





Lionsgate is bringing the found-footage horror franchise "The Blair Witch Project" back to theaters with a reboot set for a 2027 release. The new film will hit screens on September 24, 2027, according to Rolling Stone, reviving the iconic 1999 independent horror classic that terrified audiences with its grainy, low-tech footage of three student filmmakers lost in the Maryland woods. "The revival of the iconic 1999 found-footage horror classic will bring the franchise back to theaters next fall, continuing the legacy of one of the most influential independent horror films of all time." Variety confirmed the theatrical release date, noting the reboot aims to build on the original's legacy. However, Rolling Stone raised a key question: how can the premise of helplessness in the woods work in an era where everyone carries a smartphone and social media is ubiquitous? The original film relied on characters having no modern technology, a conceit that feels increasingly anachronistic for a TikTok-era audience. Lionsgate has released a teaser on Instagram, but plot details remain undisclosed, as reported by Rolling Stone. The challenge of recontextualizing the story for a world where characters would likely document their ordeal in real time on social media adds a layer of complexity to the reboot's creative direction. "The article highlights the challenge of recontextualizing the original 1999 found-footage horror film, which relied on characters having no smartphones or modern technology, for a TikTok-era audience." This tension between the original's analog dread and modern digital saturation will likely define how the reboot is received. As Lionsgate moves forward, the question remains whether the Blair Witch can still terrify when every lost hiker has a camera in their pocket.


Dialog, an invite-only events group cofounded by Peter Thiel, notified members that a database containing personal information had been breached by a "criminal" hacker. However, a WIRED investigation found that the files were actually exposed due to a misconfigured website landin
Astronomers have determined that interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS, detected nearly a year ago racing through the Solar System at 221,000 km/h, likely originated as long as 12 billion years ago. Using NASA's JWST, researchers analyzed the comet's chemical signature and report in Nature





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