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-Reservoir Dogs
-Dog Day Afternoon
-The Matrix
-Donnie Darko
-The Godfather, Part I
-The Godfather, Part II
-The Crow
-Dogma
-Sleepy Hollow
-The Brave Little Toaster
-The Shining
-Yellow Submarine
-eXistenZ
Reviews
1408 (2007)
Beautiful visually; gorgeously creepy
When I first saw a preview for 1408 several months ago, I was just confused. John Cusack in a horror film? I turned to my boyfriend in the theater and asked if he had just seen the same trailer I had. I supposed he and Stephen King knew each other after their work together on Stand By Me in 1986, but still. This was an entirely different thing. This was a completely new direction for the man known to so many as Lloyd Dobler. It was so interesting that I just had to see it for myself.
The movie was based on a short story of the same name, published in 2002 among thirteen other tales in the anthology Everything's Eventual. Though I hadn't read it, Stephen King movies always make me a little nervous. Obviously, there have been several gems, such as Stanley Kubrick's The Shining and Brian De Palma's Carrie, but more often than not, it feels like King's stories are more effective on paper than they are on the big screen. 1408 is one of the exceptions. Beautiful visually, it made me wonder how it ever sufficed as only words.
The plot is interesting in that far-fetched way that King has so brilliantly mastered over the years. Mike Enslin, an occult writer who doesn't really believe in ghosts, stays in hotel rooms for a living and rates them on their creepiness. You guess what comes next. Of course he ends up face to face with the real thing, finding himself over his head in a paranormal world he never believed existed. The interesting thing is what he actually finds himself up against. Rather than ghosts or ghouls, the antagonist in Mike Enslin's story is actually the room itself. From the very beginning, room 1408 seems to be a sentient being; a personification of evil. John Cusack excels a difficult task; that is, acting opposite to an inanimate object. He is alone in the hotel room for large portions of the movie but still manages to react in honest, believable ways, despite the difficulties of being alone in front of a camera.
Don't forget, 1408 is a scary movie and it's effective at what it does. The cinematography is gorgeously creepy throughout. Despite a few cheesy shots, the special effects are an overall enhancement and don't make it feel less real, like much of the CGI in Hollywood nowadays. Though subtle, sound is an important part of the film's atmosphere, and the suspense created by Gabriel Yared's musical score is only equaled by a few stretches of very well placed silence. Over the years, the "thirteenth floor" sector of the superstition genre has almost become a species of its own. (Remember, thought 1408 may be the number of a fourteenth floor room, hotels skip the thirteenth floor when they number!) This is a psychological thriller through and through. As Mike Enslin tries to sort out reality from illusions, the audience is left sifting through the leftovers and trying to decide for themselves.
Be ready for a roller coaster of twists, turns and false endings, some predictable and some surprising. Expect a few horror movie clichés but also look forward to a few genuinely interesting oddities. John Cusack has tried something new but Stephen King is up to his old tricks. This is not another gore-filled serial killer story in the style of Texas Chainsaw Massacre; 1408 is the twisted story of evil, insanity and the strength of the human will to live.
Neophytes and Neon Lights (2001)
I thought this movie was bloody awesome
I spent a lot of time and effort trying to get my hands on Neophytes and Neon Lights. It's an Australian film festival flick, and I found it quite troublesome finding it. However, the wait was worth it. This movie is admittedly one of the oddest flicks I've ever seen, but it's also a radiant gem.
The plot doesn't shine. It's set in Australia, in a world where teleportation has replaced air travel. Four petty criminals, a drug dealer, an entertainer and a half-crooked security guard frequent a teleportation terminal, which is the equivalent of an airport. The acting shines, and the characters are amazing, once you get them straight, which is the hardest part of the movie. Don't only pay attention to the main characters, but file every character into your brain - people you wouldn't expect come into play as the plot surges forward. It starts out fairly slow paced, then speeds abruptly, and the twist ending will knock you for a loop.
I was impressed with the talented bunch of actors, pulling off tough characters. Americans may only know Matt Doran from his small part in the Matrix, but Mouse fans will love Sedge. Morgan O'Neil comes through with Astro beautifully, and Sam O'Dell will break your heart as Turner.
Overall, this movie was funny. It was suspenseful. It was extremely entertaining. I wished it would never end. If you can get access to this elusive movie (as it took me months to do) I would say, whole-heartedly, watch it. You will not regret it.
Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
A refreshing new take on a bank robbery
First off, I'd like to say that this is one of my favorite movies of all time. Probably my absolute number one. The reason I liked it so much was how the bank robbery was portrayed. Yeah, yeah, Sonny *was* robbing a bank. He was a criminal, obviously. But the way the movie twists and turns, it makes you kind of forget about that, and sympathize with him. It takes you through the rocky road of his life and really kind of lets you see with his eyes. Al Pacino, who has never let me down in delievering an unforgettable performance, is a genius, and really brings the character to life. The light tone of the film in general, a mixture of every detail in the whole movie really, makes it something you would not want to miss.