Since the breakout success of 1999, The Blair Witch Project, found footage film became a sub-genre in itself. In a vein similar to Blair Witch, the series Paranormal Activity has found great financial success with their relatively meager budgets, and Cloverfield in 2008 proved that even on a large scale, aesthetics handycam sensations can provide effective when used by filmmakers who have a solid understanding of style
Josh Trank is a chronic evolution of the genus found footage, using the character as a cameraman for the vanity of interesting new places, and marking the director as a young talent worth following.
Chronicle differs from its predecessors like Cloverfield in that these images handyman is not presented as "found" in itself, but rather a stylistic and narrative choice that puts a refreshing spin on an original story greatly exaggerated: the origin of super hero. After encountering a strange glowing object in a cave deep underground, high school students Andrew (Dane DeHaan), Matt (Alex Russell) and Steve (Michael B. Jordan) find they have telekinetic powers that allow them to move objects with their minds.
Josh Trank is a chronic evolution of the genus found footage, using the character as a cameraman for the vanity of interesting new places, and marking the director as a young talent worth following.
Chronicle differs from its predecessors like Cloverfield in that these images handyman is not presented as "found" in itself, but rather a stylistic and narrative choice that puts a refreshing spin on an original story greatly exaggerated: the origin of super hero. After encountering a strange glowing object in a cave deep underground, high school students Andrew (Dane DeHaan), Matt (Alex Russell) and Steve (Michael B. Jordan) find they have telekinetic powers that allow them to move objects with their minds.
But make no mistake, this is an origin story (one that does not necessarily beg for a sequel though), and Trank and his co-writer Max Landis (son of John Landis) use the visceral, in -your-face nature of found footage to give life to a genre that came perilously close to wear out its welcome in the last decade.
There is also a nice element of self-reflexivity as Andrew, an unpopular misfit, uses his camera to be definite, and how he notices the world. The old adage about writing what you know appears to ring true in the case of the Chronicle, see Andrew and study to shift his camera in more ways thanks to its active new powers may be start the least index Trank's autobiography. The film is packed with subtle phases like this that will possibly be missed by most, but happily Chronicle basically taking at face value is a satisfying experience, which proves that the original story superheroes n is not dead, it just takes a good shake from time to time.
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