
WHAT’S IT ABOUT
When the Paranormal Activity franchise put Blumhouse on the map as a production company, the Asylum must have taken notice. The low-budget, found-footage horror films did incredibly well at the box office, and ushered in a successful business model for Jason Blum’s production company. But the Asylum seemed to learn the wrong lesson from Paranormal Activity. Instead of recognizing that low-budget films could be watchable, they apparently decided that they could make even lower-budget, unwatchable films.

Found-footage ghost stories complete with a disclaimer at the beginning from made-up authorities, and supposedly depicts several spooky incidents that lead up to a murder. This film is entirely unremarkable, but you have to give the Asylum credit for taking their parodies beyond the major studios.
Paranormal Entity – 12/22/2009 – A paranormal investigator who was imprisoned for murdering his sister, claimed demons were responsible for the crime, years later the truth is finally revealed when terrifying footage of the event is discovered.
Paranormal Entity 2 (8213 Gacy House) – 09/28/2010 – Ghost hunters wire a serial killer’s home with paranormal detection equipment and get terrifying and grisly results.
Paranormal Entity 3 (Annelise: The Exorcist Tapes) – 03/01/2011 – A young woman suffers from mysterious ailments, and paranormal phenomena plague her house until a priest arrives to perform an exorcism.
Paranormal Entity 4 (100 Ghost Street: The Return of Richard Speck) – 07/24/2012 – Paranormal investigators try to film Richard Speck’s ghost at the site of his heinous killing spree.
MoviesInMo says:
Heavily influenced by
Paranormal Activity franchise
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