryland native this makes me so happy, I hope you enjoyed your visit!
Wow, props to you for being such a devoted super fan!! I love to hear that.
@@sabresister It was lovely! Such a beautiful landscape!
Lenardtown is a 10 minute drive from me. The curse had to be permanent and never ending construction on route 5. I swear 30 years and I have never seen that 3 mile strip of route 5 without cones, metal plates, uneven pavement, and random painted lines.
Curses DO vary across the ages and by region...so maybe! :D "May your travel ever be 'inconvenient and slow'!"
I saw this at a theater when it came out with a coworker. Now, I'm A country girl and spent a lot of time running through the woods at night as a teenager. I didn't think it was that scary. My coworker however, was a city girl and she was beyond freaked out.
Super impressive
I get what you’re saying. I grew up in the woods and still live in the woods. As a kid my brother and I would explore. What scares me are big cities. People are there and they are far more dangerous imo. I still walk my dogs and let them run in the woods twice a day.
My woods is a lot more damgerous apparently. Its black and there are holes and dips not to mention rocks and crags everywhere. Oh! And various animals that will not hesitate to attack you and have tried many times plus the occasional crackhead and unexplainable happenings. I carry a weapon at all times and am prepared and had to fight anything that attacks me. I’m brave but I’m not stupid so I’m staying in the light of my street lamp that covers the whole yard in a circle of light.
Saw it on a date in a little indie/art theater the weekend it came out. Totally packed. The hype and mystery was palpable… By the end of the movie, nobody said a word. Some were truly freaked out, some were dizzy from the camera movement, and some were just totally puzzled.
Later that night I hung out with a friend… as I walked up to his house I remember actually feeling uneasy/creeped out. As a horror fan, I was impressed that a movie could still make me feel that way.
@@Zanemob where do you live that the woods has this much going on 💀 it's really not that scary
I always took it that Heather's failure to read the map as part of the witch's power. That Heather could read the map and knew the area well, but the witch could manipulate the environment to keep them lost.
There's not enough comments getting hyped that Thornburry is in front of the camera and talking. This is really cool.
I’ve been trying to make him do that for years so I’m excited to show him these comments
@@TheLoreLodge The guy is great - need more of him. He speaks really well.
@@sdriza HIs voice reminds me of Itsjustsomerandomguy.
He did a fantastic job.❣️
My brain immediately went to the witch, actually being some sort of fae, and that they definitely went to another plane, much like how stepping into a fairy ring will bring you to the fairy realm. Kind of reminds me of the other mother Coraline theories on how the other mother might actually be some sort of fairy that needs the lives of people to stay alive herself.
Really enjoyed this video :)
My absolute favorite Blaire Witch theory is the one from The Film Theorists channel, where they suggest that the whole scenario in the movie is the two guys plotting to kill the girl and succeding.
matpat media analysis doesn't hit often but when it does it HITS
Dude same that FT episode felt like it fit so well.
I honestly really liked that approach as well. I prefer to take the movie at face value, but that theory would make a great story as well. Especially if an entity actually pops-up to confuse things.
Nah, that's some mental gynnastics right there, saw the movie twice after mat's video and nothing clicked
I really liked theirs theory too it seems more likely tbh
It's ridiculous how great your analysis at the end is.
It reminds me of The Ritual, which has perhaps the scariest and coolest movie monster I've ever seen: big Leshy vibes. And it requires worshippers and sacrifices to remain powerful, forces people to choose between worship or death, there's time skips and memory manipulation...just a great movie.
I haven't had that creep factor for a while, and just your description of this being tied to a malevolent Sidhe elevated the whole concept of the movies (and gave me the shivers). Well done!
Yep, both Blair witch and the ritual are my favorite movies. Any creature flick in the woods is a thumbs up for me
I grew up in Leonardtown, within walking distance of where the Moll Dyer legend is based. We walked to her dilapidated home, which was just a tin roof on the ground and a stone chimney, many times as kids in the 90s. A few things:
- There is a road called Moll Dyer Road in Leonardtown. If you were to take that road to the very end and then hike straight back off it, that's where the house was, deep in the woods and there were only foot paths/horse trails to get there
- Where the house was were two above ground cement graves which, of course, people smashed holes into the side of. We could see in them and there were a few bones but for the most part animals or idiots got to them first
- The rock in your picture is sitting at the Tudor Hall Manor and is a tourist attraction today, legend is you can run your hand over it and feel a hand print
- My childhood home was in the forest where she allegedly died with her hand frozen to the rock, it was lowkey creepy at night, but mostly because there was very little else back there at the time
- As you mentioned, there are a few different stories, but pretty sure the consensus was she lived "on the edge of town" because she was in an inter-racial marriage which wasn't easily accepted at that point in time
- As far as I know... I'm not cursed
Growing up,the idea of living in a sparsely populated area seemed terrifying. Whenever I imagined it I pictured it being exactly like you described,holy shit that sounds scary😅
I also grew up in Leonardtown and remember hearing different stories about Moll Dyer. As a kid i remember thinking it was weird to have a road named after a witch.
