I'm not sure how to reply to this other than. . . wtf?
I have many problems with so-called documentaries, number one being that they distort the truth and wrongly convince gullible, superstitious fools (90% of my country, America) to believe in magic and bullshit. Those fools then go on to believe more in all the stupid little "magical" coincidences in their lives, and the cycle feeds itself until you have mobs taking away the children of Wiccans and xtians murdering their siblings for being "possessed."
You need to let anyone who thinks that "The Devil Inside" is real know that, if it were, it would be national news. Not a hollywood movie. Second, at best, it's a re-enactment, for obvious reasons. You don't just film a car crash in action involving the subjects of your "documentary" without doing anything to stop it. Third, their imagery is false. For example, in one of the commercials, I saw an inverted cross. They put this in because it scares xtians. In reality, the inverted cross is a holy symbol. The simple fact that they made up that tidbit just to scare people should cast doubt on the credibility of the rest of the movie.
Another issue I have with movies that claim to be real (and are not) is that they can get away with no story at all, just due to the scare factor of it being (supposedly) real. It undermines movie quality everywhere.
I have many problems with so-called documentaries, number one being that they distort the truth and wrongly convince gullible, superstitious fools (90% of my country, America) to believe in magic and bullshit. Those fools then go on to believe more in all the stupid little "magical" coincidences in their lives, and the cycle feeds itself until you have mobs taking away the children of Wiccans and xtians murdering their siblings for being "possessed."
You need to let anyone who thinks that "The Devil Inside" is real know that, if it were, it would be national news. Not a hollywood movie. Second, at best, it's a re-enactment, for obvious reasons. You don't just film a car crash in action involving the subjects of your "documentary" without doing anything to stop it. Third, their imagery is false. For example, in one of the commercials, I saw an inverted cross. They put this in because it scares xtians. In reality, the inverted cross is a holy symbol. The simple fact that they made up that tidbit just to scare people should cast doubt on the credibility of the rest of the movie.
Another issue I have with movies that claim to be real (and are not) is that they can get away with no story at all, just due to the scare factor of it being (supposedly) real. It undermines movie quality everywhere.
What falls away is always, and is near.
Also, I am not pretending to be female, this profile picture is my wonderful girlfriend. XD