Classroom - 76

Classroom 76 isn’t great, but it’s interesting — and in horror, interesting often outlasts perfect.

But here’s the problem: . The students? Forgettable. The teacher? A cliché. And the final act tries to explain the supernatural with a bureaucratic cover-up (something about a 1976 experiment — ah, that’s the “76” in your title — a military dictatorship-era psychic project). The lore dump kills the mystery. Classroom 76

A documentary crew investigates a mysterious mass seizure in a high school classroom. One student, supposedly possessed, spoke in a dead language. The only footage? A single, unbroken tape from a fixed camera in — you guessed it — Classroom 6. Classroom 76 isn’t great, but it’s interesting —

Here’s what works: . Most found footage films shake like a caffeine overdose. Classroom 6 does the opposite. The camera doesn’t move. It sits on a tripod, facing a chalkboard, some desks, and a window to the hallway. For 20 minutes, nothing happens. Then a chair moves. Then a whisper. Then a shadow that shouldn’t be there. The tension is excruciating in the best way. Forgettable

The ending card: “This footage was submitted to the police in 2016. No further incidents were reported.” Too neat. Too safe.