Studio: Vanguard Cinema
Director: Richard Lowry
Writer: Richard Lowry, Tor Lowry
Producer: Bobby Harwell
Stars: Bobby Harwell, Dan Brinkle, Kyle Nudo, David Arnold, Phillip Brickey, Jennifer Francouer, Carolyn Mejia, Patrick Colson, Donna Brown, Otis Roberts, Myra Harwell Young
Review Score:
Summary:
Two documentarians unravel a government conspiracy when they interview a man who claims a secret Texas town completely disappeared in 1953.
Review:
IMDb and Amazon identify 2003 as “The Wicksboro Incident’s” release year since that is when it debuted on DVD. The movie screened as early as 2001 however, as evidenced by a Variety review from August of that year, which puts it in even closer proximity to “The Blair Witch Project” (review here) and the birth of the “found footage” boom.
Every microbudget movie shot in a first-person format back then was accused of being a “Blair Witch” rip-off whether the claim was warranted or not. The subgenre had yet to achieve peak saturation, so BWP remained the barometer for measuring and/or comparing anything that fell into the “found footage” category.
Consequently, nearly half of all IMDb user reviews for “The Wicksboro Incident” mention BWP, as does Variety’s aforementioned coverage. Other than being a faux documentary likely inspired by its counterpart’s success though, “Wicksboro” has little in common with “The Blair Witch Project.” I assume the errant association is merely a holdover reference for criticizing any “found footage” film that followed after 1999 until “Paranormal Activity” (review here) reset the bar a decade later.
“The Wicksboro Incident” actually mimics one of those “UFO Files Exposed” shows that aired in late-night syndication back when “The X-Files” was in its prime. Made by two brothers and a handful of family and friends, “Wicksboro” is clearly a homemade effort definitely dated to its turn-of-this-century production year, yet that’s precisely why I find the film appealing. Right down to its synthesized score, the movie fondly reminds me of smirking at quickie conspiracy theory series while waiting to fall asleep in the days before 1am programming slots were taken over by Joey Greco and “Cheaters.” Should you have similarly nostalgic affinity for old school alien-oriented “reality” TV, you’ll appreciate “The Wicksboro Incident’s” incidental recreation of that aesthetic, even though the flick can be uneventful at times.
The ramp-up remains engaging largely because the movie’s lead actor is flat-out fantastic. Forget Heather Donahue. Never mind Katie Featherston. If “found footage” horror had awards for acting, Bobby Harwell would win every one of them.
It’s not a flashy bells-and-whistles performance by any means. But playing an elderly electrical engineer who claims he can expose a government cover-up from 1953, Harwell is so completely convincing as Lloyd, he will cause you to question every talking head you ever considered credible in a nonfiction UFO documentary. Because if he can come across as this authentic, who in the real world might be an equally talented liar?
I don’t know how much of Bobby Harwell’s dialogue may be improvised since more than one person gets credit for writing a script, yet every word out of his mouth sounds believable. If you randomly came across a clip of Harwell playing this character out of context, there’s no way you would immediately know Lloyd wasn’t a real person. Perhaps the most unfortunate consequence of “The Wicksboro Incident” being mostly undiscovered is that no one scooped up Harwell to reprise this kind of role in a bigger production.
Harwell’s rapport with the two men playing filmmakers Mike and Gary pays huge dividends in making the plot seem like it develops organically. Together, the three men investigate Lloyd’s claim that he developed a device capable of detecting aliens living among us on Earth. To keep the conspiracy secret, the U.S. government destroyed the Texas town of Wicksboro where Lloyd’s research took place. 45 years later, Lloyd is the only remaining person who remembers what happened, and he wants Mike and Gary to help him prove Wicksboro existed.
Outside of this trio, none of the other characters, which consist of nameless men in black and various authority figures seen only in quick cutaways, develop into meaningful personalities. Ordinarily, this might be a strike against an underwritten movie. Given “Wicksboro’s” premise, the conceit instead works in the film’s favor since almost everyone who isn’t Lloyd, Mike, or Gary becomes a faceless entity contributing to a greater cabal. There’s a genuine sense of uncertain danger because the conspiracy is so vaguely defined. For once, following a loose outline without concrete fiction enhances the mystery. It’s another boon that amateur actors don’t have to appear excessively and risk breaking up the fantasy.
Director Richard Lowry does a good job emulating expected documentary style. We get the usual slow zooms into and out of grainy old photographs that Ken Burns made commonplace. Then again, we also get early segments with interviewees who are largely cursory inclusions in light of how little impact they have on the back-half action of G-men chasing Lloyd, Mike, and Gary through Texas deserts.
Really, that becomes “The Wicksboro Incident’s” most significant sin. It’s only 70 minutes short, and inconsequential asides suck up some of that runtime with random runarounds and boring backstory bits. Hard pressed to pack the film full of compelling content, “The Wicksboro Incident” then hiccups into an unsatisfying conclusion that might spark a question about the filmmakers running out of time, money, or more likely, good ideas.
Ultimately, “The Wicksboro Incident” isn’t as cool as “Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County” as far as handheld extraterrestrial horror goes. But it is one of the most engaging alien-based “found footage” films out there, particularly when taken as a nifty time capsule of late 1990s/early 2000s TV-grade video production. Assuming a game imagination willingly meets low-budget shortcomings halfway, storytelling gaps paved over with forgettable fluff and cheap camerawork pale in comparison to the earnestness expressed by everyone involved, especially in the exceptional Everyman acting of Bobby Harwell as Lloyd.
Review Score: 65
At least the movie only runs 70 minutes, though I suppose that extra 10 technically disqualifies it from being a literal amateur hour.