What constitutes a horror documentary? Is it a documentary about a horror film or television series, or, is it a documentary that’s content is horror based? I believe it’s the latter, being that the subject matter of the documentary is rooted within the horror genre. It could really be about anything that is interpreted as frightening or scary. Urban myths, historical content or even the human condition. Sometimes a really great horror documentary can be every bit as good as a really good horror movie. The field of possible topics is a vast and almost boundless space. I have chosen a small collective of films that I consider to be both imposing and intriguing.
The documentary is by Joshua Zeman (The Killing Season and Killer Legends) and Barbara Brancaccio. Both filmmakers grew up on Staten Island and writer Zeman, wanted to explore the mythology behind the tales of ‘the boogeyman’ he had been terrified of since his childhood, and the link to Andre Rand the man found guilty of Jennifer Schweiger’s murder and presumed responsible for the disappearance of several other kids. This documentary isn’t the stock standard type of presentation. It’s dramatic, moody and delivered with real horror-film, eerie flare. There are the typical Zeman dramatizations but overall, it’s a solid film and thoroughly fascinating.
The link of the “Hookman” legend to the Texarkana Murders was made infamous in the film The Town That Dreaded Sundown (1976). In Texarkana, Texas teenagers that dared to go ‘parking’ in Lovers Lane after dark were being brutally murdered by a masked assailant, a case that is still unsolved. For the Candyman, Zeman and Mills head to Houston, Texas to look at Ronald Clark O’Bryan, the man convicted of poisoning his 8-year-old son with cyanide-laced pixie sticks, for the insurance money. They examine the case of Janett Christman, a teenager raped and murdered while babysitting in Columbia, Missouri in 1950. The man believed to be responsible for the crime had been convicted of a similar crime and executed, however, Zeman and Mills suggest the possibility of another perpetrator who had been infatuated with Christman. And finally, the killer clown is associated with the notorious serial killer John Wayne Gacy, a man convicted of torturing and killing 33 young men and boys in Chicago. This documentary is somewhat amplified for dramatic effect, but generally, it’s a unique and interesting insight into some disturbing yet intriguing contemporary American lore.
In 2014 two 12-year-old girls brutally stabbed their friend, impelled by the Slenderman. The documentary is quite confronting and astounding. Documentarian Irene Taylor Brodsky explores the relationships of the girls, the catastrophic consequences of their actions and the association of blame that connects this crime to a media-based entity. The film also looks at the subject of Schizophrenia and how an undiagnosed disorder bared an impact under these circumstances. As I mentioned, this film is extremely eye-opening and also deeply heart-breaking at times, with the focus on how and why a crime like this came to be committed. A horror film entitled Slenderman (2018) was based on the internet phenomenon but not the case.
Whether you’re a believer or a sceptic, this film is extremely engrossing. It’s chock-full of haunted-house goodness and makes for a very convincing argument in the Ammons family’s favour. There are some extremely cringe-worthy ‘reenactments’ that the viewer should definitely overlook but, the eerie moments captured on film make it really difficult to disparage what you are actually witnessing. There are moments that will have you scratching your head with this film. If you choose to believe what you are seeing then you will in fact believe that this house was where some very dark and baffling events occurred. At the very least it is an extremely entertaining film that waivers between documentary and horror fable. Bagans had the ‘diabolic’ residence demolished in 2016 (the demolition is included in the documentary).
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