Sheltered (2010) Poster

(2010)

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5/10
Bad, but almost great.
duckman_0795 May 2020
Difficult to rate this one. It has all the elements of a good horror movie, but the flow wasn't good for some reason. Also, a lot wasn't explained. I don't like slashers, but the mix with the supernatural was good. I wish more were brought out with the lead girl's role as far as her ability to see things, which seemed to connect the diabolical and charming bartender. If it didn't show promise, it would get a 4 from me. If it were refined, I can see it going much higher than a 5. Please keep in mind that I know almost nothing about making movies or being a critic, I'm just one person who's opinionated.
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5/10
Sometimes it is better to stay out in the rain.
michaelRokeefe16 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This advertised horror flick directed by Josh Stoddard is one of those that can really be enjoyed or on the other hand treated like trash. A group of friends are traveling and are seeking refuge from a storm brewing. Ducking into a roadside bar sounds like a good idea. The vacationers are greeted by a friendly enough bartender Joey(Gerald Downey). He is a bit odd acting, and informs the wet group he needs to close shop; but invites them to ride out the storm at his nearby home. Everything goes well until their eccentric host runs the gamut from mild and meek to unbridled manic. This shelter from the storm quickly becomes a trap. Outside the storm is raging, while inside the guest become easy prey.

Really more of a chiller than a horror film. Some elements of terror, but nothing to rave about. Others in the cast: Stacia Crawford, Allison Dunbar, Nick Stable, Tricia Small, Jonathan Frappier, Manoel Hudec and Scott Damian.
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5/10
Small budget slasher with professional direction
Leofwine_draca10 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
SHELTERED is a surprisingly efficient little slasher film made on a very small budget in California. This time around the single location setting is well explained by having the central characters taking shelter from a storm in a house belonging to a friendly stranger. You can guess what begins to happen next, but the real surprise is here is just how well this film is made.

The editing is far above average for a zero budget production and the performances are a little less shrill, a little more well realised. The twists and turns will surprise nobody and the attempts at back story rather poorly handled, but the deaths and the scares are pretty good. In addition the direction is of a professional standard which means that this is a film which at the very least looks good.
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2/10
Bad horror movie that does almost everything wrong...
dwpollar29 August 2011
1st watched 8/28/2011 –(Dir-Josh Stoddard): Bad horror movie that does almost everything wrong from the beginning to the end. It starts out with the typical rowdy young group of kids out to have a good time despite driving right into the face of a hurricane on a vacation(where they just will not be denied their fun, of course). They stop at a bar to have a few drinks, their car stops working, and the bartender graciously gives them a place to stay and party until the storm ceases. Of course, this bartender, has other things in mind for them as the filmmaker lets us know about right off the bat by showing us his first kill at his feet behind the bar(there goes the mystery…so why watch the rest??). I did continue watching the rest – and the rest consisted of the group drinking, some random sex, and then the group being killed off one-by-one. That was pretty-much the movie, except they did let us know why he wants to kill in the first place, and one female character strangely sees all the background thru various apparitions(and we're never told why). There's plenty of blood and gore, if you like that kind of thing, but there is no brains behind the story. It's a typical slasher-type movie that's been retread many times over and un-fortunately the best part of the movie was the original music performed by one of the stars. Music though, doesn't make a movie – but instead should complement it – but sadly there was no movie here to be complemented.
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4/10
Today is going to get much worse
nogodnomasters28 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A group of vacationers and not tourists get stranded during a Hurricane. Joey (Gerald Downey) allows them to stay at his house after making google eyes with Jen (Stacia Crawford). The group includes a couple of surfers, 2 hot chicks, Todd, Joey's brother Billy and a junkie.

There is a storm, a semi-party is going on, and we know Joey is the psycho killer. At this point the plot is dead and the only thing that can save the film is dialogue and colorful characters which were as poorly conceived as the plot.

Guide: F-word. Sex. No nudity. Heather Loschiavo bra and panties.
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1/10
Awful
davidfio-788033 November 2018
The acting, story and directing are all bad. The plot is easy enough to follow but many of the characters actions make no sense. This move is bad on every level and a complete waste of time.
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7/10
Atmospheric and artistic low-budget slasher
Wuchakk20 August 2016
RELEASED IN 2010 (with a 2006 Copyright) and directed by Josh Stoddard, "Sheltered" is a micro-budget slasher about a group of 20-somethings who seek shelter at a stranger's house during a hurricane, but there's something 'off' about the host and, even more, his brother. Will they survive the night?

