Unfriended Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Unfriended quiz and we will tell you which Unfriended character you are. Play it now.

It’s interesting to see how “Unfriended” formalizes its experiment. This is a film that takes place in real time, and everything that we see is restricted to whatever is displayed on the main character’s computer screen. The idea has been around for quite some time, of course; however, it’s possible that this is the first time that such a conceit has been depicted in its most straightforward form. Except for a brief scene in which one of the characters picks up his laptop and walks around his house with it, the director, Levan Gabriadze, and the screenwriter, Nelson Greaves, confine the characters to the area immediately surrounding their computers.

Aside from that, we’re listening in on a protracted discussion that’s taking place between a group of six teenagers, and it involves alternating between video chats and text message exchanges. That is, until some otherworldly influence transforms it into a conversation between six adolescents, and then five, and then four, and so on and so forth.

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The movie makes two terrible judgment calls, which are as follows: 2.) It is simply not very interesting to watch video chats and text messages, particularly when the participants are of the sort described in item No. 1. 1.) All of these characters are self-absorbed, unfeeling bores. 2.) It is particularly uninteresting to watch video chats and text messages involving participants of the sort described in item No. 1. The majority of the movie consists of Blaire (Shelley Hennig) sitting at her computer and staring at a static web browser and program windows on her desktop. Inside of those windows are smaller video boxes that show close-ups of her friends or text bubbles that show the written exchanges between two characters written in the typical, lazily abbreviated shorthand of online communication. One might speculate that the quick access to a dictionary program that is located in the bottom left corner of the screen is a private joke for users who place a higher priority on using correct spelling and grammar in their written communications.
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Unfriended quiz.

Through these conversations, we learn that a young woman named Laura, played by Heather Sossaman, took her own life exactly one year ago to the day after a video of her behaving in an embarrassing and drunken stupor that was posted online went viral. During a sexually charged video chat that Blaire and her boyfriend Mitch (Moses Jacob Storm) start, Mitch brandishes a knife and “jokingly” threatens Blaire with it if she does not take off her shirt. Blaire and Mitch have an intimate relationship. Mitch is the kind of guy who always tells it like it is.

Unfriended Quiz

A group chat with three other friends—the standard best friend Adam (Will Peltz), the stuck-up brat Jess (Renee Olstead), and the necessary computer whiz Ken—interrupts their conversation (Jacob Wysocki). Later on, the somewhat less stuck-up Val, played by Courtney Halverson, joins them; however, the communications between the friends are also being monitored by an anonymous user who appears to have access to all of Laura’s online accounts. A word of caution could be implied by the inclusion of a link to a post on an online forum with the heading “DO NOT ANSWER MESSAGES FROM A DEAD PERSON.” The fact that some of the letters have been capitalized appears to be a dead giveaway. The tale of a woman who answered a text message from her late husband and then took her own life a week later is most certainly an example of this phenomenon.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Unfriended quiz.

This appears to be a horror movie at first glance, but upon further inspection, we realize that it is missing many key elements that are essential to the genre, such as building suspense and providing genuine scares. As has been hinted at previously, the movie is an attempt to accurately recreate the experience of spending a significant amount of time in front of a computer screen. As a result, the majority of the movie’s attempts at creating tension involve staring at the spinning circle of a video that’s loading, the long pauses between instant messages when the person on the other end is occupied with something else, watching files download, and Blaire typing and deleting—and re-typing and again deleting—various messages to the ghost in the machine, who is probably the spirit of the girl that she and her friends drove to commit suicide. By the way, virtually all of the characters assert, in one fashion or another, that Laura “deserved what she got.” These individuals are so approachable and easy to connect with.

About the quiz

Naturally, each character has to perish in turn as the story progresses. They do in the end, and in increasingly ridiculous and befuddling ways that Gabriadze milks for cheesy and overtly obvious jump scares (The final, anticlimactic one especially feels like a rushed afterthought). The fact that Greaves’ screenplay featured a humorous techno-ghost is partially attributable to the writer’s skill as a storyteller. In between the more obvious instances of terrifying its victims, the phantom preys on the adolescents’ insecurities and the secrets they keep to themselves. Blaire’s playlist of contemporary pop music is replaced with an old classic about lying after it is revealed that she was the victim of a sexual betrayal. A lengthy game of “Never Have I Ever” that quickly turns into a melodramatic showdown is one of the unintentionally funny scenes in this film. Another unintentionally funny scene involves two uses of a blender that the appliance’s inventor probably never imagined.
Also, you must try to play this Unfriended quiz.

In the off chance that it isn’t obvious by now, the point of the movie is that cyberbullying is unacceptable behavior. It is reasonable to assume that “Unfriended” is at least partially an exaggerated attempt to scare people straight about that despicable trend. However, the movie might just make people associate bullying with an activity that is pointless, laborious, and devoid of any sense of fulfillment. Hey, you know what? That might also work.

For more personality quizzes check this: The Duff Quiz.

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