List of mockumentaries
This is a list of mockumentaries. Mockumentary or mock documentary is a genre of film and television, a parody presented as a documentary recording real life.
Film
- Finding You (2017), about one man's journey to find his own romantic leading lady.
- Mascots (2016), Netflix film about the competition for the World Mascot Association's Gold Fluffy Award.
- Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping (2016), follows Conner4Real (Andy Samberg), a parody of Justin Bieber in the style of a typical concert documentary.
- 482-Love (2015), about a young director struggling to film a documentary on the nature of love.
- Bucky and the Squirrels (2014), about a rock band that gets frozen in ice in 1968 after a plane crash in the Alps, and is brought back to life 50 years later.
- What We Do in the Shadows (2014), comedy-horror film about a group of vampires sharing a flat in Wellington, New Zealand.
- Actus Reus (2013), about a man and his group of friends committing various crimes to raise money to keep the main character's house.
- State of Bacon (2013), about all things bacon, including the world's largest festival dedicated to bacon, the men who put it on, and some fun folks who attend.
- On the Ropes (2011), about a rivalry between a boxing gym and martial arts school.
- The Tunnel (2011), a documentary crew encounters a ghoul in the tunnels below Sydney.
- Brüno (2009), about Sacha Baron Cohen's gay Austrian fashion journalist in a journey through the United States.
- District 9 (2009) includes element of mockumentary in depicting the struggles of an alien species living in immigrant camps in Johannesburg.
- Morris: A Life with Bells On (2009), British spoof documentary about morris dancing.
- Paranormal Entity (2009), about a widowed family that are believed to be haunted by a demon.
- The Baby Formula (2009), about a couple of two lesbian women who both get pregnant through an experimental stem cell procedure.
- The Far Left (2009), in which a fictitious filmmaker follows the life of a far left activist and his accomplice.
- The Flying Scissors (2009), following a handful of individuals preparing for a rock-paper-scissors competition.
- The Mother of Invention (2009), comedy following a failed inventor and his successful rival competing for an annual young inventor's award.
- Confessions of a Porn Addict (2008), about a man's quest to get his wife back after she left him for being addicted to porn.
- Believe (2007), the story of multi-level marketing and a failed pyramid scheme.
- Chalk (2007), the experience of three teachers and one assistant principal over the course of an entire school year.
- Confetti (2006), British mockumentary about a fashion magazine wedding competition.
- Dick Ho: Asian Male Porn Star (2006) investigates the supposed existence of a 1970s Asian male porn legend who allegedly had a 13 and half inch long penis.
- The Boys & Girls Guide to Getting Down (2006), a fictional guide to teach inexperienced youth about all things involved with "getting down", while also pointing out some of the pitfalls associated with the party lifestyle.
- Brothers of the Head (2005), the story of two conjoined twins (played by real-life twin actors Harry and Luke Treadaway) who form a punk rock band.
- Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon (2005), in which a film crew follows around a serial killer in training.
- A Day Without a Mexican (2004), a fantasy satire in which all Mexicans in California suddenly disappear.
- A Hole in My Heart (2004), about a man who films a porn in his apartment with the help of a friend and an attention-seeking starlet.
- Comic Book: The Movie (2004), direct-to-DVD release about a comic book fanboy dealing with the unfaithful film adaptation of his favorite character, set to the backdrop of the 2002 San Diego Comic-Con.
- C.S.A.: The Confederate States of America (2004), an alternate history take in which the Confederate States of America won the American Civil War.
- The Calcium Kid (2004), boxing documentary charting the unexpected rise to fame of a milkman who is an amateur boxer.
- The Delicate Art of Parking (2003), Canadian mockumentary about parking enforcement officers.
- All You Need Is Cash (aka The Rutles, 1978; an updated version (2002), a parody of music documentaries using a fictional counterpart of The Beatles.
- 2gether (2000), spoof of boy bands like N*Sync and The Backstreet Boys.