If you want to see a multi-million dollar horror film, stay clear. If you wanna see a well-made independent flick made on nickels & dimes check out "Sheltered." The acting and script are surprisingly adept. Gerald Downey & Manoel Hudec standout as the courteous host and his little brother, Joey and Billy, while Stacia Crawford is effective as the main protagonist, Jen. Heather Loschiavo is on hand as an oversexed junkie, Christie.

One of the other actresses, Tricia Small (Denise), wrote and performed several of the cuts on the soundtrack, along with Dee Rock. One of them is a moving acoustic piece, "Salvation Day," that plays at the 47:12 mark and it's spectacular, even worth the price of admission. The editing during this sequence is artistic and all-around superb. The end credits song, "I Wanna Go Home," is also worth noting.

You'll notice the TV movie quality of the photography right off the bat but, other than that, the filmmaking is quite professional with imaginative flourishes. Stoddard effectively creates an ambiance of eeriness somehow mixed with beauty and even reverence, which can be observed in the climactic scene of one of the characters standing in the rain with their hands held out to the sky, as if they desperately need cleansed and perhaps re-awoken. It smacks of real life.

I appreciate well-done spare change budget indie flicks like this because you'll never get what they can offer from mainstream cinema. They provide a unique experience.

THE FILM RUNS 83 minutes and was shot in Glendale, Southern California.

GRADE: B
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8/10
Neat suspense thriller
Woodyanders13 July 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Awkward, but friendly and handsome bartender Joey (a fine and intense performance by the hunky Gerald Downey) allows a group of young vacationers to seek refuge in his house on the eve of a big storm. The vacationers soon discover that there's a crazed killer in their midst, but unfortunately are trapped inside the house by the fierce storm that's raging outside. Director Josh Stoddard, who also co-wrote the absorbing script with Matthew Murray, relates the gripping story at a steady pace, does an expert job of creating and sustaining a potently spooky gloom-doom mood, stages the jolting moments of sudden brutal violence with real flair and skill, and adds a few nice touches of amusing black humor for good measure. The slowly mounting tension gets more edgy and unsettling as the narrative unfolds, with an especially harrowing last third and a startling denouement that's not only upsetting, but also unexpectedly poignant. It's this latter element of tragedy and poignancy which in turn gives this picture an extra substantial emotional resonance (Downey's outwardly charming and polite Joey makes for a scary, yet still somehow strangely pitiable psycho). The competent acting from the able no-name cast helps a lot, with particularly praiseworthy contributions from Tricia Small as the sweet and sensitive Denise, Stacia Crawford as the spunky Jen, Allison Dunbar as the snippy Susan, Jonathan Frapier as bumbling loser Todd, and Manoel Hudec as Joey's creepy and antagonistic drug dealer brother Billy. Marco Fargnoli's slick cinematography gives this movie an impressive polished look. In addition, Small and Dee Rock provide a handful of spot-on harmonic songs on the nifty soundtrack. A cool little flick.
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7/10
Surprisingly fantastic!
xxxsarahmariexx9 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I'm the ultimate horror movie buff. I bought this film in a 4-film movie pack, so I wasn't expecting much. It was actually good though! The acting was solid, the blood was realistic, and the storyline was fun. At first I was confused about the voices and little visions, but the wrapped it up nicely. My biggest problem though... (*spoilers!*) At the end, when Joey had lost a lot of blood and he was holding the gun, Billy appeared out of nowhere and stabbed him with a hook. My reaction: WHAT?! Billy was CLEARLY shot in the heart by Joey earlier. He should've been dead! Yet somehow he lives and is shown holding his dead brother while Jen escapes. Maybe the writers didn't notice this? ... Actually I'm pretty happy with it, because the actor who played Billy was extremely cute, so I may be biased. :) Overall, a great thriller with some good bloody scenes and a talented, attractive cast. What more could you want?
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8/10
Bloody Fun
papamccain23 May 2015
The story and the coincidences may have been a bit too contrived but the actors pulled every bit of good out of the script. Everybody knows within the first 15 minutes how it was going to roll, but the acting kept you engaged. Gerald Downey's ability to turn from pleasant young man to psycho murderer was quite well done as was his portrayal of OCD. Mandel Hudec always angry still pulled it off at the end. Worth watching at least once as a guilty pleasure. The women (Stacia Crawford, Tricia Small, Allison Dunbar, Heather Loschiavo) played some great characters also, more mature but just as horny as your typical teenage thriller.
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