Marble Hornets

Marble Hornets

Title card
Genre Horror
Created by Joseph DeLage
Troy Wagner
Written by Joseph DeLage
Kirill Baru
Tim Sutton
Troy Wagner
Directed by Joseph DeLage
Troy Wagner
Starring Troy Wagner
Joseph DeLage
Tim Sutton
Brian Haight
Jessica May
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 3
No. of episodes 92
Production
Producer(s) Joseph DeLage
Kirill Baru
Troy Wagner
Editor(s) Troy Wagner
Running time 1-14 minutes
Distributor THAC, LLC
Release
Original network YouTube
Original release June 20, 2009 – June 20, 2014
External links
Website

Marble Hornets (abbreviated MH and sometimes stylized MarbleHornets) is a YouTube web series inspired by the Slender Man online mythos.[1] The first episode was posted on YouTube on June 20, 2009, following a post from its creator Troy Wagner created on Something Awful the previous day.[2]

To date, there are 87 entries chronicling the series and 92 episodes. The series also has 39 accompanying videos from a side-channel, "totheark". These videos, as well as the eponymous "totheark", have been featured multiple times throughout the story. As of 3 October 2016, the principal channel has over 88,500,000 views.[3]

On August 3, 2015, a spin-off sequel series titled Clear Lakes 44 was uploaded onto the Marble Hornets channel. As of April 2016, Clear Lakes 44 was cancelled after the members of the creative team went their separate ways, as confirmed by Wagner.[4]
On October, 16, 2016, a successor to Clear Lakes 44, titled Eckva, was launched. [5]

In 2015 a film adaptation Always Watching: A Marble Hornets Story was released.

Plot

The series follows Jay (Troy Wagner), a young man who attempts to find out what happened during the filming of "Marble Hornets", a student film project of his friend, Alex Kralie (Joseph DeLage), three years previous. Alex abruptly ended the project after two months of production and has since been secluding himself from society. Before cutting contact with Jay, Alex gave the film tapes to Jay while telling the latter never to talk about it with him again. Jay discovers that the filming seemed to be hampered by a figure known as "the Operator", who begins invading Jay's personal life after he watches the tapes, inducing him to set up cameras in his apartment. Posting the tapes to YouTube as "Entries" also nets Jay cryptic and threatening responses from a user known as "totheark". Jay's attempts lead him to meet with one of the film's cast members, Tim (Tim Sutton), and a visit to the abandoned house of another cast member, Brian (Brian Haight), where he has his first encounter with a masked figure. Jay also finds a tape showing Alex leaving his cameraman Seth (Seth McCay) at a red tower when confronted with the Operator, and deeming all of the cast and crew of Marble Hornets "gone". Eventually, threats of stalking from totheark causes Jay to flee his apartment, which is subsequently burned down. Jay sets out to find Alex after receiving a video mail of Alex and his girlfriend, Amy (Bethann Williams), being attacked by the Operator.

Seven months afterward, an amnesiac Jay wakes up in a hotel room and meets with a similarly amnesiac young woman, Jessica (Jessica May), who subsequently disappears. He unlocks a safe containing videos and a hard drive revealing the events that transpired during the previous seven months, including his run-in with Alex which saw them forming an alliance to find Amy. Jay learns that the masked figure is Tim, who cooperated with a mysterious hooded figure in his attempt to kill Alex. Having been driven insane by the terror of the Operator and suspicious of Jay sneaking on him, Alex killed a stranger whose body was taken by the Operator. The videos also reveal that Jessica is Amy's roommate, who, when contacted by Jay in his investigation, is unintentionally dragged into the case. When an insane Alex attempted to kill Jay and Jessica, the two escaped with the help of Tim and headed down to the hotel, where the Operator erased their memories.

Having no lead in finding either Alex or Amy, Jay enlists Tim under the pretense of finishing Marble Hornets. While Tim is initially furious upon learning about Jay's true motives, he decides to continue assisting him. It is revealed that Tim was formerly committed to a mental hospital due to hallucinations that he fears were caused by the Operator; his hallucinations are what are driving him to enter his "masked" state, and only a certain kind of medicine is able to counteract that. Subsequently, Tim suffers through psychological torments by the Operator, which is further hampered when the medicine is stolen by the hooded figure. Tim is also revealed to have hidden a video showing him and the hooded figure being the ones responsible for kidnapping Jessica before the Operator took hold of her. When Jay becomes trapped and killed by a lurking Alex, Tim carries on by himself and eventually learns the identity of the hooded figure: Brian, shortly after Tim sees him fall to his death. During Tim's final confrontation with Alex, Alex reveals that he wants to kill anyone with knowledge of the Operator, including Amy and Jay, and then himself, as the Operator cannot materialize if there is no one who believes in him. In the ensuing struggle, Tim finally manages to kill Alex by stabbing him in the throat. The Operator then appears and leaves with Alex's body.