- Best in Show (2000), about the contestants at a national dog show;[1] one of several mockumentaries written and directed by Christopher Guest.
- The Big Tease (1999), a Scottish hairdresser's journey to the U.S. for a hairdressing competition, filmed with mockumentary elements.
- Bob Roberts (1992), Tim Robbins satiric film about a right-wing folk singer's crooked election campaign.[1]
- Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan (2006), Sacha Baron Cohen's outrageous depiction of an over-the-top Kazakh journalist's journey through the United States.
- Born Twiztid: Beyond the Freakshow (2000), about the supposed early life of the band Twiztid.
- Burn Hollywood Burn (1998), about a movie director who prevents severe editing of his latest film by stealing it.
- The Canadian Conspiracy (1985), about a supposed Canadian plan to subvert the United States by taking over its media.
- CB4 (1993), "rapumentary" starring Chris Rock about the story of a fictional group loosely based on N.W.A and 2 Live Crew.
- The Clowns (1970), Federico Fellini's larger-than-life portrait of the art of clownery.
- Dark Side of the Moon (2002), a French mockumentary portraying the moon landing as staged in a movie lot by Stanley Kubrick.
- David Holzman's Diary (1967), a false autobiography by Jim McBride, which interrogates the art of documentary-making.
- Dill Scallion (1999), about the rise and fall of a country-western singer, much in the way of This Is Spinal Tap.
- Drop Dead Gorgeous (1999), a camera crew follows a beauty pageant contestants in a small town in Minnesota.
- The Falls (1980), by Peter Greenaway, documenting the cases of 92 victims of the fictional VUE (violent unknown event).
- Auditions (1978), mockumentary about the porn industry.
- Farce of the Penguins (2007), direct-to-video parody of March of the Penguins.
- Fear of a Black Hat (1994), the story of the fictional rap group Niggaz with Hats (N.W.H.), as it evolves alongside the genre, from its popular origins to the advent of gangsta rap.
- Fellowship of the Dice (2005), story of a first time gamer's introduction to the role-playing game world.
- Finishing the Game (2007), depicting the search for "a new Bruce Lee" to finish The Game of Death.
- First on the Moon (2005), Russian mockumentary about a fictional 1930s Soviet landing on the Moon.
- For Your Consideration (2006), about three actors finding their film is generating Oscar buzz; one of several mockumentaries written and directed by Christopher Guest.
- Forgotten Silver (1995), Peter Jackson's fictional documentary about a "forgotten" New Zealand pioneer filmmaker.
- FUBAR (2002, with sequel in 2010), about two members of the head-banger subculture.
- Fudge 44 (2005), an Irish mockumentary about six puppets in a financially impoverished children's puppet theater in Tokyo, whom locals believe came to life and robbed a nearby bank to avoid being put out of business.
- G-SALE (2003), mockumentary about garage sale fanatics.
- Gamers: The Movie (2006), about players trying to set a record playing a Dungeons and Dragons-like game.
- Get Ready to be Boyzvoiced (2000), following fictional Norwegian boy band Boyzvoice.
- The Gods Must be Crazy (1980, with sequel in 1989), a South African comedy presented and narrated in the manner of a nature documentary.
- Good Arrows (2009), about a Welsh darts player.
- Hard Core Logo (1996), the final tour of an aged punk band, as a model for the death of "true" punk rock.
- A Hard Day's Night (1964), starring the real Beatles at the height of Beatlemania, but in a fictional, exaggerated circumstances.
- The Heavenly Kings (2006), follows the fictional Cantopop boy band Alive, fronted by Daniel Wu, who also directed the film.
- I'm Still Here (2010), satirical film parodying America's fascination with the reality television phenomenon of the 2000s; revolves around the life of Academy Award-nominated actor Joaquin Phoenix; disheveled and perpetually clothed in dark suits and sunglasses, he announces his retirement from acting in favor of a career as a professional hip-hop artist.