Ditto. I went to Leonardtown high school. And I ran the group with all of the alt kids in it. We would visit the forest at night on occasion. It was creepy and fun.
I’ve lived in Leonardtown for 17 yrs and I find it interesting that the time the town of Leonardtown began “respecting” Moll Dyervis around the same time the town began growing and becoming more successful
Moll Dyer is just a tale with no actual records of the incident. Meanwhile no one mentioned Rebecca Fowler the only person actually convicted and executed in Maryland on October 9th 1685. It's documented and you can visit her grave in the historic St Mary's City cemetery.
Fun tie in, the name Blair comes from the Scottish Gaelic word "Blàr", used in a lot of place names. It means Plain, Meadow, or Field, just as another connection to the Cloverfield franchise. Also, Blair Castle in Scotland has a bunch of history with witchcraft and witch trials.
I wish the ending to the 2016 film was Lisa getting out of the house successfully into daylight, possibly through a portal (which would explain the light that came through the house from outside) so she celebrates her freedom... but she walks to town, only to find someone/see the town and find out that she's traveled back in time, either to the 1940s or earlier like 1690s or whatever lol. If she traveled back far enough, she could even "become the witch" lol. That'd be cool.
One of the great parts about this movie was that it was actually believable. That ending that you presented would not be.
They didn’t have the budget for all that lol
I am 37 and I saw this movie opening weekend and visited the website prior. I was blown away by the experience at the time being only 13. I still watch it around fall/ halloween every year. There's something about it that pulls you in. I'm still waiting for a proper sequel that gets back to the original roots. Great video, love the cult theory and parallel worlds!!
The ARG's of the early internet days were insane because nobody knew what was real. I still remember looking at Freakylinks thinking we were uncovering a huge mystery
I hate to be “that guy” but there was a third group of people in Maryland during the 1888. Freed Africans, Maryland was a slave holding state for a very long time. There were the descendants of Enslaved Africans and Caribbean Peoples who not only had traditions of tribal faiths but also Islam pasted down along the enforced Christianity. Thank you for dedication to educating people.
"How do you know she's a witch?" "She turned me into a newt!"
.....i got better
“And what do you burn besides witches?”
‘More witches!!!’
@@jendoe9436 I see you are wise in the ways of science.
Because she’s made of wood.
Gather round, children, as I tell you the horror story of 90s/early 00s internet: there were, in fact, no "tabs"
It was a better time.
realy ? I was born in 95, and had a good pc and good fiberlink internet (in romania) since 2005 , there always were tabs as far as i can remember
@@VladRadu-tq1pgtabbed browsing did not exist anywhere in 1999, by 05 probably, but it was not around in any browser in 99
I think the Blair Witch Project was the first Horror Movie I ever watched intentionally as an elementary school child.
It was because my drama teacher wanted me to learn about improv acting. I still question her choices but I did end up a horror fan, so I guess it worked out somehow.
I didn’t watch it until I was an adult, but the quality of the acting was my biggest takeaway, all of them did a phenomenal job of making the premise believable
lol I was in middle school when it came out and really wanted to see it. I snuck downstairs and watched it in the middle of the night before the tape had to go back to Movie Gallery (woof that sentence dates me). It ended with me, on the couch in the pitch dark, entirely too frightened to go get the tape out of the VCR and put it back. This is sadly one case where I was not kind and did not rewind. XD First R rated movie I ever saw.