Four days afterward, Tim voluntarily commits himself again to a mental asylum and reunites with Jessica, whose location has been hidden by him to protect her from the Operator's clutches. Tim's final encounter with Jessica ends ambiguously as Tim lapses into a coughing fit as the camera distorts and then cuts to black. When the footage resumes, Tim is alone, driving away and stopping at an intersection while sirens can be heard in the distance. The final image of the series is a text card that simply states "Everything is fine".

Characters

Development and reception

Wagner and DeLage began working on the webseries after reading about the Slender Man mythos and because both liked the ease of creating a YouTube series.[6] The initial budget for the series was about $500, which the two used to create the first 26 episodes.[6] They decided against making a set time for each entry, as they both determined that the characters filming the entries would not consider the length of the episode and that the random entry times would help add to the realism. The entire series is edited with the software Sony Vegas Pro and Adobe Premiere.[7]

After its release the series' popularity grew,[8] drawing comparisons to Lonelygirl15 and Connect with I.[9] In 2013, Dread Central named Marble Hornets one of their "Top 10 Horror Fan Films", noting that while it "isn’t technically a film" it still contained an "interwoven examination of the mythical Slender Man" and that they felt it was "what quality fanfare and found footage is really all about."[10] Early during the airing of season 1, the series received praise from Roger Ebert.[11]

In May 2014, the developers launched a Kickstarter campaign to raising funds for the DVD release of the third season. The response was overwhelmingly positive, with the original goal of $8000 in donations being exceeded by $76,271.[12] These funds went towards further projects, including a box set and new supplementary material in the form of scenes from Alex Kralie's Marble Hornets.

Film adaptation

In February 2013, Variety announced that plans were underway to produce a film adaptation of Marble Hornets.[13] They also announced that the script would be written by Ian Shorr, that James Moran would direct, and that Doug Jones would be portraying the Operator in the film.[14][15] In October of the same year, Wagner announced on his blog that the movie had finished filming and it would not be a continuation of the YouTube series but would be set within the same universe.[16]

The film, titled Always Watching: A Marble Hornets Story, was released on video on demand in April 7, 2015, starring Doug Jones, Alexandra Breckenridge, and Alexandra Holden. The film opened in select theaters on May 15, 2015.[17] Critical reception for Always Watching was predominantly negative.[18]

References

  1. "YouTube Horror Series Marble Hornets Will Bring Slenderman To Theaters". Cinema Blend. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  2. "Creepy Things That Seem Real But Aren't: The Marble Hornets Project". Crushable. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  3. "Marble Hornets". YouTube. Retrieved 2016-10-04.
  4. ""Announcement."". Retrieved 25 April 2015.
  5. ""eckvanet"". Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  6. 1 2 Nolfi, Joey (24 August 2011). "The 'Marble Hornets' Web series becoming a smash on 'Net". Post-Gazette. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  7. "Webseries interview: Marble Hornets creator Troy Wagner". Hypable. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  8. Powell, Kathryn. "Stalked by Slenderman: A review of "Marble Hornets"". The Gargoyle. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  9. Alexander, Bryan. The New Digital Storytelling: Creating Narratives with New Media. ABC-CLIO. pp. 87–89. ISBN 0313387508.
  10. Molgaard, Matt. "Dread Central Presents: The Top 10 Horror Fan Films". Dread Central. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  11. Ebert, Roger. ""Marble Hornets," a YouTube serial. A forsaken indie film meets "Paranormal." All episodes to date.". Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  12. "Marble Hornets Season 3 DVD". Kickstarter.com. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  13. "Mosaic adapting horror web series". Variety. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  14. "WEB SERIES MARBLE HORNETS FLYING TO BIG SCREEN". JoBlo. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  15. "Web Series 'Marble Hornets' Getting Its Own Movie". Spill. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  16. Wagner, Troy. "So about that movie". Troy Wagner. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  17. Clow, Mitchel. "'Always Watching: A Marble Hornets Story' movie review: Tell, don't show". Hypable. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  18. "ALWAYS WATCHING: A MARBLE HORNETS STORY (2015)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
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