- Incident at Loch Ness (2004), about a filmmaker (Werner Herzog, who's also writer and producer for the film) attempting to make a documentary about the mythological Loch Ness Monster while a documentary about his life is, in turn, being filmed.
- It's All Gone Pete Tong (2004), comedy following the tragic life of legendary DJ Frankie Wilde; takes us through Wilde's life from being one of the best DJs alive, through subsequent battle with a hearing disorder, culminating in his mysterious disappearance from the scene.
- Kenny (2006), the life of a portable toilet installer in Melbourne, Australia.
- The Last Polka (1985), John Candy and Eugene Levy mockumentary about the last concert of the Shmenge Brothers, a Leutonian polka duet whose characters were first developed on Second City Television.
- LolliLove (2004), story about a husband and wife team, played by James Gunn and Jenna Fischer, who form a charity to give each homeless person a lollipop with a cheery slogan on the wrapper, but who are really only serving themselves.
- Man Bites Dog (1992), Belgian black comedy/satire in which a film crew follows a serial killer documenting his crimes.
- Man of the Year (1995), a satirical look directed by former Playgirl magazine Man of the Year Dirk Shafer, about his Man of the Year reign as a closeted gay man.
- Medusa: Dare to Be Truthful (1992), "behind the scenes" exposé of fictional pop singer and sex symbol Medusa, on her "Blonde Leading the Blonde" concert tour.
- A Mighty Wind (2003), the story of three groups of folk singers who come together at a tribute concert in honor of their recently deceased manager; one of several mockumentaries written and directed by Christopher Guest.
- Mike Bassett: England Manager (2001), the fortunes of a lackluster England football manager in the World Cup.
- Never Been Thawed (2005), about people who collect frozen TV dinners.
- The Old Negro Space Program (2004), short subject in the style of a Ken Burns film; subtitled "the shocking but false story of America's blackstronauts", it depicts the fictional "Negro American Space Society of Astronauts" (NASSA), lampooning racial segregation in the United States and in particular the Negro Leagues.
- R2-D2: Beneath the Dome (2001), the career of supposed real-life actor R2-D2, who was played in reality by Kenny Baker and puppeteer Don Bies, co-director of this mockumentary.
- Real Life (1979), mock documentary directed by Albert Brooks about a year in the life of an average American family (headed by Charles Grodin); it spoofs the PBS-style documentaries.
- Shooting Bokkie (2003), about a South African film crew creating a documentary on a 13-year-old assassin (a bokkie) and the people living in the impoverished and crime-ridden area of Cape Flats.
- Sons of Provo (2004), musical mockumentary about a Mormon boy-band and its rise to local fame in Utah.
- Steamin' and Dreamin': The Grandmaster Cash Story (2009), comedy that follows the exploits of Cork hip-hop artist Grandmaster Cash.
- Surf's Up, animated mockumentary that follows the progress of a surfer penguin as he enters a surfing competition.
- Sweet and Lowdown (1999), by Woody Allen and starring Sean Penn, includes elements of mockumentary depicting the life of a fictional jazz guitarist from the 1930s.
- Take the Money and Run (1969), the second film ever directed by Woody Allen, in which Allen plays an ambitious but clumsy burglar.[1]
- Tanner '88 (1988, with a follow-up sequel in 2004), the campaign of fictional former Michigan U.S. representative Jack Tanner in his bid to secure the Democratic party's nomination for President; written by Garry Trudeau, directed by Robert Altman.
- This Is Spinal Tap (1984), a film crew follows a British hard rock band attempting to revive their popularity;[1] the first of several mockumentaries written by Christopher Guest.
- Waiting for Guffman (1996), a small Missouri town's celebration of its sesquicentennial; one of several mockumentaries written and directed by Christopher Guest.
