A group of online chatroom friends find themselves haunted by a mysterious, supernatural force using the account of their dead friend.A group of online chatroom friends find themselves haunted by a mysterious, supernatural force using the account of their dead friend.A group of online chatroom friends find themselves haunted by a mysterious, supernatural force using the account of their dead friend.
- Awards
- 3 wins & 6 nominations
Anthony Eftimeo
- Student
- (uncredited)
Michael Herbig
- Officer
- (uncredited)
Tony Hernandez
- Tony Hernandez
- (uncredited)
Konstantin Khabenskiy
- Officer
- (uncredited)
Denis Lyons
- Student
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAll of the Facebook and Skype accounts shown in the film exist and can be found on Facebook and Skype.
- Goofs(at around 29 mins) Initially Blaire shares her entire screen to everyone to show the "EXPOSURE" link but she didn't unshare it and she still messages to Mitch privately. But since the screen is shared it should be visible to everyone.
- Quotes
Text from Trailer: [from trailer] Online, your memories live forever... but so do your mistakes.
- Crazy creditsAt the start, the Universal logo starts breaking up like a bad connection.
- Alternate versionsIn the FX broadcast, the voice acting is rerecorded to censor obscenities. Scenes were also re-edited (ie: Laura Barns party video) to censor inappropriate scenes.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Chris Stuckmann Movie Reviews: Unfriended (2015)
- SoundtracksMoney Over Bitches
Written by Justin Fabillar, Dikega Hadnot and Tim Clark (AKA Bustin, DKE and Crim)
Performed by Justin Fabillar, Dikega Hadnot and Tim Clark (AKA Bustin, DKE and Crim)
Courtesy of Maya Angeles Music
By Arrangement with Hiam Records
Featured review
Mostly irritating
Following the suicide of a schoolmate, six skyping teens find their regular session invaded by a malevolent troll intent on revealing their dark secrets.
Well, it had to be done. I guess the editing of this is extremely clever, and why not try it on a standard ghost story? Windows layered on windows, real time typing and clicking, octobox web cammery, buffering youtube vids, pixellating feeds. It's more pure than Open Windows, but still it doesn't work.
First problem is it's just boring to watch information typed out on screen, even when the deletes suggest the character of the typist. Second is that information jumps around so much you worry you're missing out. And the webcams are so tight on the characters that it becomes really stuffy, creating a constant desire for the relief of wide shots and physical interaction. At the same time I did miss well lit, full screen close-ups.
The director failed to take a lot of short cuts - I really don't need to see everything typed, to have characters say What? to a clear question that then gets repeated, and a few other things. I guess that's down to real-time realism, but hey - it's a ghost story.
The story is OK, similar to Smiley, but the characters do become really irritating. The main girl and her boyfriend start out sympathetic, and there is an overall decay as the secrets come out, but I wasn't really interested, and of course we had to have macho guys shouting and gurning in full "Game over, man!" melt-down. Some of it was down to the limitation of the form - how are actors expected to react in a skype scenario? - but please get some better dialogue.
Music very limited, couldn't be woven into the storytelling - so that cuts out half the usual effect of a horror. The computer squeaks and beeps didn't add anything. A couple of weak jump scares generated purely through silence/NOISE.
The one sequence I did enjoy and which really suited the form and the story was the chatroulette, so that's something to think about.
Overall, it's worth a watch if only to confirm the computer screen is not the movie screen. So far.
Well, it had to be done. I guess the editing of this is extremely clever, and why not try it on a standard ghost story? Windows layered on windows, real time typing and clicking, octobox web cammery, buffering youtube vids, pixellating feeds. It's more pure than Open Windows, but still it doesn't work.
First problem is it's just boring to watch information typed out on screen, even when the deletes suggest the character of the typist. Second is that information jumps around so much you worry you're missing out. And the webcams are so tight on the characters that it becomes really stuffy, creating a constant desire for the relief of wide shots and physical interaction. At the same time I did miss well lit, full screen close-ups.
The director failed to take a lot of short cuts - I really don't need to see everything typed, to have characters say What? to a clear question that then gets repeated, and a few other things. I guess that's down to real-time realism, but hey - it's a ghost story.
The story is OK, similar to Smiley, but the characters do become really irritating. The main girl and her boyfriend start out sympathetic, and there is an overall decay as the secrets come out, but I wasn't really interested, and of course we had to have macho guys shouting and gurning in full "Game over, man!" melt-down. Some of it was down to the limitation of the form - how are actors expected to react in a skype scenario? - but please get some better dialogue.
Music very limited, couldn't be woven into the storytelling - so that cuts out half the usual effect of a horror. The computer squeaks and beeps didn't add anything. A couple of weak jump scares generated purely through silence/NOISE.
The one sequence I did enjoy and which really suited the form and the story was the chatroulette, so that's something to think about.
Overall, it's worth a watch if only to confirm the computer screen is not the movie screen. So far.
helpful•4630
- begob
- Oct 10, 2015
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Cybernatural
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $32,482,090
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $15,845,115
- Apr 19, 2015
- Gross worldwide
- $62,882,090
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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