Welcome to ASFN Fan Forums! We're glad to have you here. Please feel free to browse the forum. We'd like to invite you to join our community; doing so will enable you to view additional forums and post with our other members.
Registered Members don't see these ads. Register now it's free!
Release Date: April 20, 2007 Studio: Screen Gems (Sony) Director: Nimród Antal Screenwriter: Mark L. Smith Genre: Horror, Thriller MPAA Rating: R (for brutal violence and terror, brief nudity and language) Website:Vacancy
Starring: Luke Wilson, Kate Beckinsale, Frank Whaley, Ethan Embry
Plot Summary: When David (Luke Wilson) and Amy Fox's (Kate Beckinsale) car breaks down in the middle of nowhere, they are forced to spend the night at the only motel around, with only the TV to entertain them... until they discover that the low-budget slasher movies they're watching were all filmed in the very room they're sitting in. With hidden cameras now aimed at them... trapping them in rooms, crawlspaces, underground tunnels... and filming their every move, David and Amy must struggle to get out alive before whomever is watching them can finish their latest masterpiece.
Registered Members don't see these ads. Register now it's free!
__________________
"If Chuck is Solo, Larkin is his Fett!" - Morgan
I enjoyed the movie for what it was right up until the last 5 minutes. What a crappy ending. They set it up for one more thrill, and then...nothing.
The wife and I just watched this and both really enjoyed it. We liked that they set up the classic "one more thrill" ending but didn't go with the cliche.
__________________
People of Mars, you say we are brutes and savages. But let me tell you one thing: if I could get loose from this cage you have me in, I would tear you guys a new Martian ***hole. You say we are violent and barbaric, but has any one of you come up to my cage and extended his hand? Because, if he did, I would jerk it off and eat it right in front of him. “Mmm, that’s good Martian,” I would say. - Jack Handey
The measure of one's individual liberty is proportionate to their acceptance of personal responsibility. Without the latter the former will cease to exist.