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Interestingly enough, “The Blair Witch Project” did not only lend the basic story idea and the general approach from “The Last Broadcast”, but also used exactly the same marketing techniques and tricks to increase the publicity for their picture. In 1998 Avalos and Weiler visited the Sundance Film Festival with “The Last Broadcast” in their backpack. The movie had been under serious consideration for a midnight viewing at the Festival but was suddenly pulled for a number of reasons. |
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Everything seems to be identical between these films and one can’t help but feel warped in a time-space-continuum when following the details, but the major difference is that “The Last Broadcast” was finished a full two years before “The Blair Witch Project” unleashed its attack on the box office. For the young filmmakers who created “The Last Broadcast” this must have been an almost traumatic experience one would think, but Lance Weiler, is surprisingly rational in his take. |
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thought it would resolve from something like that,” he adds sarcastically. As surprising as this attitude may seem, Weiler shows a maturity in his attitude that is truly astonishing. He recognizes the fact that apart from “The Last Broadcast” having been the smash hit, riding the tidal wave out as the predecessor to the controversial smash hit, is the next best thing that could have happened to them. He also sees striking differences between the two films however. “In a way, our movie deals with reality and the way media present this reality. It is almost ironic that we’re pushed in the media spotlight and that we became the cover story on “Extra”, “E!”, “Good Morning America”, the “Howard Stern Show” and so on,” he contemplates. |
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that would gradually expand. The most notable side effect was the signal it send to aspiring filmmakers in the rest of the world that it doesn’t take millions of dollars to create captivating films, and the two told everyone they met on their way, that they too can make films themselves. |
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Nonetheless, the shadow of the Blair Witch is omnipresent, not only for unsuspecting audiences, but for the filmmakers as well, and during the last visit to the Cannes Film Festival they met the creators of the film. “Eduardo Sánchez and Daniel Myrick were on the same flight with us,” Weiler remembers with a laugh of disbelief. “We couldn’t believe they were sitting right in front of us. We were talking about the films a little, but that was about it. Later in Cannes then all sorts of people approached us because they wanted to write stories about both movies. We decided to put it all off, because that’s not how we wanted to be known. The |
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Another movie looms in many people’s minds when it comes to both, “Blair Witch” and “The Last Broadcast”. The 1979 Italian splatter movie “Cannibal Holocaust” used the idea of a news team that discovered a camera and lost footage of a crew that went into the amazon to film cannibals is by many seen the father of both films. “I wish I had seen it,” Weiler comments enthusiastically. “I have heard a lot about it, but in regards to the story and all that it seems to be more in the line of the Fulci school of splatter movies. We have had a lot of people say, you stole that from “Cannibal Holocaust”, and “Cannibal Holocaust” is the original. I’ve heard it might get a re-release, and I’ll definitely check it out. Now, unless I pick it up from some obscure source, there’s no chance for me to see it, and believe me, I would like to see it. I would like to see if our film is indeed similar, and if, where is it similar.” |
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“When it came to the film’s distribution we found ourselves in a dilemma because of economic constraints,” Weiler remembers some of the stepping stones. “We wanted to push the envelope, so much was clear but we could never go to celluloid with our film. Creating a 35mm print runs into the tens of thousands of dollars - money we did not have. We had initial distribution offers form people but we did not want to go with these traditional routes. Stefan had released another picture before and he had some |
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Now, “The Last Broadcast” has been released on DVD, an outlook that gets the young filmmakers excited. “It’s so excellent that it’s finally coming on DVD, the movie we started in 1996,” Weiler says. “When we started the project all films were shot on celluloid, which is very expensive. Our idea came out of the frustration of waiting to shoot on film. Eventually we had this idea to create a digital movie so it can actually be distributed in digital form as well.” |
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© 1997-2001 by “DVD Review”. All rights reserved. |
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