Did you know that Psycho was the first major motion picture to feature an onscreen flushing toilet? Modern indoor plumbing had been available for centuries at that point, but, for some reason, studios thought that this ubiquitous technology didn’t fit their vision of a romanticized cinematic reality. While this sounds silly in retrospect, there is […]
Did you know that Psycho was the first major motion picture to feature an onscreen flushing toilet? Modern indoor plumbing had been available for centuries at that point, but, for some reason, studios thought that this ubiquitous technology didn’t fit their vision of a romanticized cinematic reality. While this sounds silly in retrospect, there is still an industry-wide reluctance to depict commonplace trends and technologies that defy the “cinematic ideal.” After all, it was only during the past decade or so that big releases started to include smartphones in their stories, and most movies still have issues with properly depicting emergent media and online culture without sounding like Steve Buscemi wanting to interact with his “fellow kids.”
Fortunately, there’s one area where this definitely isn’t the case, and that would be the Found Footage genre. As far back as the early 2000s, in-world camera movies have been incorporating concepts like social media and online virality into their visual vocabulary through both Screenlife movies as well as productions meant to look like they were originally shot to be online videos. Of course, it takes an especially tech-savvy production team to make sure that these innovations come off naturally, and that brings us to David James Clark, Joe Martinez-Weinberger and Dean Smith’s Clickbait, a horror-comedy anthology film satirizing modern internet culture.
A passion project born from the aftermath of the SAG and WGA strikes of 2023, Clickbait is the first major feature-length film developed by Gallows Humor Pictures, an independent production company founded with the goal of creating budget-friendly genre movies with a comedic edge. And for their first collaboration, the team decided that a bit of meta commentary was in order.
In the finished film, the wraparound segment introduces us to Ralph (Tyler Arceneaux), a struggling livestreamer eager to react to scary videos in order to pull in more viewers on Halloween night. He gets more than he bargained for when a mysterious user promises to grant his wish, leading to a series of gruesome vignettes featuring YouTubers and other influencers dealing with horrific situations – all the while Ralph’s real life begins to spiral into madness.
From Mr-Beast-inspired pranks gone wrong to health influencers being pushed to insanity by the contents of their subscription boxes, there’s an entertaining collection of digital parables here to keep viewers entertained – provided that you’re already familiar with some of the issues afflicting modern day content creation. While I don’t particularly mind the reliance on online in-jokes and parodies of controversial real-world personalities, ’s attempts at humor might not be quite as effective for audiences who terminally online.