- Zelig (1983), by Woody Allen, about a man who changes his physical appearance in order to fit in.[1]
Television
Series
- Documentary Now (2015- present) stars Fred Armisen and Bill Hader. The show focuses on a list of topics in current news delivered in mockumentary format. [2]
- 30 minuten (NL, 1995-1997), follows a different fictional character each week, played by Arjan Ederveen
- All Aussie Adventures (AU, 2001), follows the Australian outback adventures of Russell Coight, who believes he is one with the land but constantly has mishaps that could only happen to him
- Angry Boys (Australia, 2011), created by Chris Lilley
- Arrested Development (US, 2003-2006, 2013–present), a fly-on-the-wall series filmed in mockumentary style; follows the story of the dysfunctional Bluth family, primarily Michael, after his father is imprisoned
- Art Less (USA, 2016), an online web series; follows a group of teenagers who want to be famous, but don't have the drive to succeed.
- Brass Eye (UK, 1997), series of mockumentaries by Chris Morris
- Come Fly with Me (UK, 2010), fly-on-the-wall comedy which follows the antics of many characters on a normal day at a UK airport; most characters are played by comedian duo David Walliams and Matt Lucas
- The Day Today (UK, 1994), spoof news series created by Chris Morris and Armando Iannucci, often featuring documentary-style inserts such as 'The Pool' and 'The Office'
- Dog Bites Man, parody of local news coverage; follows the misadventures of a struggling news team as they travel around the country producing news segments
- Dorm Life (US, 2008–2009), webseries following the fictional lives of the inhabitants of the college dorm floor 5 South
- The Games (Australia, 1998 and 2000), comedy, follows the mayhem and bureaucratic snafu faced by the organisers of the 2000 Sydney Olympics
- Gerhard Reinke's Wanderlust (US, 2003), travel show following the misadventures of a bumbling German backpacker as he travels the globe in search of reasonably priced culturally enriching experiences
- Hoff the Record (UK, 2015), fly-on-the wall series starring David Hasselhoff
- Human Remains (UK, 2000), a bleak series of fly-on-the-wall insights into dysfunctional couples
- In de gloria (Belgium, 2000-2001), a tragicomical sketch show parodying reality television and human interest shows.
- Les Invincibles (Canada, 2005–2009), French Canadian dramedy about four thirty-year-old men signing a pact that says they have to break up with their girlfriends and embrace a common routine-free life
- Jimmy MacDonald's Canada (Canada, 2005), lost episodes of a mid-1960s public affairs show hosted by Jimmy MacDonald who was played by Richard Waugh; combined new segments with authentic news and human interest archive footage.
- Kreatief met Kurk (Netherlands, 1993-1994), a parody of educational TV documentaries where the hosts invite people at home to create handicraft along with them. It starred Arjan Ederveen and Tosca Niterink.
- Look Around You (UK, 2002 and 2005), parody of educational TV (season 1) and documentary about "the world and future of science and technology" (season 2), set roughly 25 years before the actual release dates
- Marion and Geoff (UK series, 2000–2003), stars Rob Brydon as a cab driver
- Modern Family (US, 2009–present), about three families living modern American lives
- My Generation (TV series) (US, 2010), about a group of high school classmates ten years after graduation
- My Life as Liz (US, 2010–present), about a seventeen-year-old girl and her senior year in high school
- Not fit (India, 2015-2016) chronicles the humorous adventures of Neerav Kapoor (Nero), struggling actor extraordinaire and quintessential fool, as he tries to make his mark as an actor in the entertainment industry. It is created by Pocket Aces (company).