@@imshinycaptain lmao that is almost exactly my experience watching The Ring. I know they're totally different movies, but the comment fully sent me back in time to regretting every second of putting a rental VHS in the VCR alone in the basement at night. Sorry rental place, I definitely didn't rewind that one, I just ran off like a coward baby XD
coolest teacher ever
"Opening up a new tab" he says, talking about dial up internet in 1999. 😂
I really love family Guy's joke about this movie. It was Brian sitting in the theater with a blind guy watching Blair witch project and he's describing the movie to the blind guy and he says "okay so they're in the woods, the camera is moving around, nothing's happening, they're looking for a witch or something; I don't know, I wasn't listening. Nothing's happening, nothing's happening, something about a map, nothing's happening. Aaaand It's over; a lot of people in the theater look pissed."😂😂😂
Those who were pissed were the dumb ones, movie was awesome. :)
Stimmt. 😂😂😂😂
@Gonk Nah, as a horror movie fan (even the bad ones), BWP was super boring and a massive let down. The remake in 2016 was also bad, but at least things actually happened that might’ve been scary if you were 10
@@g.f.demille1598 Incorrect it just points to your lack of imagination is all.
@Gonk How can I be "incorrect" about an opinion? It is my opinion that BWP is boring and thus a bad movie. It is my opinion that the worst thing a movie can be is boring. Even objectively bad films can be entertaining and thus "better" movies or more accurately more enjoyable and feel like less of a letdown. If you enjoyed that movie, I respect your opinion and would prefer to agree with you, I just don't. My opinion is that the film suffers from the eight deadly words: "I don't care what happens to these people." Thus, there's no tension for me and no stakes, so no investment and much boredom. What scares it does have might be more interesting in a better film, but here it just fails to keep my attention. I'm probably not alone in that feeling, but even if I am, please don't make assumptions about me or my imagination just because I didn't enjoy the same movie you did.
I work with an older gal, her parents listened to War of the Worlds as it happened. She said her mother vowed to punch Orson Welles if she ever met him. They were living in a very rural area, and the farmers that heard the broadcast were freaking out, watching the sky with their guns ready. It was so realistic and convincing because they didn't have any other means of receiving information. They only bought newspapers when they traveled in to town, what they heard on the radio was "real-time news" and they trusted what they heard. That stunt caused such terror that her parents recounted the story and she recounted the story and her kids... I'm sure hers isn't the only family that held such a grudge against Welles.
What seems ridiculous for the present wasn't so much back there. With the 19th century a century of a unbelievable progress so it seems that every science fiction is only a matter of time. With that experience space travel wasn't such a ridicule idea. And even there was even theories about civilization on a different planet (like Mars) to astronomical observations of seemingly artifical structures on the surface. Today aliens travelling through space and maybe looking for worlds to conquer and colonize being an absurd idea (based on the knowledge of space travel and distances we have now) was very likely at least thinkable option. Would it have been different from what the indigenous people of the americas experienced when the europeans arrived at their shores? That their beyond the horizon is a whole other world, with totally different people in posession of technological advancements unbelievable and they appear seemingly out of thin air. When you think this through for a moment: In alien Invasion like played out in War of the Worlds is not so much different.
I love listening to Legolas Aiden talk about how film making works. As someone who works in the industry it’s nice to hear someone explain it in a non condescending way 😊
I watched this movie when it came out. I was in high school and under the impression it was real and the crew was missing. I remember being extremely creeped out and feeling like I’d watched a snuff film or something I wasn’t supposed to watch
I grew up right near Burkettsville, and while the original movie scared the hell out of me when I first watched at like 10, as an adult I find it really funny. The ridge near there is only like a mile or two across, so if you walked in any direction but along the ridge for more than a few hours you'd run into farmland or a highway or something, and even on the ridge, youd eventually hit the river or a trail. So some fae nonsense is really the only way someone actually could get lost there
If they played into the local angle more with kids that "grew up there" and showed off the true landscape, they could have used that to their advantage. Honestly, I think fae nonsense makes it scarier
idk why they set it in burkettsville, the legend is based off of Moll Dyer from Leonardsville, MD
Especially doesn't make sense to make up a witch in Burkettsville when the Snallygaster and the Dwayyo are right there
Not from anywhere near there but I always thought any woods on the east coast would be very hard to get lost in for days.
@@boki1693 You'd be surprised. I live in Maryland, and there are parts of it and neighboring states that are still surprisingly well-forested.
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Anyone else remember The Faces of Death? That was another one we all got obsessed with. It wasn't exactly found footage, but they presented the film like a documentary. It was fun! Especially to watch in the older theaters they had before regal Cinemas took over.
I love stories about Fae Folk immigrating to North America (or factoring in that they were already here because Under the Mountain or Under Hill etc can include a mountain range that was connected in Pangea. Which is a wild connection I hadn’t seen explored before) and the ways that gets weird.
