When The Taking of Deborah Logan first arrived in 2014, the "found footage" genre was arguably past its prime. Audiences were weary of shaky cameras and "based on true events" marketing. However, director Adam Robitel managed to create a film that bypassed the tired tropes of the subgenre to deliver a genuinely unsettling, emotionally grounded, and visually visceral horror experience.
The Taking of Deborah Logan is often cited alongside The Blair Witch Project and REC as one of the best examples of found footage. It didn't rely on cheap jump scares; instead, it built a slow-burning sense of dread that culminated in one of the most shocking final sequences in modern horror history (you know the one—involving a cave and a very wide mouth). Technical Specs for Enthusiasts: 1920x1080 Source: WEB-DL (Verified digital retail copies) Director: Adam Robitel Run Time: 94 Minutes Final Verdict thetakingofdeborahlogan20141080pwebdld verified
The film follows Mia Medina (Michelle Ang) and her film crew as they document Deborah Logan (Jill Larson), an elderly woman suffering from Alzheimer’s disease. Mia hopes to capture the daily struggles of Deborah and her daughter, Sarah (Anne Ramsay), but the documentary takes a sinister turn. When The Taking of Deborah Logan first arrived