- The Naked Brothers Band (US, 2007–2009), starred two real-life brothers Nat and Alex Wolff and their real life friends; about a teenage fantasy of a world-famous kids' rock band, with cameras following the band members everywhere they go; based around the real-life band which Nat and Alex formed in pre-school; the series was created by their real-life mother, actress Polly Draper, who also wrote and directed the self-titled film that became the pilot for the series
- The Office (UK/USA, 2001–2013), British satire on white-collar management, later remade for US and other audiences
- Operation Good Guys, British satire of an incompetent police force (often seen as a precursor to The Office)
- Parks and Recreation (US, 2009–2015), follows Leslie Knope, head of the Parks and Recreation department in a small town in Indiana
- Paths to Freedom (Ireland, 2000), fly-on-the-wall spoof about two prisoners leaving prison, both from different backgrounds, one an esteemed gynaecologist and the other an inner-city Dublin rapper
- People Just Do Nothing, BBC mockumentary following the men who run Kurupt FM, a pirate radio station broadcasting garage and drum and bass in London
- People Like Us (UK, radio 1995-1997, and television 1999-2001), British comedy featuring an inept interviewer (played by Chris Langham) who interviews people in various jobs
- Prehistoric Park (UK, 2006), six-episode mockumentary that depicts a hypothetical scenario whereby a time machine is used to create a wildlife park
- Pure Pwnage, an Internet-distributed show about a gamer followed around by his brother; created by Geoff Lapaire and Jarett Cale
- Real Husbands of Hollywood (US, 2013–present), created by and starring Kevin Hart, shown on BET
- Reno 911! (US, 2003–2009), Comedy Central parody of Cops, about an inept police force in Reno, Nevada
- Sono 'Okodawari', Watashi ni mo Kure yo!! (Japan, 2016), based on a manga series
- Southern Fried Stings, depicting a group of mercenaries/private detectives operating in the southern United States
- Summer Heights High (Australia, 2007), about three characters at a public high school
- Total Drama (Canada, 2007–present), animated parody of reality shows, about a group of teens competing for $1,000,000
- Trailer Park Boys (Canada, 2001–present), follows Julian, Ricky, and Bubbles, as they commit crimes and hatch crackpot schemes to make money, most of which are illegal and often involve growing marijuana
- Victoria Wood As Seen On TV (UK, 1985–87), two series of sketch shows with regular five-minute mockumentaries, written by and starring Victoria Wood
- We Can Be Heroes: Finding The Australian of the Year (Australia, 2005), about five fictitious candidates nominated for the prestigious Australian of the Year Award
- Wildboyz (US, 2003–2006), Jackass spin-off, starring Steve-O and Chris Pontius; mocks nature documentaries
- Yacht Rock (US, 2005-2010), Channel 101 series following the fictionalized lives and careers of American soft rock stars of the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Specials and one-offs
- The Gist, one-off arts review show parody written by John Morton; presented by Robert Webb; featuring Amelia Bulmore, Bill Nighy
- In Search of the Edge, film by Scott Barrie; a trial to prove that the earth is not round, but flat
- Introducing Tony Ferrino: Who and Why?: A Quest, Steve Coogan's parody of cheap promotional videos which went alongside the arrival of his Portuguese singer character; written with Peter Baynham, co-writer of Borat, The Day Today, who appears as an interviewer eventually killed by the sinister Ferrino.
- Larry David: Curb Your Enthusiasm, HBO Special about the making of an HBO special
- MyMusic (US, 2012), web series about a dysfunctional music company
- The Naked Brothers Band: The Movie, stars two real-life brothers Nat and Alex Wolff and their real-life friends about a teenage fantasy of a world-famous kids' rock band, with cameras following the band members everywhere they go; based on the real-life band which Nat and Alex formed back in pre-school; written and directed by their real-life mother, actress Polly Draper, who also created the series
- Norbert Smith - a Life, a personal project by English comedian Harry Enfield, satirising TV arts show biographies, British films of the 20th century, and the British acting fraternity; Enfield later provided two other mockumentaries, Smashie and Nicey: The End of an Era (which took us through the glory days of British radio) and Normal Ormal: A Very Political Turtle (a scatter-gun attack on politics)
- Oil Gobblers (Ropáci), a film by Jan Svěrák about creatures that live in underground mines and feed on oil, plastic, and rubbish
- Operación Palace, (Spain, 2013), aired on La Sexta, about the February 23, 1981 (23-F) attempted coup d’état in Spain; featured prominent figures from politics and the media, providing, in perfect sync, invented testimony relating to the events surrounding the 1981 attempted coup, in which a group of civil guards, led by Lieutenant-Colonel Antonio Tejero, violently stormed Congress; this bothered many Spaniards because their constitution, kingdom and democracy are based mostly on these facts
- Platinum Weird, a band formed by Dave Stewart and Kara DioGuardi, and the subject of a VH1 mockumentary
Commercials
- ESPN's "This is SportsCenter" commercials are presented in a mockumentary style.
