If you like 'spooky' but not 'gross' -- if you like to be scared without being assaulted -- then 1408 should do the trick.
1408 (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:162
Fresh:127
Rotten:35
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: Relying on psychological tension rather than overt violence and gore, 1408 is a genuinely creepy thriller with a strong lead performance by John Cusack.
Rated: 15 [See Full Rating] for thematic material including disturbing sequences of violence and terror, frightening images and language
Runtime: 1 hr 44 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Theatrical Release:31-08-2007
Synopsis: The PG-13 rating given to 1408 belies this film's truly terrifying effects on its audience. Though it's far less gory than its peers, it has frightening moments and a creepy mood throughout. John... The PG-13 rating given to 1408 belies this film's truly terrifying effects on its audience. Though it's far less gory than its peers, it has frightening moments and a creepy mood throughout. John Cusack (IDENTITY) plays Mike Enslin, a gifted writer who has turned his talents to paranormal travel books. His stays in haunted hotels never shake him, but he's intrigued by New York's Dolphin Hotel. Room 1408 has been the site of dozens of deaths, and this is a selling point for the skeptic in Mike. Despite the warnings of the hotel manager (Samuel L. Jackson, BLACK SNAKE MOAN), Mike resolves to stay in the haunted room. No one has lasted more than an hour in 1408, and Mike has his work cut out for him. Though Cusack got his acting pedigree in comedies, he proves he's able to adeptly carry a horror film. He's in practically every frame of the film, often alone, and he's great at making the audience share in his fear. This is the second English-language film from director Mikael Hafstrom (DERAILED), and he does a good job of establishing tension. A lot of the credit is due to the film's sound crew, whose detailed work goes far in giving 1408 its unsettling feeling. Like THE SHINING, this is based on writing from horror master Stephen King, and it's a similarly creepy tale set in a hotel. But in its execution, 1408 is far more indebted to classic horror films such as the original 1963 version of THE HAUNTING. [More]
Starring: John Cusack, Samuel L. Jackson, Mary McCormack, Tony Shalhoub
Starring: John Cusack, Samuel L. Jackson, Mary McCormack, Tony Shalhoub
Director: Mikael Håfström
Director: Mikael Håfström
Screenwriter: Matt Greenberg, Scott Alexander, Larry Karaszewski
Producer: Lorenzo Di Bonaventura
Composer: Gabriel Yared
Studio: Dimension Films
Reviews for 1408
1408 amounts to little more than a radical shock-therapy session for a man still finding his way after the loss of his daughter. Best to leave him alone with his issues.
Swedish director Mikael Hafsrom, who scored with Evil in 2003 and fizzled badly with Derailed two years later, seems to have regained his footing.
Your check-in time for the Dolphin Hotel's room 1408 should be whenever the movie hits video stores.
The story features some surprises, and director Mikael Håfström adds realism by bypassing computer graphics for practical effects. Add in the natural fear of being trapped in tight spaces and you have a can't-miss formula for horror and suspense.
1408 is not quite interesting enough to linger long in the mind, but it has enough jack-in-the-box chills to mollify those who feel it's been all downhill since The Uninvited.
John Cusack is virtually a one-man show in the claustrophobically chilling 1408.
1408 offers proof that you really can make a creepy and effective, PG-13-rated horror movie.
Underneath the atmosphere and pizzazz is an intimate and thoughtful portrait of one man's return from an abyss infinitely more haunting than any old, evil hotel room.
Adapted from a Stephen King story, this trite but watchable chiller plays like a scaled-down version of The Shining, with Cusack driven over the edge by hallucinations of his abusive father and dead daughter.
It's a good, solid scare picture, modestly scaled but well-crafted. And unlike certain other horror items on offer right now, this one doesn't make you feel like a psycho-in-training for sitting through it.
As the film chips away at the psychological barriers that protect a non-believer from being scared, don't expect your defenses to fare any better.
Listen up, all you Hostels, Saws and other purveyors of bloody terror. Lay down your whips, chain saws and paring knives to watch a truly scary movie.
Stephen King’s claustrophobic obsessions are well served by Hafstrom and Cusack.
Based on a Stephen King story, 1408 takes the simplest plot and turns it into an enjoyably surreal, unnerving creepfest.
1408's a room none of us would want to visit in real life but one everyone should spend some time in while in the safety of a darkened theater.
Cusack is supposed to be a haunted-house pro, but after a window shuts on his fingers and the sink sprays hot water, he turns hysterical. Shouldn't he call maintenance first?
Not only is the trailer for 1408 oodles more terrifying than the movie itself; worse, for the most part, this pop-horror trifle adapted from a Stephen King short story grows into a formulaic bore.
It pins you into a claustrophobic chamber of terror for a surprisingly stomach-turning thrill ride.
Latest News for 1408
November 01, 2007:
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Following a sluggish fall season, November kicks off with a bang this weekend with two high profile films both reaching for the number one spot while appealing to vastly... More...
October 02, 2007:
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A delightfully mixed bag awaits us this week at the video store -- a little superhero hype (Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer), some Stephen King suspense (1408), plenty... More...
July 30, 2007:
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July 22, 2007:
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