Genre: Horror/Thriller
Director: Franck Khalfoun
Cast: Rachel Nichols, Wes Bentley, Simon Reynolds,
Grace Lynn Kung, Paul Sun-Hyung Lee
RunTime:
1 hr 38 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: NC-16 (Violence)
Official Website: http://www.p2themovie.com/
Opening Day: 24 July 2008
Synopsis:
It's
Christmas Eve. Angela Bridges, an ambitious young executive,
works late before she leaves for her family's holiday party.
When she gets down to the parking garage, she discovers that
her car won't start. The garage is deserted and her cell phone
doesn't get a signal underground. When Thomas, a friendly
security guard, comes along and offers to help, Angela nervously
accepts his gesture of good will. Soon after a failed attempt
to start her car, he invites her to stay and share a small
Christmas dinner he's preparing in the parking office, but
she laughs it off. Angela doesn't realize this is no laughing
matter – Thomas has been watching her closely...for
months. His dinner invitation is not optional. If Angela wants
to live to see Christmas morning, she must find a way to escape
from level P2 of the parking garage.
Movie Review:
P2 makes architects, real estate, facilities and safety people
look stupid. Why?
It's because the design of the building is implausible to
allow for such an
occurence to happen. Really, and if you think you might be
locked in, have no safety
devices for manual overriding of automated systems, and every
barrier to exit
designed as posed in the movie, then you really need to evaluate
and highlight these
deficiencies to the right department. Also, if Flightplan
made flight attendants
look bad, then P2 portrayed security officers as lecherous
voyeurs with sick minds
fantasizing about that hot executive in the business suit.
It
took almost one year for this film to mark its theatrical
release here, and even
the DVD is already out in the shops. You might want to give
this movie a chance and
watch it on the big screen, but do take note that it's an
edited version with
jarring cuts, even though it's rated NC-16 for violence. You
have been warned.
P2
refers to the particular basement parking level of a building,
where much of the
action takes place. Well, the characters got no choice given
the building lock down
on the upper floors, and this could be a strange supernatural
movie as well because
parked cars seemed to grow by the numbers at will, or either
there are a lot of cars
broken down, or the owners decided to take public transport
home for the holidays,
and leave their cars behind. It is precisely this kind of
sloppy story telling that
make P2 an unintentional comedy, which kind of surprised me
because Alexandre Aja
of Haute Tension and The Hills Have Eyes fame, had creative
input into the story.
Rachel
Nichols plays Angela, a typical beautiful blonde executive
type who found
herself stuck in her office building because her car would
not start. Eager to get
home for the holiday celebrations, she got some unsolicited
help from the car part
attendant/security officer Thomas (Wes Bentley), who as it
turned out, harboured a
secret destructive crush on her. Thus begin a kidnapping cat-and-mouse
game between
the two, with the hunter wanting to just make friends and
unleash his vengeance upon
those he's jealous of, and the prey trying her best to get
herself out of the
handcuffs that Thomas had locked her hands with, all the while
dressed in an outfit
with a cut so low that everything threatened to spill out.
While
Nichols could be credited with expressing a range of emotions
from disdain to
indifference to fear to desperation to sudden laughable bravado,
Bentley portrayed
his Thomas with a lot more psychotic conviction, though sometimes
going overboard
with his looking mean and shouting-proves-you're-crazy routine
when he hears his
name get repeated too many times. Given the movie hinges primarily
on these two
characters, their repeated escape and capture routine become
quite stale after some
time, and the lack of set action pieces to elicit some results
of tension caused the
abhorring degeneration of such moments into ones containing
the usual quick cuts and
sudden in-your-face instances to get some cheap scares.
And
if you survived reading this review until this point, you
deserve to be awarded
with a tip for the real world. So what do you do if you have
a rogue officer
stalking you, and if your mobile phone is flat / damaged /
is not within your
telco's lousy coverage? If your building is designed right,
there are always
multiple building fire alarm points on every floor. These
alarm points have a
breakable piece of glass in a box. Smash that glass, and the
building fire alarm
goes off, which links it to a remote monitoring station connected
to the fire
department. The guard will have to perform a follow up response,
because if he
doesn't, fire engines will come to your rescue. And even if
he does call them off,
hit another point, and another, and another. Surely, you'll
get the attention of
somebody, as it is clearly a situation which is not normal.
But
of course, don't get yourself caught in that kind of situation
in the first place. And if everyone's attitude is of the laid-back
sort especially during public holidays, then I'd say good
luck to you, and you'd better start reaching for that fire
axe.
Movie
Rating:
(for each distracting half-ball)
(Elvis would turn in his grave in having his songs
associated with laughable P2)
Review by Stefan Shih
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