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Turner Clay Returns with ‘The Blackwell Ghost 2’

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He’s baaaa-aaack! Turner Clay, the man who brought us one of last year’s most talked about paranormal films The Blackwell Ghost, has returned, quietly making available The Blackwell Ghost 2 with as little fanfare as the last film.

Many of you will recall my article following the first film’s release in which I dug into the story the documentary tells to try to separate fact from fiction.

What I found seemed to place the film firmly under the fiction heading.

Since that time, other details have emerged. For instance, Mr. Clay lists only a few films (mostly of the zombie variety) under his IMDb profile, And yet, as a few people brought to my attention, there’s a film called Phoenix Tapes ’97, a found footage film involving aliens. Clay is definitely one of the stars of the film, but like so many things involving the filmmaker, it’s almost a complete ghost online outside of a few images.

Turner Clay in Phoenix Tapes ’97 (left) and The Blackwell Ghost (right)

Then there was the fact that “Greg”, the owner of the Blackwell House turned out to be a musician and actor who was on the faculty of a college in Kentucky.

These tidbits aside, The Blackwell Ghost is a highly entertaining film that I have recommended numerous times over the last year when people come to me for paranormal or found footage suggestions. It’s just a lot of fun with a simple premise executed like an expert.

Still, though I’ve wondered from time to time what Clay might have been up to, I was completely caught off guard when I pulled up YouTube and saw a trailer for The Blackwell Ghost 2.

Shared on the YouTube channel JimmyNut22, which has become popular for its paranormal videos. I love the channel and have had my suspicions for some time that it belongs to Clay but that is entirely speculation.

Regardless, I quickly switched over to Amazon and laid down the $10 to purchase the sequel and sat back to see what the filmmaker had in store.

As it turns out, after the first film, Clay went back and made another zombie film called Raccoon Valley, which has been playing various festivals over the last year. It was then, he said, that he received a package in the mail which contained a few photos, a letter, and a record.

The letter, and the email that soon followed, came from a woman who claims to have grown up, part of the time, with the Blackwell family, and without any pretense at all, she signed over the rights to Mrs. Blackwell’s remaining possessions and informed him that the photos were of some of her victims. She also said she included the record because it had been Mrs. Blackwell’s favorite song.

With that, we were off to the races with Clay hurrying back to the house in an attempt to uncover what remained of its secrets, but not until after he reminded us that regardless of what audiences thought, this was completely real.

I may be paranoid, but it felt like he was pointing a finger at me. We’ll save that for later, though.

Once again, Clay proved he’s very good at setting mood by using the simplest of devices. A few overturned chairs, a record player turning on by itself, and the sounds of phantom footsteps held my attention throughout the film.

I found myself searching the screen closely to spot the smallest details, and my pulse quickened as those events ramped to higher levels at just the right moments.

To put it simply, as with the first, I was enthralled. However, and this is something to consider, it followed the sequel rules almost perfectly.

The scares were larger, and the activity, more blatant. In fact, the sequel lacks most of  the first film’s subtlety, and does nothing to promote the idea that this was documentary which brings me back to my previous point.

Unfortunately, like most sequels, even though I was highly entertained, it never quite lived up to the first.

Throughout my first article on The Blackwell Ghost, I repeated that I am a believer in the paranormal and have experienced it throughout my life. I want to believe that Clay’s film is real, but I just can’t bring myself to do it.

My thorough research on the first film simply would not let me believe fully, and in this second film, he posts a disclaimer as it begins saying that some names and locations have been changed to protect the innocent.

Now, I can see changing a name…I can even see changing the location of the house within the state of Pennsylvania (or withholding it altogether which he does in both films), but facts are facts. If a filmmaker lists a Pennsylvania archive service as a source, then at some point in the state’s history someone should be able to identify a series of murders like the one described, and none of my sources could do so.

Now, don’t get me wrong, I believe the writer/director is very good at what he’s doing. He is creating paranormal content that is engaging, scary, and that leaves his audiences on the edge of their seats in the way that Paranormal Activity and The Blair Witch Project have in the past.

The Blackwell Ghost 2 is a lot of fun and fans of the first will definitely want to check it out on Amazon. You can view the trailer below.

But, if I may, I’d like to end this article with a plea and a promise to Mr. Turner Clay:

If you’re out there, and I’m sure you are, and you happen to read this, and I’m sure you will, I’d love for you to prove me wrong. As I said before, I want to believe your story. I just need the final pieces of the puzzle to get there. Prove it to me, and I’ll be happy to print that story.

I’m pretty easy to find: [email protected]. I hope to hear from you soon!

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Original Blair Witch Cast Ask Lionsgate for Retroactive Residuals in Light of New Film

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The Blair Witch Project Cast

Jason Blum is planning to reboot The Blair Witch Project for the second time. That’s a fairly large task considering none of the reboots or sequels have managed to capture the magic of the 1999 film that brought found footage into the mainstream.