Television specials
- Alternative 3, TV movie of a political conspiracy to establish a settlement on Mars
- Bye Bye Belgium, a fake TV special report in which Flanders has left the Belgian kingdom
- The Great Martian War 1913–1917 (2013), TV production depicting an alternate history in which the world fought invaders from the planet Mars, rather than the actual historical participants, during World War I.
- How to Irritate People, a 1968 TV broadcast predating Monty Python, but written mostly by John Cleese and Graham Chapman while also featuring Michael Palin and Terry Jones.
- Pat Paulsen for President (1968), TV special about the fictional presidential campaign of comedian Pat Paulsen.
- Space Oddyssey: Voyage to the Planets, about a fictional manned voyage through the Solar System, presented in documentary style
- Tout ça (ne nous rendra pas la Belgique), a hoax news bulletin on a French-medium Belgian television network that claimed the Flemish parliament had unilaterally declared independence from Belgium; known in English as the Flemish Secession hoax
Individual episodes
Sometimes an episode of an otherwise non-mockumentary series is presented as a mockumentary.
- 3rd Rock from the Sun
- "The Loud Solomon Family: a Dickumentary", season 5, an episode presented in an entirely documentary style, taking a look into the lives of the Solomon family
- Babylon 5
- "And Now for a Word" (1995), framed as a documentary by the fictional news network ISN for the Babylon 5 station; every act in the episode starts with effects similar to those used by news channels, and ends with the reporter acknowledging the cut to advertisements; there is also a fake advertisement; this is the first documentary-styled episode in the science fiction genre
- "The Illusion of Truth" and "The Deconstruction of Falling Stars", season 4, partially employ documentary style
- The Comic Strip Presents
- "The Comic Strip Presents... Bad News Tour" and its sequel, "More Bad News", following an incompetent rock group on tour
- "The Comic Strip Presents... Eddie Monsoon: A Life?", the life story of an offensive talk show host
- Community
- "Intermediate Documentary Filmmaking", Pierce tells the study group he's dying and asks Abed to film his last wishes
- Entourage
- "Welcome to the Jungle" (2007), an episode as a mock "making of" film about Medellín, the film the characters produce
- ER
- "Ambush", 1997 live episode, portrayed as a documentary
- Even Stevens
- "Band on the Roof", a "rockumentary"-style episode following the band the Twitty-Steven Connection
- Farscape
- "A Constellation of Doubt", Season 4, Episode 17, most of the episode comprises a fictional documentary detailing humanity's reaction to Moya's recent visit to Earth; it is occasionally seen that John Critchton is watching the documentary on a television set in his quarters on board the ship; end credits of the episode include a trailer to the next episode of the fictional documentary
- Grey's anatomy
- "These Arms of Mine", a documentary crew visits the hospital six months after a shooting to document the road to recovery for doctors and patients
- Just Shoot Me!
