Driving by their deep will of doing adventures and witnessing true murders and hunt, a group of teenagers, go on a long journey to the wild, where they struggle against survival, after being chased by strange creatures.
If you're relatively easily scared or are in a theater full of people who are, the film might be good for a few screams. But only if you're the patient sort.
IF the filmmakers had made a documentary about haunted houses, I might have liked "The Houses October Built." Instead, they opted for a knockoff of "The Blair Witch Project." What a mistake.
This is a somewhat tiresome found-footage excursion admirable in how it came together, and disappointing that it couldn't have added up to more than it ultimately does.
The scary Halloween house at your local amusement park is child's play compared to the "extreme haunts" that fill this uneven but intriguing found-footage horror flick.
What sets this film appart from other found footage movies is the fact that it tries to be a documentary at times, adding more credibility to what we see on screen. [Full review in Spanish]
Despite sitting through an endless parade of found footage stinkers, every so often there's a movie like The Houses October Built that proves that the subgenre is far from dead.