Having “witchcraft” stories not be about Christianity is extremely refreshing for a storytelling perspective.
Absolutely desperate for narratives focusing on the potential of Faerie Rules.
I don’t know much about what you are talking about…but it sounds cool/interesting and hopefully Lore Lodge will cover!
@@lunarvision honestly Fairy/Fae/Faerie legends vary depending on their source and can get fully wild when it comes to how we feel like interpreting how that extends to modern day, people who emigrated, multicultural interactions etc. and Lore Lodge always brings so much research to the table so I hope so too!
Your theories on being out of time remind me of the Lovecraft story about the witch house where the math student starts dealing with a witch because of the odd geometry of her room that he lives in. I never knew about the connection to Celtic lore and whatnot, but it gives that story some added dimension (sorry, bad pun).
Thank you for this video-- very well done and gives a lot food for thought.
This is exactly the niche video I've craved. I'm so glad we got to have an industry film history and view, along with the deep area-rich mythos. A+!
I know right! This is a pretty great video. Love the topic.
That was freaking crazy and awesome at the same time!Never would have thought you can get so much out of something that doesn't show much
Blair Witch Project is one movie that always creeped me out, and I still can't put my finger on way exactly.
I remember going to see it and actually believed it to be true! My friends and I came out of the theater with plans to go look for the witch. Being from Pittsburgh and having family in Baltimore it was only a few hours away. We were so pissed to find out it was all bullsh!t...great video guys, really good topic!!!
You were upset that you weren't really able to go to the woods to be butchered? Interesting....
@@FreeOpenTruth we were 18 and of course invincible! No witch was going to butcher us...lol...being older I can see the crazy in us!
Plus it was only a few hours drive so close enough to check it out
@@p.k.5455 - I get it. I just found your comment amusing. God bless!
@FreeOpenTruth God Bless! And yeah I guess looking at it again that it would sound somewhat foolish...lol
I would like to see a movie combine the Blair Witch project with the real Missing 411 phenomenon considering how similar they are
Writing in the form of letters or travel journals is one of the oldest forms of writing, I think quite a few ancient books were framed as travel journals
Yep! There are some who consider Greco-Roman travel “journals” to be the first “adventure novels” because of how perfectly absurd they were
It's not ancient, but The Travels of Marco Polo definitely was at least sort of in that category
The excellent Griffin and Sabine novel helped me reconnect with an ex gf and establish a happy little life…for a while at least.
The most popular ancient Mythos is made of the same basic narratives: Atlantis is completely based on a literature philosophical dialogue with one participant claiming that he has old knowledge he heard from this guy and this guy was there and there and learned it from this egyptian priest. Insane how good this narrative principle works out over the centuries.
It's hard for a lot of younger people to appreciate how hard the marketing for this went. I remember at the time there was a split between people who insisted it was totally real and people who thought it was totally fake.
It was hard to know what to believe at a time when the internet was still quite new if you were the target demographic for this movie who was into urban legends, unsolved mysteries and other creepy stuff and really bought into it.
Even as someone who isn't a huge fan of the movie I still find it amazing how well the marketing was done.
I was in high school when The Blair Witch Project came out and the description of the era is really hilarious to me! Now I know how my dad felt when people talked about his childhood/adolescence lmfao
We didn't even have tab browsing back then! You had to open a second window!
“Striga” was such a huge part of my early childhood 😩 “if you didn’t finish your dinner… she will come for you..”
I really like the idea of fleshing out lore that is only revealed to a small extent through a story. It's like solving a mystery, kind of like piecing together what happened to someone who never came back from the woods. You did a helluva job filling in the blanks. Nice work, sir.
New headcannon; the Blaire Witch Project and The Ritual share the same universe where old myths are dying out and desparately trying to maintain themselves, but only the scary ones can because they're the ones willing/capable of doing horrible stuff to people to stay alive.
Born in Leonardtown and raised in St. Mary's County, this legend is a big part of the culture in the area. The rock upon which her hand was frozen is a tourist attraction and sat outside our old jail in front of the courthouse for years until it was moved to Tudor Hall Mansion. Adian got alot of the points correct. There was a plague/sickness afflicting the town at the same time a bad harvest had happened. On top of that, it was a very harsh winter, and when Molly (Moll as well, its a common nickname for her in the area) Dyer was driven out of her home, the mob knew it was effectively a death sentence. There was an episode of sime tv show on the weather channel of all places that covered the legend too. All of us folk in the area got a chuckle at that. Very cool of the Lore Lodge covering a story from my hometown. Love the content. Keep it up!