- "A&E Biography: Nina Van Horn", a faux A&E Biography of the character played by Wendie Malick
- Night Court
- "A Closer Look", 1990 episode showing the affairs of the show from a news TV perspective
- The Simpsons
- "Behind the Laughter" (2000), a Behind the Music-style exposé
- The West Wing
- "Access" (2004), fake behind-the-scenes documentary about a day in the White House of President Josiah Bartlet, supposedly released after his term in office has ended
- The X-Files
Other mock films and television
Reality shows
- The Comeback (US, 2005), a reality show type following the life of former "it" actress Valerie Cherish
- Double the Fist, fictional version of Jackass
- Drawn Together, cartoon version of The Surreal Life
- Series 7: The Contenders, a movie is presented as a marathon of the seventh series of an American reality television show in which six people, picked at random from a national lottery, are each given a gun and forced to hunt and kill each other for the camera
- Siberia, a horror/drama series about a fictional reality television show in which 16 contestants must survive in the remote Siberian territory of Tunguska for a 500,000 dollar prize; things go horribly wrong and the contestants are left stranded in a dangerous forest full of things they don't understand
News shows
- Countdown to Looking Glass (1984), cable-TV docu-drama presented as a series of news reports concerning an escalation in the Middle East between the US and the USSR, that eventually leads to nuclear war (not completely a documentary/mockumentary, as it includes dramatic interludes)
- Ghostwatch (1992), BBC television special in which a fictitious "live" paranormal investigation goes awry
- Special Bulletin (1983), NBC made-for-TV movie, portrayed a live broadcast from a fictional American broadcasting network on a nuclear terrorism incident in Charleston, South Carolina as it occurred; its realism caused a minor panic in Charleston at the time of its first airing, despite disclaimers shown after each commercial break
- Without Warning (1994), TV film in the form of a mock newscast, produced by CBS; covered an apocalyptic alien attack scenario as seen through the eyes of a network TV news crew; like Special Bulletin, reports of panic were also associated with its broadcast
Found footage
Main article: Found footage (pseudo-documentary)
Some films and shows take the form of (fake) raw footage.[3]
- The Blair Witch Project, 1999 horror film about three student filmmakers who disappear while hiking to film a documentary about a local legend, the Blair Witch
- Be My Cat: A Film for Anne, 2015 horror movie about a young man in Romania who goes to shocking extremes to convince Hollywood actress Anne Hathaway to play in his film.[4][5][6][7]
- Chronicle, 2012 science fiction movie about three high-school seniors who form a bond after gaining telekinetic abilities from an unknown object
- Cloverfield, 2008 monster thriller film following six young New Yorkers attending a going-away party on the night a gigantic monster attacks the city
- The Devil Inside, 2012 horror movie tracing the purported exorcism of a possessed woman convicted of a mass murder
- The Last Exorcism, 2010 horror film about a fictional evangelical minister who participates in a documentary that films his exorcism
- Paranormal Activity, 2007 supernatural horror film centered on a young couple who are haunted by a supernatural presence in their home
- Project X, 2012 comedy film whose plot follows three friends who plan to gain popularity by throwing a party, a plan which quickly escalates out of their control
- September Tapes, 2004 movie about a man who hunts down Osama Bin Laden
- The Troll Hunter, 2010 Norwegian comedy-drama film made by a team of film students, documenting the work of a troll hunter with the secret Norwegian Troll Service
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Romanski, Philippe; Sy-Wonyu, Aïssatou (2002). Trompe (-)l'oeil: Imitation & Falsification. Publications de l'Université de Rouen. 324. University of Le Havre Press. p. 343. ISBN 2877753344.
- ↑ "Fred Armisen and Bill Hader Take On Mockumentary Series Documentary Now! For IFC". Retrieved 2016-09-19.
- ↑ Kang, Inkoo (May 4, 2012). "The Ten Best Mockumentaries". Boxoffice. Retrieved June 23, 2013.
- ↑ "Be My cat: A Film for Anne". IMDb. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
- ↑ Pinto, Vitor. "Be My cat: A Film for Anne competing at Fantasporto". Cineuropa. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
- ↑ Millican, Josh. "Be My cat: A Film for Anne". Dread Central. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
- ↑ "Be My cat: A Film for Anne". Nashville Film Festival. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
^ G. Gomez, Rosario (2014). "Fake coup documentary sparks row". El País, English version, article. Retrieved 24 February 2014.
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