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Vacancy [Blu-ray]
Vacancy [Blu-ray]

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Director: Nimrod Antal
Actors: Luke Wilson, Kate Beckinsale, Frank Whaley, Ethan Embry
Studio: Screen Gems
Category: DVD

List Price: $38.96
Buy New: $9.55
You Save: $29.41 (75%)



New (27) Used (25) Collectible (1) from $8.79

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 148 reviews
Sales Rank: 18841

Format: Ac-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Subtitled, Widescreen
Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: Blu-ray
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 85
Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 5.3 x 0.5

MPN: COLBR19576
UPC: 043396195769
EAN: 0043396195769
ASIN: B000RGN2IY

Theatrical Release Date: 2007
Release Date: August 14, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new, factory sealed, in our warehouse, and ships right now.

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 08/14/2007 Run time: 85 minutes Rating: R

Amazon.com

A confined setting is a useful tool for thriller-makers, and Vacancy is definitely boxed in: a rundown motel way, way off the Interstate, the kind of place where unsuspecting movie characters go to get stabbed to death in the shower. If Vacancy doesn't quite live up to its Hitchcockian forbears, at least it provides 80 minutes of well-designed mayhem. You know somebody's paying attention just from the opening credits, a clever vortex with pounding music by Paul Haslinger. Then we meet unhappy couple Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale, driving along in the dark and forced to stay at the Pinewood Motel after a car breakdown. There's a night man (Frank Whaley, decadent) in the tradition of Dennis Weaver's Touch of Evil gargoyle, but the real mess of trouble is waiting in room number 4. Director Nimrod Antal, who scored a stylish international hit with the Hungarian thriller Kontroll, squeezes maximum juice out of the Route 66 atmosphere of the motel, although the movie doesn't get under your skin the way Kontroll did. Wilson and Beckinsale are a little too marquee-namish for this kind of heavy-breathing work, and the script doesn't give them much to play with. But hey, it's not that kind of movie. Where it really belongs is on the top half of a drive-in double bill, or maybe as a nightmare-scenario TV movie from the Seventies. Either way, it works. --Robert Horton

Stills from Vacancy (click for larger image)







More Vacancy on Amazon.com


Vacancy on DVD

Avoid Your own Travel Disaster

By the Director



Customer Reviews:   Read 143 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars I didn't see some of the creepiest parts coming...scared me!   June 23, 2007
 43 out of 49 found this review helpful

If you've seen every horror movie out there, maybe this one won't do anything for you. It definitely kept me watching for these reasons:

1. The couple, Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale, are having marital troubles. This is a nice twist on the formulaic "couple is in love, has sex, gets killed" theme. You won't find that here.

2. They end up in a really run-down motel run by a truly whacky guy.

3. Things get very frightening and it isn't the usual slasher flick. There are some nice twists and turns here...well, maybe not nice..but definitely riveting.

4. I was surprised several times and screamed my head off. You don't really want me to reveal much more, do you? If you're looking for a horror film, I assume you want to know if you're likely to get scared silly. Based on my reaction, I'd say yes. I also wanted to know how this was going to affect this couple's marriage. I mean, stick two estranged people in a motel with a psycho and see how that changes their perspective...

I do have to add that this isn't the BEST horror movie I've ever seen but it does the job.



5 out of 5 stars Great film   June 15, 2007
 18 out of 32 found this review helpful

Truly origional horror classic. I went into this not expecting much but it turned out to be totally great horror movie. I wont get into much i'll just stress "SEE THIS!"


3 out of 5 stars Spend the night, wake up dead   April 23, 2007
 10 out of 13 found this review helpful

3.5 stars. David (Luke Wilson) and Amy (Kate Beckinsale), who recently lost their son, find themselves forced to spend the night in a seedy motel after their car breaks down in the middle of nowhere. They soon realize that there are hidden cameras in the room and judging by the tape in the VCR, which shows couples being assaulted and killed in the very same room they're in, they're in for a long, brutal night.

This is the kind of movie you watch thinking, "this could actually happen in real life" and it just makes it even more frightening. A very interesting premise indeed for a horror film, well-shot, and well played by the lead actors, but sadly culminates to an anticlimactic ending. Director Nimrod Antal shows promise, helming a claustrophobic horror film in many imaginative ways. The first half hour is intriguing and very unnerving. To imagine one in a situation like that of the two protagonists is simply terrifying. Unfortunately, the script fell into a lot of cliches and the characters started doing all those things nobody would do in real life. First off, when you realize you're in a situation like this, GET THE HELL OUT OF THERE!! David and Amy kept beating around the bush and wanting to find out who was hammering down their door; in real life, I doubt anybody would've stayed in that room much longer after the first episode of relentless pounding. They would still have had time to hit the ground running.

All that aside, the film did succeed in making you care for its central characters and make you hate the antagonists. It even managed to make me jump once or twice and took me by surprise with one of its twists. Most of the film revolves around our couple escaping through underground tunnels and hiding out in dark corners. The film moved at a quick pace and surprisingly does a great job of keeping the story engaging within its limited options (very few characters, setting of a motel, a few hours of night to resolve everything). There are a few plot holes (which I can't discuss here without ruining certain parts) and the ending to me felt botched; as if they didn't know how to tie everything together.