😊
I just started my freshman year in high school when this movie came out. The movie scared the hell out of me because I thought it was real. I think it neat to see how the found footage fims fluenced other film makers to make their movies in this format. Look how they did in Grave Encounters 1 and 2 and As Above and So Below and The Chernobyl Diaries and so on.
By far the best sponsor transition ive ever witnessed.
I know this means nothing but Heather doesn't get them lost. She's following the map accurately. They get lost because of supernatural shenanigans, NOT poor survival skills.
It's literally down by them going in a loop when walling straight in one direction all day. I'm surrey, this was just annoying me
This is one of few movies that scared the absolute crop out of me.
You've thought more about this story's lore than the story writers. Thank you, your stuff is always entertaining.
I loved the flow of this video, it felt like it was much more engaging than usual. Also, having Thorny hop in to cover that section was really good. Definitely need to pop him in for some topics more often. You guys have really come a long way in everything. Love seeing the growth.
I think one of my favorite theories is that the things that the groups see are each other. The lights and fast movement Heather's group see is the drone and modern technology, which is part of why they scream 'What the f*ck was that!' and the stuff the 2016 group sees is Heather's group looking disheveled and like they'd spent weeks in the brush, since they had. The forest had a mind of its own.
Just watched a ton of lore lodge videos. Im so excited for this, cause i know it will be jam packed with info.
From what I recall, heather was navigating correctly but the boys couldn’t understand that going from point A to B to C looks different from going from C to A, because they’re not retracing their steps. They refused to go with her and she decided to follow them instead of splitting up
Man. Awesome and well-informed theory! I can’t say I’m educated enough on the topic to opine, but I just wanted to say: this movie SUPREMELY scared me when I first saw it. I was at my cousins’ house in the upper peninsula of Michigan, in a house surrounded by thick woods. Beautiful area, but I couldn’t work up the nerve to walk outside at night, as you couldn’t see through the trees almost at all. The PERFECT setting for a young teenager to get scared shitless at that movie.
I renember living in a house with similar architecture as a teenager, when the film came out. And i remember there being red paint childrens handprints on the walls of the stairwell leading down to the basement. Always terrified me. Then my father told me it was my handprints and he let me and my friends do them with my friends when he was renovating. . .
Really love the explanation of how the War of the Worlds broadcast was a sort of precursor to Found Footage as a concept in film. Like, I have been aware of the infamy of that broadcast for years and have studied film a bit myself and know about the whole found footage phenomena, but I never made the connection between the two. Thank you for sharing your insight Aiden!
The Molly Dyer story was so cool the first time I heard it and I’m actually a county over from Leonardtown and last I went down to Leonardtown I actually saw the Moll Dyer Rock it’s pretty eerie. The plaque and local legend says if you touch it you are now cursed by Molly Dyer. To keep people from touching it, it’s covered in a 4x4 plexiglass on the top.
Please please please do a video about John Carpenters The Thing? I know it's been done to death, but I love to imagine the implications of how the world would react if two arctic research stations were destroyed in some unknown horror
The game also has a lot of lore additions. It takes place 2 years after the original movie. In it you're haunted by multiple stretched out entities that are scared of bright enough lights and a bare white tree on a mound is where you first encounter them (could be another Unseelie fae connection). You travel through time a lot more openly as well (a major mechanic in-game is using a camera and cassettes to reverse events, find a missing person's report from 4 years in the future, there's a part where you're speaking over a radio and there's a discrepancy on how light out it is in the moment, you find corpses that couldn't be as old as they seem to be, and a major plot point I won't spoil here).
You also get a former police dog turned emotional support dog, named Bullet. He is a good boy and helps you solve puzzles and you need to be nice to him to get the 'good' ending.
The entire plot and major events are listed on Wikipedia, if anyone's interested but not into stealth horror games.
Oh man, that dog seems like the best thing about the game! Granted, I've only seen gameplay videos, but idea of implementing a dog as an emotional support in a horror game is an awesome idea.
This was fun! I saw the first one (only) as soon as it came out. I found out a couple days later that the footage was fake. I was pissed! My boyfriend at the time was upset too, but he was trying to play it off. He said, " the scariest thing about that movie is how not one of them had a sense of direction!" I thought that was pretty good
That’s hilarious. You were pissed that those kids weren’t murdered in the woods. 😨 I get it though.
