Regardless of how long you last in 1408, the logic to which you are entitled never comes.
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: PG-13 [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:Jun 22, 2007 Wide
Box Office: $71,912,310
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
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Reviews for 1408
Yes, it's that kind of film--what kind of film did you think it was going to be?
Refuses to embrace the fashionable elements of torture porn that are currently cutting a bloody swath through the horror genre, relying largely on psychological terror to impart the sense of someone possibly going mad, and taking the viewer along.
The movie attempts a false ending that doesn't quite work; the picture feels prolonged, dragged out, and its ennui lessens the impact of some of its more terrifying fillips.
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.
The best movie based on a Stephen King horror story since The Shining.
Haunted houses aside, never were buildings such immense sources of creepiness and fright before 9/11.
Even as haunted hotel King movies go, 1408 is certainly no Shining. Not even the TV-movie version.
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?
If I ever check into a hotel room and the clock radio is playing the Carpenters, I'm going to freak out.
In this mix of recycled scares and half-hearted twists, the only real fright is the sight of an interesting actor wasting his talents in yet another mediocre movie.
Unlike Jack Nicholson and James Caan, who also played troubled novelists in King-inspired films, John Cusack gives an utterly sympathetic and likable performance that puts us on his side in a flick that makes a virtue of being old-fashioned horror.
There's ghoulish fun and Hichcockian suspense until the film hits a narrative wall around the 60-minute mark.
The horror wouldn't work without Cusack, who makes what could have been a rote acting exercise -- Be tough! Now angry! Now defensively funny! -- a cathartic ritual instead.
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.
gruesome and psychologically chilling, not gory and shockingly gross
No matter how entertaining the gorefests of folks like Eli Roth are, there will always be an entertainment value in films that are more into spooking people than making them sick.
All good fun, but if horror films are meant to make you leap from your seat, this is an abject failure.
While it springs from a fairly pat premise, the execution is superb, eschewing cheap scares for throbbing, intense shocks.
Stephen King can be counted on to put the fun back into a ghost story. He did it with The Shining, and again in 1408, a short story that is the basis for this suspenseful chiller about a writer's hallucinogenic night in a haunted room.
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:
RT on DVD: Fantastic Four 2, 1408, and The Jungle Book!
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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