This idea has not been lost on the original Blair Witch cast, who has recently reached out to Lionsgate to ask for what they feel is fair compensation for their role in the pivotal film. Lionsgate gained access to The Blair Witch Project in 2003 when they purchased Artisan Entertainment.

Blair witch
The Blair Witch Project Cast

However, Artisan Entertainment was an independent studio before its purchase, meaning the actors were not part of SAG-AFTRA. As a result, the cast are not entitled to the same residuals from the project as actors in other major films. The cast doesn’t feel that the studio should be able to continue to profit off of their hard work and likenesses without fair compensation.

Their most recent request asks for “meaningful consultation on any future ‘Blair Witch’ reboot, sequel, prequel, toy, game, ride, escape room, etc., in which one could reasonably assume that Heather, Michael & Josh’s names and/or likenesses will be associated for promotional purposes in the public sphere.”

The blair witch project

At this time, Lionsgate has not offered any comment about this issue.

The full statement made by the cast can be found below.

OUR ASKS OF LIONSGATE (From Heather, Michael & Josh, stars of “The Blair Witch Project”):

1. Retroactive + future residual payments to Heather, Michael and Josh for acting services rendered in the original BWP, equivalent to the sum that would’ve been allotted through SAG-AFTRA, had we had proper union or legal representation when the film was made.

2. Meaningful consultation on any future Blair Witch reboot, sequel, prequel, toy, game, ride, escape room, etc…, in which one could reasonably assume that Heather, Michael & Josh’s names and/or likenesses will be associated for promotional purposes in the public sphere.

Note: Our film has now been rebooted twice, both times were a disappointment from a fan/box office/critical perspective. Neither of these films were made with significant creative input from the original team. As the insiders who created the Blair Witch and have been listening to what fans love & want for 25 years, we’re your single greatest, yet thus-far un-utilized secret-weapon!

3. “The Blair Witch Grant”: A 60k grant (the budget of our original movie), paid out yearly by Lionsgate, to an unknown/aspiring genre filmmaker to assist in making theirfirst feature film. This is a GRANT, not a development fund, hence Lionsgate will not own any of the underlying rights to the project.

A PUBLIC STATEMENT FROM THE DIRECTORS & PRODUCERS OF “THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT”:

As we near the 25th anniversary of The Blair Witch Project, our pride in the storyworld we created and the film we produced is reaffirmed by the recent announcement of a reboot by horror icons Jason Blum and James Wan.

While we, the original filmmakers, respect Lionsgate’s right to monetize the intellectual property as it sees fit, we must highlight the significant contributions of the original cast — Heather Donahue, Joshua Leonard, and Mike Williams. As the literal faces of what has become a franchise, their likenesses, voices, and real names are inseparably tied to The Blair Witch Project. Their unique contributions not only defined the film’s authenticity but continue to resonate with audiences around the world.

We celebrate our film’s legacy, and equally, we believe the actors deserve to be celebrated for their enduring association with the franchise.

Sincerely, Eduardo Sanchez, Dan Myrick, Gregg Hale, Robin Cowie, and Michael Monello

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Spider-Man With a Cronenberg Twist in This Fan-Made Short

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Spider

What if Peter Parker were more like Brundlefly and after being bitten by a spider he didn’t just take on the traits of the insect, but slowly turned into one? It’s an interesting idea, one that Andy Chen’s short nine-minute film The Spider explores.

Starring Chandler Riggs as Peter, this brief film (not affiliated with Marvel) has a horror twist and it’s surprisingly effective. Graphic and gooey, The Spider is what happens when the superhero universe collides with the horror universe to make an eight-legged terror baby.

Chen is the best kind of young horror filmmaker. He can appreciate the classics and incorporate them into his modern vision. If Chen continues to make content like this, he’s destined to be on the big screen joining the iconic directors he shadows.

Check out The Spider below:

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Brad Dourif Says He’s Retiring Except For One Important Role

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Brad Dourif has been doing movies for nearly 50 years. Now it seems he is walking away from the industry at 74 to enjoy his golden years. Except, there is a caveat.

Recently, digital entertainment publication JoBlo’s Tyler Nichols talked to some of the Chucky television series cast members. During the interview, Dourif made an announcement.

“Dourif said that he’s retired from acting,” says Nichols. “The only reason he came back for the show was because of his daughter Fiona and he considers Chucky creator Don Mancini to be family. But for non-Chucky stuff, he considers himself retired.”

Dourif has voiced the possessed doll since 1988 (minus the 2019 reboot). The original movie “Child’s Play” has become such a cult classic it’s at the top of some people’s best chillers of all time. Chucky himself is ingrained in pop culture history much like Frankenstein or Jason Voorhees.

While Dourif may be known for his famous voiceover, he is also an Oscar-nominated actor for his part in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Another famous horror role is The Gemini Killer in William Peter Blatty’s Exorcist III. And who can forget Betazoid Lon Suder in Star Trek: Voyager?

The good news is that Don Mancini is already pitching a concept for season four of Chucky which might also include a feature-length movie with a series tie-in. So, Although Dourif says he is retiring from the industry, ironically he is Chucky’s friend till the end.

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