Synopsis
An expedition looks for answers to something horrible in the forest, but the forest finds something horrible in them.
One Morning in New England, 1940, the entire population of Friar New Hampshire - 572 people - walked together up a winding mountain trail and into the wilderness. They left behind their clothes, their money, all of their essentials. Even their dogs were abandoned, tied to posts and left to starve. No One knows why. A search party dispatched by the U.S. Army eventually discovered the remains of nearly 300 of Friar's evacuees. Many had frozen to death. Others were cruelly and mysteriously slaughtered. The bodies of the remaining citizens are still unaccounted for. Over the years, a quiet cover-up operation managed to weave the story of Friar into the stuff of legends and backwoods fairy tales. The town has slowly repopulated, but the vast wilderness is mostly untracked, with the northern-most stretches off limits to local hunters and loggers. In 2008, the coordinates for the "YELLOWBRICKROAD" trail head were declassified. The first official expedition into a dark and twisted wilderness will attempt to solve the mystery of the lost citizens of Friar...and reach the end of the trail.
Official Review
Even a decade later The Blair Witch Project is continuing to have an impact on our genre. While experiencing another Paranormal Activity is like winning the lottery, there are still a few films that took the verite-style subgenre and delivered a gem (REC, Cloverfield). Then there are those inspired by that style of filmmaking who take things in their own direction. Such the case with Jesse Holland and Andy Mitton’s YellowBrickRoad, a glossy, well-polished mind-bender that’s been overlooked by pretty much everyone – and that’s a damn shame. …Read More
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