A disturbing 2011 child-abduction horror film called 'Megan is Missing' is going viral on TikTok 9 years after its release
- 2011 horror film "Megan is Missing" is going viral on TikTok 9 years after its release, with people posting their reactions to the movie and cautioning others to not watch it.
- The movie is a fictional story about internet predators and child abduction.
- It's been previously criticized for its extreme violence, with some critics calling it "torture porn."
The 2011 horror film "Megan is Missing" is TikTok's newest pop-culture fixation, and people who watch the film are calling it "traumatizing" or saying that they "couldn't even finish it."
The film, which was written, directed, edited, and co-produced by Michael Goi, was made in a found-footage style that follows the abduction of a teenage girl, Megan. The controversial film has drawn criticism in the past for its violence and sexualization of its adolescent protagonists, and as Entertainment Weekly reported, was banned in New Zealand.
Now, people on TikTok are re-living the viewing experience and posting their reactions on the app. The hashtag #meganismissing has over 83 million views.
It's not quite clear why "Megan is Missing" is going through a renaissance in 2020, but it's not unusual for cultural artifacts from decades past to become popular on TikTok, which is favored by Gen Z.
'Megan is Missing' is a controversial found-footage style film about internet predators and abduction
"Megan is Missing" takes place in the days leading up to the abduction of teenager Megan Stewart (Rachel Quinn), and follows her friend Amy (Amber Perkins) as she investigates Megan's disappearance. The film is focused on the danger of anonymous online chatting — Megan disappears after chatting with a man named Josh who claims to be a 17-year-old, says that he can't show his face because his webcam is broken, and fails to show up at a party where he and Megan were supposed to meet.
The film, set in 2007, was picked up by distributor Anchor Bay and released in 2011. While the story it tells is fictional, it was marketed as being based on true events and was endorsed by Marc Klaas, whose 12-year-old daughter was kidnapped and killed in 1993, the Guardian reported. Director Michael Goi said in an interview with Indie Film Nation that he "wanted to do a movie about this subject" and that he thought it was important to "get the word out about it."
Per the Guardian, film scholar Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, who has written on violence and rape in horror cinema, said that "Goi's motive was unquestionably positive — he's a good guy who really wanted to save kids' lives — but that didn't stop Megan is Missing from being dismissed as torture porn: ultimately it still looks and feels like an exploitation film."
'Megan is Missing' began to take off on TikTok in mid-November
Many of the videos in the #meganismissing tag on TikTok were posted within the past several days, and it appears that the film exploded on the app over the weekend of November 13. However, people had posted about the movie and their reactions to it before its biggest surge in November, with the film coming up as part of film recommendation series or in reaction videos. In early October, some users were already posting about how wished they hadn't watched it.
Now, people on TikTok are posting their reactions to the film or making videos about how they felt after watching it. Many are calling the film "traumatizing," and using the slowed and pitched down version of "Rät" by Penelope Scott in their posts. "Oh you're so traumatized it makes me wanna cry," Scott sings in the song.
A slowed, pitched-down version of Gotye's 2011 song "Somebody That I Used To Know" also soundtracks many of the videos.
The term "Megan" trended on Twitter on Sunday afternoon as people began to post about it.
The director of the film joined TikTok to post a warning about it
Michael Goi, the director, writer, editor, and co-producer of "Megan is Missing" appears to have made a TikTok account to talk about "Megan is Missing's" newfound popularity on the app.
"I got a text from Amber Perkins, the lead actress in my movie, that it was exploding on TikTok at the moment, and I didn't get to give you the customary warnings that I used to give people before they watched 'Megan is Missing,' which are: do not watch the movie in the middle of the night, do not watch the movie alone, and if you see the words 'Photo Number One' pop up on your screen, you have about four seconds to shut off the movie if you're already kind of freaking out before you start seeing things that maybe you don't want to see," Goi says in a video that now has approximately 1.5 million likes.
"Apologies to those who are already posting about how the movie has freaked them out, but fair warning to those of you who are still contemplating watching the film," he says.
If you want to watch "Megan is Missing," you can rent it on Amazon Prime, YouTube, and Google Play — just do so with Goi's warnings in mind.
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