is a bit rough, this film is really creative. I haven't seen "Blair Witch", but I guess that movie is to learn the narrative method of "Man bites dog". The film uses a documentary style, interviewing and tracking a killer throughout. The killer told the film's director, camera and sound engineer how to kill, introduced his family, his lover, took them to kill, robbed, and distributed the money to the film crew to help them complete the film. While following the killer and recording the murder scene, they also killed two recording engineers. In the end, after the killer escaped from prison, when he was about to escape, he and the film crew were all killed.
The film was shot on black and white film, and the hand-held photography gave it a strong sense of realism. In this way, relative to us, as if the killer is talking directly to us, we become the second point of view of the film, one of the participants of the film. In this way, we reflect on our own violence through the film itself. Many films now have this tendency, which is to reflect on the audience's own status through the image medium (in Kronenberg's "Murder on Video" has the same inspiration)
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