@@lunarvision this has me laughing first thing in the morning! Thanks for the comment
I met the actors and can confirm lol they are very much alive. They were a gem to meet and had a blast from Days of the Dead!
Ghosts don't like being mocked by a character that accidentally describes them. The Ringu flims where plagued with folk seeing paranormal activity with Ringu 0 being the most infamous.
I appreciate the cut out segment about film process.
Aiden did amazing! I was enthralled by the knowledge he was shoving into my brain cavity. I hope he comes back eventually for more stuff like this. It’s cool, the dynamic of knowledge between you two. Very cool, keep up the good work guys!
Even with you breaking down the process on how a film gets made, most people will still not understand how many moving parts there are pre, post, & during filming. I'm an accountant & Executive Assistant to the CFO of a Baltimore, Md. based production company. I basically make sure everyone like actors, crew, & vendors are paid, plus work/location permits & insurance is handled ahead of time. And, don't get me started on union vs. non-union shoots. Due to this and because I was born, raised, & currently live in Maryland, I found this video very interesting! I definitely remember the Blair Witch craze, but I question the Pearl Jam reference. Anyway, you did a great job of laying out the basic principles. 👍❤ Love ya guys!
A tulpa works for the third movie...but with all of the thought/energy that went into setting up the lore for the first movie, I actually wonder what you'd find at the original location, even now.
I never believed it was real but I sure as heck wasn’t going camping any time soon. Credit to the actress who played Heather for that scene she ad libbed where she apologized to everyone’s mom, to the camera, while being utterly terrified. In the theatre I saw it in, at points in the movie where the screen would go entirely black for a couple of seconds, the theatre went entirely black. No safety lights, nothing. Pitch black. It was awesome
Can we please get more Thornyboy in futures videos? Dude has a knack for long form/dissertation style content
Hi! I’m an Irish practitioner from Maryland. The thing about Celtic practices it is absolutely passed down in ancestry. I work with the Morrigan and since I was a little girl I’ve known things. It’s in our DNA and mostly can’t be explained and isn’t talked about it’s understood from aunt to aunt mom to daughter to son etc.
the Irish were infamous for not keeping records because it’s innate. We have always just inhabited the gifts and used them in spiritual practices without keeping notes.
I started researching druids and Beltane without ever knowing anything about these topics. I grew up Catholic so my parents didn’t believe anything other than their church beliefs but my grandparents came from Belfast back in the 40’s.
Anyway I live in Germantown which is where parts of the movie were filmed (the woods were in Germantown not Burkittsville). I’ve always loved the movie and fun fact I managed a property one of the directors , Roberto Sanchez, owned. Small world. This was a great analysis and breakdown of the movie. New subscriber✨🇮🇪☘️
Okay literally though the appalachias having parts in scotland makes so much sense given appalachian folklore and the amount of irish/scottish people that ended up here. It's like they were drawn to it.
That was a wonderful explanation of a movie which I found curious but very obnoxious to watch, the very few scenes I saw of it. When filming is too obnoxious, I can't watch. One of the mainstream shows on regular TV (before cable was popular - yes, I'm older) was shot where the camera veered around, and I could not watch it because it made me dizzy. I forgot what show it was, but the next year, they stopped doing that because everyone complained, proving I wasn't the only one affected. I used to get motion sickness in the round theater at Disneyland.
I am insulted by the description of imagining going to see the movie in 1999 😂 It scared the absolute SHIT out of me!! We definitely thought it was real. And I worked at a summer camp in Maryland about an hour from Burkittsville. I did not sleep that night
I don't know how anyone thought this movie was real. Maybe I was just older and had enough life experience to roll my eyes, even if I liked the movie at the time. It was reported as an entertainment mockumentary, not hard news coverage of lost and murdered students.
@@n.d.m.515 you're not tough from not thinking this movie was scary get over yourself maybe go hate on every horror movie post on facebook site lol
@@Gonk I didn't say the movie wasn't scary. In fact, I said I enjoyed the movie at the time, although not after a second viewing later in life. What I said was it is hard to understand why anyone would think it was real, other than based loosely on real events.
@@Gonkyou can't even grasp context then go onto rubbish a post that's completely valid, just because you can't read properly.
Get over yourself, and deal with your lack of illiteracy.
Maybe if you spent less time playing games, you would have been educated much better.
