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Review: Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Reviews
Vacancy
How's that for a twist?
By
BRETT MICHEL
|
April 25, 2007
VACANCY
3.0
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
Vacancy
.
What’s happened to the horror film? Rather than experiencing terror rise from the unknown (and unseen), audiences are “treated” to fetishized torture and murder, with grisly “money shots” designed to get them off — “torture porn,” in media parlance. Nimród Antal, no stranger to dark spaces (witness his moody 2003 debut, the Hungarian
Kontroll
), acknowledges this distasteful trend but also rejects it. His smart, efficient throwback to a more Hitchcockian era finds bickering David and Amy Fox (Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale) stranded at a secluded motel after their car breaks down. Before you can say “Norman Bates,” they meet Mason (Frank Whaley, believably backwoods), a proprietor with a profitable side gig producing videos in which his guests are — yes — tortured to death. Antal might disappoint viewers conditioned to twist endings, but his skillful use of sound and shadow over on-screen viscera truly chills. How’s that for a twist?
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It is a truth universally acknowledged, that there cannot be too many Jane Austen adaptations for film and television.
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ARTICLES BY BRETT MICHEL
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| May 15, 2012
As rites of passage go, Girl in Progress is a step backward for the genre.
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| May 10, 2012
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| May 03, 2012
Filled with Indian (and British) clichés, it is nonetheless a pleasant diversion that doesn't involve special effects or 3D glasses.
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| April 12, 2012
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| April 04, 2012
Eighty-five-year-old Jiro, with his unchanging expression and bald pate, resembles a wizened turtle. Leaving home at age 9 and forced to fend for himself, he would become the world's greatest sushi chef.
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BRETT MICHEL
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