The Bay (2012) is essentially grown up found footage of the horror variety. It starts low key and then proceeds to amp things up. This culminates in the worst 4th of July celebration ever.

After passing over this film on the Playstation store repeatedly, I finally watched the trailer and it caught my interest. I watched it and decided to “give it a go.” I’m glad I did. Although it uses the “found footage” formula that is quickly become a new genre of film, I agree with David Cox of The Guardian, who awarded the film 5 out of 5 stars and called it a “horror film for grown ups.”

The story

The plot is a very realistic one. A big businessman in a small seaside town in Maryland is dumping toxic waste into the bay that the town depends on for their water and for holiday trade. The toxic levels rise in the water breeding a sort of super bacteria that mutates into a parasite that is eating fish alive. From the inside out.

During a Fourth of July celebration, the town’s people and tourists contract the bug and chaos ensues.

The Bay was directed by Barry Levinson and written by Michael Wallach. It premiered at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival and was released in theaters on November 2, 2012.

The team and the Cast

Overall the film has received good reviews from critics, despite a low “overall” score from IMDb of five and a half percent. Levinson who directed Good Morning Vietnam, yes that Levinson, does a brilliant job considering that the budget for The Bay was obviously very low; which appears to be common feature amongst “found footage” films. (With the obvious exception of the huge budget for Cloverfield.)

The cast was all unknowns, which helped to sell the film’s realistic theme. While not too compact, the smaller setting of a town plagued (excuse the pun) by a virus or bacteria that causes multiple deaths and abject paranoia by the citizens worked for me. The addition of what looked like stock footage of police cars and ambulances racing to scenes and the young “trainee” media type who is there to catch the whole thing on tape, made it seem more of a documentary than a film.

Levinson takes the found footage formula and makes it work. Hes make it into something fresh and interesting. It just goes to show that low-budget doesn’t have to mean low expectations.

While The Bay doesn’t work for everyone, I enjoyed it and it actually “creeped” me out at one point. The main reason being the plot and the reactions of the authorities and the experts at the CDC who were attempting to help via the internet. The CDC with their, in the beginning, smug know-it-all attitude which slowly devolves into concern, then panic, was just one other factor that sold the film.

The Bay is available on the Playstation store as a rental or for purchase. It is also available on DVD, I don’t know if it is on Netflix or any other “legal” streaming site.

The Verdict

I’d have to give the film a solid 4 out of 5 stars. Worthy of a look, The Bay is definitely a winner in the found footage “sub-genre” of horror and as David Cox said, it may just be the first “grown up” horror film. While I can’t agree 100 percent with the statement, the film definitely deviates from the many “hack and slash” and supernatural films on offer in the “sub-genre.”

The Trailer

Courtesy of Movie Trailers


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Fediverse reactions

7 responses to “The Bay: Grown up Found Footage”

  1. I enjoyed this as I watched it. I mean, its not going to be getting any awards or anything but films are made for entertainment and I was entertained – not every film has to knock your socks off and be the best of its kind. Some people just hate found footage films and won’t like this.

    1. Agreed! The “found footage” thing is getting old in a hurry, but despite that, I enjoyed it! Thanks for sharing!

  2. I’ve been weighing up checking this out, might give it a whirl. Nice review Mike.

    1. Thanks mate! 😀 Let me know what you think of it!

  3. good review
    glad someone enjoyed it 😛
    thought it was a diabolical shambles/ I quite like a lot of found footage films and this stood out as one of the worst. If that guy, whoever he is, thinks this is the first ‘grown up’ horror film, then he’s watching the wrong films!
    I didn’t discount the cleverness of *some* of the techniques, like the various different mediums used to piece together the story incl’ answerphone messages and things, in my review but that was the only positive I could find.
    I was somewhat offended that they likened it to [REC] tbh xD haha
    But alas, it’s not for everyone

    1. I don’t really seen where they can justify comparing it to REC… Not everyone’s cup of tea certainly. 🙂

      1. I guess they just assumed that because it’s a handheld/found footage style film about an outbreak that it MUST be like REC lol

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