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  • paranormal activity

    Saturday, Oct 17, 2009 1:35AM / Standard Entry / Members only
    8 comments

    Paranormal Activity premiered at Slamdance 2008, where it was acquired by Dreamworks and was later passed onto Paramount for distribution. It was made on $15,000 and has already grossed 8 million at the beginning of its theatrical run. Check out the article below to read how the filmmakers wanted to redo it on a bigger budget, but were eventually able to release it in its original form, with some edits. And how it's the latest word-of-mouth success in film.


    Video: http://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRF7JRPwTOI


    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20091014/ap_en_ot/us_film_paranormal_activity

    `Paranormal Activity' achieves abnormal success


    In this film publicity image released by Paramount Pictures, a scene from the AP – In this film publicity image released by Paramount Pictures, a scene from the film, 'Paranormal Activity,' …

    LOS ANGELES – The critics have spoken. Here's what more than a few have to say:

    "Scariest movie of the decade."

    "Scariest movie of my life."

    "Scariest movie of our time!"

    For Hollywood studio flicks, such raves usually are no more than icing on top of a marketing campaign that cost tens of millions. For "Paranormal Activity," the raves are the marketing campaign.

    The comments above, repeated over and over again in various contexts on Twitter and Facebook — along with other online fan buzz — propelled the micro-budgeted horror movie to a $7.9 million weekend in just 160 theaters. That's a colossal average of $49,379 a theater, compared with $11,429 in 3,000 theaters for "Couples Retreat," which debuted as the weekend's No. 1 movie with $34.3 million.

    "Couples Retreat" has stars — Vince Vaughn, Jon Favreau, Kristen Bell, Kristin Davis — plus the traditional mammoth studio sales push — one that included TV spots, billboards and a chic junket for Hollywood reporters on Bora Bora.

    "Paranormal Activity" mainly has just its fans — a legion growing by the minute as more and more people post their thoughts.

    Distributor Paramount Pictures so far has spent only a couple of million dollars promoting the movie, a fraction of the marketing budget for big releases. Most of that money has gone into its Web site and to set up screenings to build the buzz.

    "This movie doesn't lend itself to a big, giant marketing campaign. This movie is an old-fashioned word-of-mouth movie," said Rob Moore, Paramount vice chairman. "By and large, at today's production budgets, it's really hard to say, `All right, now we're going to rely on the audience and their word of mouth to make it work.' Not when you have tens of millions of dollars in production costs invested in the movie."

    The studio has only a pittance invested in "Paranormal Activity." Shot by writer-director Oren Peli for a reported $15,000, the movie was acquired by former Paramount partner DreamWorks at 2008's Slamdance Film Festival.

    The original idea was to reshoot the movie, putting more money and gloss into the documentary-style fictional tale of a couple tormented by strange phenomenon and apparitions.

    But Paramount decided Peli's raw little fright film could stand on its own. The studio trimmed the movie a bit and punched up the ending, then tried to figure out the best way to hook fans.

    In keeping with the movie's do-it-yourself indie spirit, Paramount started with midnight-only screenings in 13 cities, then let the online community decide where the movie would play next.

    Over the second weekend of midnight shows, "Paranormal Activity" expanded to 20 more markets where it got the most requests from a Web site the studio had set up. Fans continued to vote, deciding the movie's next destinations as it went into all-day release in 46 markets this past weekend; the studio plans to continue rolling the movie out to more theaters based on what towns request it the most.

    The fan base has grown exponentially as more people saw the movie, then jumped online to write about it. "Paranormal Activity" has lingered on and off for days among Twitter's most-popular "trending topics," where it remained on Tuesday.

    "On the social-networking sites, everybody's talking about how freaking scary this movie is," said Paul Dergarabedian, box-office analyst for Hollywood.com. "This does not happen every day. This is literally capturing lightning in a bottle."

    Finishing at No. 4 for the weekend, just ahead of the "Toy Story" 3-D double-feature and just behind "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs," "Paranormal Activity" raised its total haul so far to $9.1 million.

    Internet hype has become part of every movie's marketing plan, but online buzz generally is a supplement to traditional advertising. Another indie horror tale, 1999's "The Blair Witch Project," became the biggest hit ever discovered at the Sundance Film Festival as months of online chatter pushed it to a $140 million haul.

    Preceded by similar Web patter, 2006's "Snakes on a Plane" wound up fizzling, fans deciding it was more fun to sound off about the movie online than to actually see it.

    With a combination of Internet buzz and cryptic advertising, Paramount created an aura of mystery around producer J.J. Abrams' monster movie "Cloverfield," turning it into a solid hit last year.

    Paramount is adding hundreds more theaters this Friday, a critical weekend that will help determine if "Paranormal Activity" graduates from impressive indie success to full-blown phenomenon.

    Could "Paranormal Activity" be the new "Blair Witch," riding online mania to join the $100 million hit club?

    "That would seem highly improbable, since it hasn't happened this decade," Paramount's Moore said. "I certainly wouldn't attach a goal at that level, but it certainly has turned into a major success, and the next several weeks will determine what level of success it'll reach."


Entry comments (8)

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  • JoanneSanderson
    posted on Monday, Oct 19, 2009 3:56AM [Report]
    It's good to hear about a success story such as this for indie films, I've never heard about it, but word of mouth is always one of the things that make me want to see a movie.
  • RenRen
    posted on Sunday, Oct 18, 2009 12:01PM [Report]
    I've never heard of this movie until last night when my friend and I were trying to figure out which movie to watch. I was only aware of this movie when my friend specifically pointed out that she didn't want to watch it.
  • wendycheng
    Official artist 
    posted on Sunday, Oct 18, 2009 2:13AM
    No, I actually didn't know about it earlier... I don't keep up a lot with things these days... except for my own work. This film played at Slamdance the year before I was there. But I was happy to find out about it's success :) Esp. as we're programming... it gives new perspective to what we are doing.
  • mariejost
    Official artist 
    posted on Saturday, Oct 17, 2009 9:48AM [Report]
    When I first read about this film, I thought I should pass along a ref.  Seems you knew about it all a long, long before I did.
  • Flagday
    posted on Saturday, Oct 17, 2009 6:53AM [Report]
    The reviews seem divergent.  They either say super scary or overhyped - boring.  The key is getting asses in the seats when the thing cost $15000 to make and very little to promote.  I was creeped out by Blair Witch from time to time but the last 10 minutes made me crap my pants.  lol  What I do like is the idea of few special effects and no blood yet scaring you with the anticipation of horror.
  • Dreamy
    posted on Saturday, Oct 17, 2009 4:24AM [Report]
    i just saw it last night.........
  • andy_lau_spain
    posted on Saturday, Oct 17, 2009 2:43AM [Report]
    I watched it last week, loved it =)
    Although I presonally would have played a lil bit more with the backgrounds...as in shadows, or things changing place...
  • peachey
    posted on Saturday, Oct 17, 2009 2:34AM [Report]
    Whether it's $15K or $150m, if the film's got the elusive 'goods,' it should expect to do well. Hooray for indie! I haven't even seen Blair Witch bc I'm too afraid. If the internet was what it was when BW premiered, I think it would've made even more at the b.o., don't you agree?

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