1408 (2007)
Director: Mikael Håfström
Movie review
From Time Out New York
Stephen King, the author of this source material, has already done haunted hotels. So the idea of stretching what was simply supposed to be a dessert course (a short story in King’s 2000 audiobook Blood and Smoke) to a full meal speaks more to Hollywood appetites than the proper dictates of drama. The tale is skimpy, mostly set in a New York City suite that, despite its bustling midtown location, is said to host unspeakable evil—and it doesn’t even have Wi-Fi.But as shown by Piper Laurie in Carrie and Kathy Bates in Misery, King’s work can often inspire wonderfully unhinged turns from actors smart enough to be in on the joke. And that’s the case with 1408, in which John Cusack uncorks one of his most verbal, manic performances to date as a ghost debunker who fearlessly checks into the room to write a final chapter in his latest bestseller-to-be. Cusack, comfortable in ironic Hawaiian shirt and curled lip, excels during the film’s initial you-gotta-be-kidding phase; he’s even better by the time his character is screaming deranged insults into a minibar. Swedish director Mikael Håfström ultimately lays on the CGI too thick, but when he trusts his star, who fully dives into psychological meltdown, he’s on to something.
Author: Joshua Rothkopf
Time Out New York
User reviews of this film
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- Chris said...
- Posted on Jul 23 2007 12:00 This was way too long and disappointing. It wasn't even that scary. The whole concept is interesting but the conclusion is predictable and the special effects not that impressive.
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Cast & crew
Director: Mikael Håfström
Producer: Lorenzo Di Bonaventura
Cast: John Cusack, Samuel L Jackson, Mary McCormack, Tony Shalhoub, Jasmine Jessica Anthony full cast
Genre(s): Fantasy, Horror, Thrillers
Rated: PG-13
Duration: 105 mins
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