Oh dang, I don’t blame you!! 😱
I grew up going camping; but for a time after watching the movie, I had no desire to go anywhere near woods, ha ha. 🫣
Your mind can play tricks on you when you’re deep in the woods and it’s dark.
This insistence that Heather kept getting them lost despite all the obvious inferences to supernatural forces being at work is so incredibly frustrating. Maybe, just maybe, it wasn’t her fault? That never fucking seems to occur to anyone.
I don’t think the supernatural aspect was ever supposed to be responsible for them getting lost initially, just their panic later.
I think it's the only reasonable explanation as to how they walked in the same direction all day and ended up back at the same spot. The idea that she was so incompetent that she couldn't follow a compass bearing is ridiculous. Given how desperate they were to get out of the woods by that point, plus the row she had with Mike about the map and not trusting anyone else with the compass, the idea that she would have botched such a simple responsibility so profoundly is absurd.
This is genuinely my favorite films of all time and so under appreciated.
This was such a fantastic video. While I've never fully watched any of the series, I do remember bits and pieces. I really like how you broke it down into parts of history of witches of that area, lore from a movie prospective, the film history (nice addition of having Mr Thornbury step in), lore from a "real" prospective, and then a what it really sounds like it could be if true. Great work!
Great video. Really appreciate you taking a a serious, academic approach to analyzing something totally fictional and thinking about it's place or relationship to existing lore. Stories are important to and deserve at least some serious treatment.
Special memories of this movie. Was 12 in '99 when I saw it on vhs rental during a weekend sleepover at my buddies while his parents were out of town. His sister and her friend who were 2 grades older were also there. Girls were petrified and the inclement weather basically drove them to sleeping in the same room, and for two nights I shared a sleeping bag with the sister's friend getting makeout lessons and other life skills. Still see her around occasionally and she always gets a big smile and calls me "hero". Great movie!
I'm loving this video! It was awesome to hear more about the filming/media and how that made such an impact. Im extremely impressed! Great job guys!!! 🎉❤
1:07:42 If you read the material that was uploaded I think before the film, there’s Heathers diary, and over there she mentions that she has been “sending energies” towards the witch before going to the forest. There are a lot of interesting things in those diaries!
The only part of Blare Witch that is done correctly is that the monster is never explained.
The quickest way to defuse the horror aspect of horror is to explain what's happening or what the monster is.
Or shown! And that part was completely by accident. Though, to be fair, it's pretty thoroughly explained in The Curse of the Blair Witch. Still though, not EXPLAINABLE.
Yep. To this day The Blair Witch Project still holds a lot of creepy mysteries, even though it’s been talked to death. I mean, here we are now!
So many strange and unsettling little “clues” peppered throughout the film, and it’s lore… But all very ambiguous. It allows your imagination to run wild.
@@carnuatusWait, what part (by accident) are you referring to?
That's the best and most terrifying thing, not knowing what it is exactly, who or what that something looks like. But in the most recent Blair witch they show the witch 😑😑 killed the mystery behind it
Most times, yea, but not always. The 80s movie The Thing does a great on revealing the monster but still keeping it scary
This movie absolutely scarred me for months. We used to camping every summer, from May to August. Always exploring the woods, creeks, etc. And the fact that it was never about a witch, but something very real, shivers & nightmares. LOL
"...opened up a new tab". Sir, I regret to inform you that tabs were not a thing in 1999.
...so many windows
the blair witch project was the first horror movie i ever watched and now years later I've seen hundreds of horror films and bwp is still one of my top favorites. i know it's not a perfect film, i know a lot of people didn't find it scary or interesting and i get why. but it terrified me the first watch and it still does now. idk why, it's just always had a special place in my heart. I always thought that as the movie goes on and the scenes get choppier and less focused, you can really see, hear, and feel the characters losing hope and losing their minds from the ongoing terror they're experiencing. the characters are hard to like, theyre annoying, and they're real. i found it very immersive. and that famous last shot, and the way you never get an answer,, it's just a continuation of the cycle that these kids were trying to document and maybe even solve...idk I just love it lmao
My best friend and I have been obsessed with this move since we were 10. I can still tell you exactly where I was and what I was doing when I found out that it wasn't actually real lol. We live semi-close to Burkittsville and have visited the graveyard and have plans to do the Seneca Creek State Park heritage hike that explores filming locations in the woods next year.
