Genre: Thriller
Director: Nimrod Antal
Cast: Kate Beckinsale, Luke Wilson, Frank Whaley,
Ethan Embry
RunTime: 1 hr 25 mins
Released By: Columbia TriStar
Rating: NC-16 (Brief Nudity and Coarse Language)
Official Website: http://sonypictures.com/movies/vacancy/index.html
Opening Day: 19 July 2007
Synopsis:
When David and Amy Fox's car breaks down in the middle of
nowhere, they are forced to spend the night at the only motel
around, with only the TV to entertain them... until they discover
that the low-budget slasher movies they're watching were all
filmed in the very room they're sitting in. With hidden cameras
now aimed at them... trapping them in rooms, crawlspaces,
underground tunnels... and filming their every move, David
and Amy must struggle to get out alive before whomever is
watching them can finish their latest masterpiece.
Movie Review:
The film starts off well by introducing us to bickering couple
David and Amy, whom we find out are on the brink of divorce
and soon to be stranded in the middle of nowhere because David
had taken a turn off the interstate highway and subsequently
puts on a futile display of machismo by refusing to ask for
directions. Predictably enough, their vehicle conks out in
the open and the couple have to either spend a night in their
broken-down car, or take their chances with the only available
motel for miles. While the seedy motel obviously doesn’t
have classics like “Psycho” or “Identity”
on cable, it does however have a bunch of cobwebby video tapes
piled up against the ancient television set. Horror and realization
subsequently dawn upon the couple when they conclude (rather
belatedly) that the grainy amateur snuff films they are watching
take place in the room they’re in.
With
better actors than Wilson and Beckinsale, the movie might
actually make a bigger impact on the audience. Because we’re
stuck with these two, however, there’s not much to say
about character development – Beckinsale graduates from
sullen to shrill as she becomes increasing fidgety and terrified
for her life, while Wilson struggles to maintain a stoned
façade throughout, thereby cementing him as one of
the most stoic B-grade actors of our generation. After this
cinematic turn, you may be right in guessing that “vacancy”
would feature prominently in their acting calendars from now.
Watching
the panicked couple flee for their lives through heavily claustrophobic
sets including dinky tunnels and cluttered rooms, all the
time being chased by scary men in black masks wielding shiny
weaponry masterminded by a creepy Mason (Frank Whaley) is,
dare I say it, a fun-filled thrill ride. To their credit,
newbie screenwriter Mark L. Smith and relatively unknown director
Nimrod Atal manage to do a relatively decent job of breathing
new life into a well-worn premise like the old stuck-in-dilapidated-motel-after-car-broke-down
routine.
Never
once letting up on the taut pace, we descend into a breathless
cat-and-mouse chase between victims and pursuers without knowing
whether or not they’ll survive up to the very last minute
– only to be disappointed by the huge copout of a watered-down
climax. Clocking in at only 80 minutes, the best part of this
film is that it never overstays its welcome, preferring instead
to register the requisite amount of scares before making a
hasty exit with an ill-fitting generic ending obviously aimed
at pleasing the executives over at the studio.
Movie Rating:
(Done to death formula gets new spin but ultimately let down
with tacky ending)
Review by Ninart Lui
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