I can't recommend this film to everyone, but if you're a horror fan or have a fear of motels, then, by all means, you should definitely check in for the night; Vacancy has a few scares in store for you!



4 out of 5 stars A motel where you check in but never check out 3 1/2 stars   August 15, 2007
 9 out of 15 found this review helpful

Although it becomes a bit predictable by the end of the second act, "Vacancy" breathes new life into the suspense thriller genre by taking an unusual premise, a married couple at the end of their relationship and mixing it up with dazzling techique to create a great little thriller. Director Nimrod Antal and the writer take an unsual tact by actually creating characters we care about that are having major martial problems. Although it becomes predictable by the second act, I was sucked in to the film enough so that I was willing to stick around and finish the ride.

SPOILERS*

David (Luke Wilson) and Amy Fox (Kate Beckinsale)are stranded in the middle of nowhere while on a trip. They end up staying at a ratty looking motel. The creepy manager (well played by Frank Whaley in a role that echoes both "Psycho" and "Touch of Evil")and dilapated appearence of the motel hint that it isn't going to be a quiet night for the couple. What David & Amy don't realize is that the survival of their marriage is the least of their concerns.



END OF SPOILERS*

A taunt, well directed thriller, "Vacancy" isn't deep--it's a nail biting thriller that doesn't take the easy like a lot of slasher flicks that rely a bit too heavily on blood and gore. "Vacancy" works due to the appealing work of Luke Wilson, Kate Beckinsale and the creepy performance of Frank Whaley. Unlike a lot of thrillers, the backstory for the characters is actually interesting.


Using his skills in film technique Antal manages to create suspense electing NOT to take lazy approach that we see in all these torture porn films (yes Eli Roth I am talking about your films "Hostel" and "Hostel II") simply putting more gore on screen. The film reminds me of "Identity" and "Breakdown" (and, of course, the granddaddy of all these films "Psycho") in that the director digs deep into the characters to help create suspense during the first half of the film. Sure the film has a couple of cheap thrills but on the whole the makers of "Vacancy" opt for using their characters and the situations to generate suspense as opposed to just throwing blood and guts at the audience. Those expecting a film like "Hostel" or "The Hills Have Eyes II" will be disappointed but those expecting solid performances and skillful direction will enjoy this film.

"Vacancy" reflects the skill that John Carpenter or even Hitchcock might have displayed at the top of their game. What makes the film unique is that the director and writer doesn't make this into your typical slasher film developing the main characters so that we can identify with them and root for them once they are on the run from the killers.

The transfer is top notch with solid blacks, a sharp looking picture and bold colors. The extras on the disc are a bit disappointing. We get a deleted scene, a couple of the "unedited" films that Amy & David see when they put the videos on their room and a short featurette on the making of the film. I'm a bit disappointed that there isn't a commentary track from the writer or director but, really, the film kind of speaks for itself with its marvelous set pieces. We do get a lot of previews for forthcoming flicks. I didn't watch the pan & scan version included on the same disc so have no comments on how it looks, sounds, etc.

You might want to check into this motel. You won't get any sleep but you will get a suspenseful filled thrill ride. The film takes some unexpected twists and turns in its plot that will keep you on the edge of your seat. 3 1/2 stars.



3 out of 5 stars A Movie That Dares to Examine Snuff Films   August 16, 2007
 7 out of 9 found this review helpful

VACANCY may not be the best thriller of the year, though it does provide three good performances from Kate Beckinsale, Frank Whaley and a surprise serious role for fine comedian Luke Wilson, but it stands apart from many by the fact that it unveils a piece of the underbelly of crime by addressing the creation of snuff films (films made by strange minds that show the death of the actors, and whether or not we like to believe it, there is an audience for that!). The fact that the film (as shown in the very good featurette additions) was filmed entirely on a studio set adds to the admiration that grows after the fright diminishes. And writer Mark L. Smith and director Nimrod Antal deserve credit for their project.

The plot is simple: on a night road married couple Amy (Kate Beckinsale) and David Fox (Luke Wilson) are lost and the tension of the night only ads to the fact that this couple is in the throes of a broken marriage, one that fractured at the accidental death of their only son. Frustrated and angry with each other and their plight, they end up stranded in the middle of nowhere and check in to a morbid motel managed by the oily and repulsive Mason (Frank Whaley). From the moment they enter their room they realize something is wrong: the videos on the television are snuff films filmed in the room in which they are staying. From there the action of the film speeds up and is a non-stop ingenious attempt to escape the killers that besiege their room. The trauma of the night makes Amy and David reconsider their history and the film ends with a grande guignol bang.

Beckinsale and Wilson make a credible couple and the writer and director have opted to make the film more about the relationship of the estranged couple than just about horror. It works. This is not a great film, but it is an entertaining one - as well as frighteningly informative...! Grady Harp, August 07


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