![]() If you see a crazy car crash right now, boom - we'll definitely take out our phones, Twitter, Instagram it.ĭiaz: In, our characters are uploading stuff on Youtube. Jacobs: I think social media has an influence on it, definitely. Jorge, do you think what you're talking about concerning people not putting the camera down is a product of our current social media how we want to document things so much in modern society? If "found footage" were possible when 'Psycho' was made fifty years ago, do you think it would have been done in the same way? ![]() Everybody from Paramount, everybody works very hard to show this, and it's not just three people. I actually feel like - and this is my first project ever, I've never worked on anything else, no TV show, nothing - but hearing from people like Jorge and my cast mates who have worked on this stuff, this is a lot of hard work. ![]() In reality, it's a huge process, and a lot of work. Why do we keep shooting? Why not?!Īndrew Jacobs: I think that a lot of people, while they are watching the film, must think that must have been handed a camera, and that it was just three guys running around filming something. It would be insane footage to have, and bring validation that there is actual paranormal activity in the world, you know what I mean? That's where there are shows like "Ghost Hunters," you want the evidence, right? Why wouldn't you shoot it? There are so many shows that are about trying to get footage, and then they criticize when we have something that's supposed to be found footage, and we have the evidence of it. No one is going to believe that my buddy is possessed or anything. But maybe the biggest misconception is that I always read, "Another movie where the guy doesn't put the camera down!" And I'm thinking, in real life you're going through such crazy circumstances, why wouldn't you want to have evidence of that? I feel like if I'm about to die, I want at least this evidence to leave behind, so they can point at whoever is responsible for my death or whatever happens. Jorge Diaz: I don't know if this answers it, but I didn't expect to have as much fun as I did shooting it. What do you feel is the biggest misconception about found footage movies? Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones is now playing everywhere. Speaking with the guys a week after the film opened, we talked about not putting the camera down, the demand for more Hispanic characters in movies, what Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones has to say about Martin Scorsese's recent words, and more. Diaz has acted previously, having appeared in films like Filly Brown, TV shows like "True Blood," "Boston Public," and video games "Grand Theft Auto V" and "Dead Rising 3." The film stands as the acting debut of Jacobs, who can also be seen performing as a street dancer in Los Angeles. It is written and directed by Christopher Landon, who previously wrote Disturbia and three Paranormal Activity movies. The fifth film in the found footage franchise, Paranormal Activity: The Marked Ones takes its arc of supernatural shenanigans to Oxnard, CA, where teens Jesse (Andrew Jacobs), Hector (Jorge Diaz), and Marisol (Gabrielle Walsh) encounter strange forces in their apartment complex.
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