Me and my friend watched this film when this film first was released over here in Ireland on VHS in house, we were both 12 years of age. I knew it was a film and deep down ⬇ knew that if it was real, the police would find the bodies and solve the mystery. Not for my friend, he genuinely believed it was real and he was way more terrified than me. In the end of the film when he's standing in the corner I actually closed my eyes and all I could hear was the screaming, my friend who kept his eyes open literally has never been the same since. It destroyed his mind. I still see him now and again but he's not doing too good. Films can wreck people if watched too young.
I went to visit my parents and my brother still lived at home with them. He was telling me about this movie and I had no clue what he was talking about but agreed to go see it that day with him. Went back to my parents place after in shock 😂. Never had we seen anything like it and it freaked us out.
Glad you covered all of this. I'm a huge Blair Witch fan. I wish that elongated stretched figure who they show in the 2016 film at the very end sequence there are a few brief frames would have been a cool witch. Like a long legged figure.
I wasn't expecting an episode about this, nor to see other Aiden on screen! This is awesome! But as a man with a film degree myself, and a big nerd on The War Of The Worlds, I must comment on one thing:
The War Of The Worlds broadcast fiasco was a myth, as far as my research has gone. The newspapers reported that people were going mad and calling into police stations, arming themselves and stockpiling food for the invasion, when in actuality that didn't happen and maybe three people were actually convinced it was a real broadcast. At most, people thought it was real, kept listening till the end to get all the info, only to realise when the credits rolled that it was a show and then called a bunch of people to complain. This either was purposely warped by papers wanting a sensational headline, or it was misinterpreted by the media as genuine concern. It's an urban myth, and I'm surprised people are still parroting it. Unless I'm wrong and the disproving has been disproved, which could be likely...
Honestly, since one of you is a film and media buff and the other one is a student of culture and lore, I think it'd be great if you did a video about how alien folklore was influenced by H.G. Wells and The War Of The Worlds. The idea that aliens come from Mars, invade Earth, are associated with the colour green, are more advanced than humans, the concept of the energy weapon, the use of chemical weapons in warfare, aliens using humans as a food source, terraforming... these were all ideas that originate with Wells and his book, or at least were put into pop culture firmly by his book if he didn't invent them. He also predicted The Tank, The Second World War, he pushed the concept of an Invisible Man and time travel into the pop cultural zeitgeist, and even influenced Winston Churchill with his writing.
Iirc there were a few people who freaked out and did call in, but it was only a small handful, while the news blew it up to EVERYONE freaking out with only a small handful not doing so.
There were some people, who iirc, did believe it to be real, but they mostly just called to ask their friends and relatives if it was real, was told it wasn't and then the complains were about how scared people had been and a few people did call u nto complain to the station that broadcasted.
I'm not 100% I'm correct, I can only tell you what I believe happened based on what I remember. So not completely false, but massively blown up
@@JDM-is-my-name That's essentially what I've heard too, and that's why I tried to get across in my comment.
@@SpectrumAnalysis I think you did for the most part, I mostly felt the need to add that most of the people who called in was to complain, I didn't think your comment mentioned that a lot :)
I hope you didn't take it was me trying to "speak" over you, if that makes sense, just wanted to add my 2 cents
@@JDM-is-my-name I didn't take it as that at all, no worries! I did mention that aspect a bit actually, but I could have emphasised it more, yeah.
@@SpectrumAnalysis I might just have missed it? I'm not entirely certain, I just felt you didn't mention it enough for some reason. I might just have missed it.
I'm glad you took it well! I get so worried when commenting because I know I sometimes come across as a little aggressive and I'm not really good at the / mood indicators :)
It was a fun experience to take part of. Glad I was able to see it in theaters and be young enough to still feel spooked out by the movie
Having a witch with powers over space and time is similar to Keziah Mason Mason from H.P. Lovecraft's Dreams in the witch house. You can also find the concept of a malign force twisting the road so characters can't escape in the Revelations of Glaaki.
I think the only way film makers could replicate the marketing of The Blair Witch Project today, would be to make a film called The Blair Alt-Right Project.
Loved the video!! Thanks Aiden for the deep dive into found footage genere and thanks to Aiden for trying to figure out what the "witch" actually is. The mind messing and cult theory reminds me a lot of another horror movie from2017 - The Ritual
1:00:00 actually St Patrick was an Englishman kidnapped and taken to Ireland by Irish raiders. Life is so ironic.
Fun fact there are Blair witch comics and games when the original movie came out
I remember seeing a playthrough of the video game and it confirms the whole pocket dimension thing.