Movie Review — “Parnormal Activity: The Marked Ones”

ImageWith “Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones”, this found footage franchise abandons the lull you to sleep creepiness of found surveillance footage for full on shaky cam and an altogether more conventional horror movie plot.

But as exhausted as this series and the genre it comes from is, it still manages a few decent jolts thanks to that new approach and a pretty good cast’s reactions to what they, and we, see through the video camera’s viewfinder.

Writer-director Christopher Landon Latinizes the tale, setting this installment among Angelinos in the barrio — teenagers, gang-bangers, abuelas and the like. And even as he recycles some of the funny stereotypes Marlon Wayans & Co. sent up in the “Paranormal” parody, “A Haunted House,” he finds frights and fun in that found footage.

Jesse (Andrew Jacobs) gets a camera for his high school graduation present. He and his pal Hector (Jorge Diaz) and Marisol (Gabrielle Walsh) play with it, taping parties, pickup basketball games and the like. That gets under the skin of the occasional gang banger, but that comes with the territory.

But the crazy lady downstairs in Jesse’s complex is truly out of the ordinary. They hear weird noises, slip the camera down the heat vents and tape a strange sexual ritual. And then Ana dies, killed by Jesse and Hector’s class valedictorian, Oscar (Carlos Pratts). Looking at Oscar, they can see, as we can see, that this boy isn’t right in the head.

The boys will be boys stuff is reasonably realistic. And the stumbling panic about what is happening with these people who knew the late Ana, whom all the kids called “bruja” (witch) is sharply realized. Call the cops!

“Call the cops and tell them WHAT?:

Jesse’s Spanish-speaking granny knows, and her approach to the problem is old school and old school horror.

The bottom line of any horror picture matches your neckline — as in, “Does it make the hairs of your neck stand up?” The answer here, as silly and weary as these movies are, is “Yes. A few times.”

But the jokes, intentional and unintentional, give away why “The Marked Ones” was dumped on the dead first weekend of January. It was never going to be much better than mediocre.

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MPAA Rating: R for pervasive language, some violence, graphic nudity and some drug use

Cast: Andrew Jacobs, Gabrielle Walsh, Jorge Diaz, Katie Featherston, Richard Cabral

Credits: Written and directed by Christopher Landon. A Paramount release.

Running time: 1:24

About Roger Moore

Movie Critic, formerly with McClatchy-Tribune News Service, Orlando Sentinel, published in Spin Magazine, The World and now published here, Orlando Magazine, Autoweek Magazine
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