|
|
|
Written by Robert W. Butler, MCT
|
|
Monday, 18 June 2007 |
|
|
|
|
___ 1408 2 ½ stars Director: Mikael Hafstrom Cast: John Cusack, Samuel L. Jackson, Mary McCormack Rated: PG-13 for disturbing images, language. Running time: 1:34 ___
Most ghost stories bore you with a long setup before getting down to the good stuff.
"1408" is just the other way around. The first half hour, when director Mikael Hafstrom and three writers (working from a Stephen King story) are putting all their ducks in a row, is terrific. It's smart, clever and subtle.
The actual scary part is a letdown.
Mike Enslin (John Cusack) writes ghost guidebooks - tours of cemeteries, country inns and old lighthouses where the paranormal is said to run rampant. But for all the nights he's spent in "haunted" rooms, he's never actually encountered a ghost. Mike's a glum cynic who, in the wake of his young daughter's death and the breakup of his marriage, doesn't believe in anything.
Then a mysterious postcard arrives telling him to check out Room 1408 in New York's Dolphin Hotel. A little research reveals numerous suicides in the room, beginning just weeks after the hotel opened in the 1920s. Guests have thrown themselves from the windows, slashed their wrists and necks, hanged themselves from light fixtures and drowned in the bathtub.
Still dubious but with his curiosity piqued, Mike travels to the Big Apple, where the desk clerk at the Dolphin tries to give him a different room. This leads to the film's best scene.
During a sit-down with the manager, Olin (Samuel L. Jackson), Mike learns that the reported deaths in 1408 are but the tip of the iceberg. There are dozens of "natural" deaths as well. Nobody has ever stayed in 1408 for more than an hour and come out alive.
Since Olin came on board he's refused to let anyone stay in the room, which is cleaned once a week by a team of maids who are never left alone and who must complete their work in just a few minutes.
This sounds to Mike like an elaborate scam created to generate publicity for an old hotel. He demands the key to 1408. Olin tries to bribe him with an expensive bottle of liquor. Mike is smugly adamant. What's the big deal, anyway?
"It's an evil (blank)ing room," Olin hisses in reply.
That encounter is so sharply written and deftly played by Cusack and Jackson that the real meat of the story - what happens to Mike in 1408 - feels more like an afterthought.
At first the room looks normal. But then the clock radio resets to 60 minutes and begins counting backwards. Ghostly apparitions take headers to the street below. Walls crack and something like blood oozes out. A painting of a seascape inundates the room with a wave of water, then the temperature drops to well below freezing.
The door won't open and a call to the front desk results only in a chirpy female voice informing Mike he can check out at any time ... through the window.
Pretty soon Mike is a believer. The question now is how he'll survive the night.
"1408" isn't really scary, not in the heart-clutching manner of, say, the original version of "The Haunting." Director Hafstrom ("Derailed") takes a funhouse-ride approach with big set pieces - fire, water, snow - and an ingenious fake ending that will have most moviegoers guessing.
There's plenty going on, but the movie is too busy to be truly disturbing, it has too many distractions to really home in on what's important - Mike's mental state. Cusack, quite possibly our most personable actor, goes through the expected stages of sarcasm, cynicism, curiosity, alarm and panic.
But as for that deep-in-the-bones sense of dread that great horror generates, "1408" comes up short.
| Only registered users can write comments. Please login or register. |
|
|  | "Humankind cannot gain anything without first giving something in return. To obtain, something of equal value must be lost. That is Alchemy's first law of Equivalent Exchange. In those days, we really believed that to be the world's one, and only truth." | |
|  | We're not that bright, even though in our own little world, we're geniuses. We like 80s hair bands and one-hit wonders, but among us we have respectable tastes, too. Metallica, Iron Maiden, U2. Pursuit of all things trivial is a lifestyle, not just a game. We like some sports, love other sports, and can find something to say about anything. We watch TV and movies and we've read a book or two, even a few classics (Yes, Classic Comics count!)
We call it insight, you call it what you will. | |
|  | Felix Wong is an outdoor enthusiast living in Fort Collins. A mechanical engineer by day, he is especially passionate about bicycling, running, and backpacking. | |
|  | Hola Amigos! I'm Sandra. I like to believe that people are 70 percent good and 30 percent dumb. I'm stickin to that story. Reading this blog might make you want to be good, but probably just dumb. | |
|  | Donovan Henderson is editor of NEXTnc. | |
|  | Here at Nextnc we have some characters. Get a sneak peak behind the curtain and find out what amusing antics our staffers get themselves into on a weekly basis. | |
|  | What is up FoCo?
I am a recent college graduate of Minnesota State University Moorhead. After recieving my B.A. in English and Mass Communications this past August I moved down to Colorado.
I enjoy long walks on the beach, candlelight dinners, and heavy metal. My hobbies include reading and writing, music, movies, and getting drunk. Some of my favorite contemporary authors include Bret Easton Ellis, Chuck Palahniuk, and Kurt Vonnegut. My top movies are anything directed by Kubrick. I enjoy listening to anything that rocks.
Right now I am just trying to get to know Colorado and FoCo better. Mostly in order to find the best drink specials on each day that ends in Y. So if you know where I can get a cheap drunk on, let me know!
--Drew | |
|  | Life's little morsels of inspiration, observation and encouragement seen through the eyes of the Nextnc reporter.
| |
|  | Ms. Giles currently lives in Colorado where she stars in her own private reality show. She writes aphoristic accounts of her life, taken completely out of context, and embellished with characters and situations disguised to resemble something close to interesting. | |
|  | over and out | |
|  | My name is Michelle Turley and I'm 28 years old. I live in Severance with my hubbie, Brandon. We have 2 dogs and a cat. We enjoy camping, four-wheeling, and just being in the mountains. I like to cook, clean (go figure), flea market, and play poker. I have so much to say about poker... | | |
|