Amazon Prime states "A filmmaker tries to prove that ghosts are real but soon regrets his intentions after he finds himself being terrorized in a haunted house by a ghost with a dark past. An authentic documentary that shows actual ghost footage that was captured on camera" (Amazon 2017). It has a 59 minute runtime and only lists one "star," Ruth Blackwell, a character who only appears in the film as a photograph. It seems to have gained a cult following among horror movie fans who are unsure if it is real or fiction."

I was able to match those scenes to a film called Disaster L.A., a low-budget zombie flick from 2014. The name of the filmmaker there was Turner Clay, but Clay is a total ghost online. I found no actual pictures of him and so I could not verify that the man in the film was the man who made the movie.


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Honestly, I don't have a thing about ghost stories. I find it too mainstream and unbelievable art some point. I told myself that I will never believe stories like this until I see it through myself. But when I watched a documentary entitled "The Blackwell Ghost", it was pretty convincing and look realistic. Even the photo and video experts couldn't say that they clips were edited because it's 100% legit and they cannot provide an explanation for what they just saw. That sounds creepy, isn't it?

A filmmaker tries to prove that ghosts are real but soon regrets his intentions after he finds himself being terrorized in a haunted house by a ghost with a dark past. An authentic documentary that shows actual ghost footage that was captured on camera.

Incontrovertibly, one hundred percent real documentary starring Turner Clay, Terri Czapleski and Sonny Burnette that draws deeply on the (60ft deep basement) well of Paranormal Activity - it even name checks it at one point - and the plethora of panicky-people-in-the-dark, green-lit 'reality' tv ghost stalker progs that sprang up in its wake. Seriously, who was green-lighting all that shit? It's not technically found footage as the conceit involves a filmmaker deciding to make a documentary about an allegedly haunted house by staying there with his wife for a couple of nights to see if they can get any documented evidence of supernatural business. But fuck technicalities, it's basically a found footage film.

Another found footage horror :D

This one is about a guy and his wife that go into a haunted house to make a documentary that ghosts are (or not) real. It's pretty straight forward.

It's very paranormal activityesque, but in a good way because it does not exploit too much the scenes around the house where nothing or slightly nothing happens. It creates tension just the right way.

Watch it if you want to be spooked. I fucking love horror movies.

Mildly spooky, ghost investigating faux-doc by a Z-grade horror movie director, including his 'I'm so done w/ this bullshit rn' wife - centered on an old house where a serial murderess once lived: a baby killer, who disposed of the bodies down a water well, located in the house's basement.

At only an hour long, this mockumentory follows the exploitsof Turner Clay as he puts his zombie movies on hold to look into whether ghostsare real. After putting out a call for paranormal experiences, only one piqueshis interest, a house in Pennsylvania where the owner experiences ghostlyactivity almost every day. It turns out a previous owner, Ruth Blackwell, hadkilled several local children and hidden the bodies in the drain beneath thehouse. What a lovely lady.

From IMDB: The senior partner of an investment brokerage, Jeffrey Desange,has a breakdown due to a financial collapse and kills several co-workers andhis estranged wife. He then kidnaps his two young daughters, Victoria 3 andLilly just 1. He drives his car recklessly through a winding snow covered road.He loses control of his car and drives off an embankment. He finds an abandonedand isolated cabin where he plans to kill his daughters, but the children aresaved by a dark ghostly image. tag_hash_112

Blackwell is a series of five graphic adventure video games from independent game developer Wadjet Eye Games, created by Dave Gilbert. The games' plots focus on Rosangela Blackwell, a spiritual medium, and her spirit guide Joey Mallone, who work to help ghosts transition to the afterlife.

The first game in the series, The Blackwell Legacy, was released on December 23, 2006. The protagonist of the game is Rosangela Blackwell (Rosa), who is a young freelance writer living a solitary life in New York City. Her only close relative, her aunt Lauren Blackwell, dies following years of being in a coma in the local hospital. Shortly afterward, Rosa is asked to write about a suicide in a college dorm for a small newspaper. Rosa experiences headaches throughout the day culminating in a ghost named Joey Mallone appearing in her apartment. He explains that she is a "medium" like her aunt and that her job is to assist ghosts stuck in the real world to "move on". Reluctantly she accepts the explanation and proceeds to solve a case about the girl whose ghost is now haunting a dog park. She discovers that the girl is one of three close friends, who summoned a restless ghost with Ouija board; two of the friends have already committed suicide. She learns how to help the ghost. The third girl also attempts to commit suicide but is taken to the hospital, where Rosa finds her and the restless ghost. She then helps the ghost move on as well.[1] Afterwards, Rosa asks Joey why did Lauren stop being a medium. Joey says it is because Lauren wanted to raise Rosa after the latter's parents died in a car accident. Pondering this, and with her writing career going nowhere fast, Rosa decides to follow in her aunt's footsteps and become a medium full-time.

The main protagonist of the series, living in modern day New York City. Having been brought up in foster care after the early death of her parents and Institutionalisation of her aunt, Rosa is a reserved introvert who struggles with communication, though she is hardly interested in befriending others. She starts the series as a fledgling writer and journalist, but quickly embraces her role as a medium. Over the course of the series, she becomes determined and fierce in her resolve to help ghosts move on, even accumulating multiple restraining orders over the course of her work. She is incredibly defiant at times, and can be dismissive of Joey, but always cares enough to do the right thing.

Nishanti, a resident of the same apartment complex as Rosa, possesses contrasting personality traits that make her an amiable and outgoing individual. Notably, she possesses a high EQ, which allows her to perceive things that many others cannot, inadvertently aiding Rosa in her ghostly encounters. In later games, Nishanti embarks on travels, and communication with Rosa is limited to email. Despite their close proximity, Nishanti remains unaware of Rosa's spiritual medium abilities.

The primary antagonist of the second and third games. The Countess was originally a spirit medium who lived during the Roaring 20s. Her real name is Jocelyn Contis. Unlike Rosa, Jocelyn resented her job as a medium, preferring to spend her nights dancing with her peers than with Madeline, her guide. Shortly after the Great Depression hit, Jocelyn decided to sever her connection to Madeline, and in doing so, she would go mad looking for a new spirit guide, and began referring to herself as the Countess. She would attach herself to other humans and, in the process, create more ghosts rather than help them move on. She is killed by Lauren, but doesn't rest until Rosa helps her spirit move on several decades later.

In "The Blackwell Ghost 6," the filmmaker Turner Clay embarks on a mission to document supernatural occurrences using his camera. While capturing paranormal events, he must also protect his children from a malevolent ghost haunting their home. The film sets the stage for a mysterious and incomplete haunting, leaving viewers with unanswered questions.

Lawsuit plaintiff Bryan Muehlberger said he had never heard of ghost guns until November, when his 15-year-old daughter, Gracie Anne Muehlberger, was one of two students killed by a shooter using a ghost gun at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita. e24fc04721

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