They're going to have to start issuing licenses to all these filmmakers who insist on shooting their movies in the shaky-cam "found footage" format. Maybe have the "Blair Witch" guys and Oren "Paranormal Activity" Peli sign those licenses.
Because something needs to be done to limit this explosion of cell-cam/security cam/nanny cam and GoPro footage that's dominating the Horror Hit Parade.
Those "Quarantine" and "Poughkeepsie Tapes" Minnesotans, the Dowdle brothers, overuse and abuse handheld cameras for "As Above/So Below," a thriller about what might come after you in the catacombs beneath Paris.
It's a modest marriage of "Indiana Jones" and "Da Vinci Code" archaeological puzzle-solving with the denizens of "The Descent," supernaturally attached, almost as an afterthought. And for all the paranoia that climbing through dark caves beneath Paris promises, the Dowdles insist on a headache-inducing orgy of bouncing, tumbling cameras to seal the deal.
In a "Last Crusade" prologue, urban archaeologist Scarlett (Perdita Weeks) videos herself sneaking into Iran in an attempt to poke around some caves before the superstitious government blows up some priceless piece of human history.
Her Iranian contact warns her not to follow her late archaeologist dad's footsteps.
"His quest was a path to madness."
But she is nothing if not single-minded. She finds evidence of this "Philosopher's Stone" talisman he was looking for, and surviving the demolition of the caves (shaky/dusty cam), sets out to Paris to finish his search for the alchemist's ultimate prize — a magic rock.