Wes Bentley's screaming and ranting is (unintentionally) funny, not unnerving. It's like being menaced by Tobey Maguire.
P2 (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:67
Fresh:23
Rotten:44
Average Rating:4.3/10
Consensus: P2 is full of gore, but low on suspense, featuring a cat-and-mouse plot has been done many times before.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for strong violence/gore, terror and language.
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Theatrical Release:Nov 9, 2007 Wide
Box Office: $3,950,874
Synopsis: Most people who have been alone in a parking garage have probably felt vulnerable to an attacker amidst the silence of the cold concrete walls, but what would you do if your assailant were the... Most people who have been alone in a parking garage have probably felt vulnerable to an attacker amidst the silence of the cold concrete walls, but what would you do if your assailant were the attendant? That's the question posed by P2, which fits into that sub-genre of thrillers that unfold in one primary location (think Mario Bava's KIDNAPPED, PHONE BOOTH, or WIND CHILL). The script, co-written by Alexandre Aja (THE HILLS HAVE EYES, HIGH TENSION), Franck Khalfoun, and Gregory Levasseur, offers a basic cat-and-mouse tale with a couple of jolts of bone-rattling gore. It's Christmas Eve, and young New York executive Angela (Rachel Nichols) is the last to leave her office before heading to New Jersey for a holiday with the family. Already late, she is dismayed to find that her car won't start. The handsome, seemingly helpful garage attendant, Thomas (Wes Bentley), checks out the car for her, but to no avail. The next thing she knows, Angela wakes up in the garage office in a dress, chained to a chair, with a Christmas dinner laid out before her. Thomas has been watching her for a long time, and with everyone else gone for Christmas, he finally has her alone. Angela will have to fight with everything she has to make it through to Christmas morning. Under the first-time direction of co-screenwriter Khalfoun, P2 is a solid thriller that delivers ample action, despite being an amped-up two-person stage play. Nichols is an appealing heroine in a physically demanding role, while Bentley's wacko Thomas never veers into cartoonishness. This isn't one for the SAW crowd, though the two brief moments of splatter are certainly of that gross-out caliber. Vintage Christmas songs are also used to strong effect. [More]
Starring: Wes Bentley, Rachel Nichols
Starring: Wes Bentley, Rachel Nichols
Director: Franck Khalfoun
Director: Franck Khalfoun
Screenwriter: Franck Khalfoun, Alexandre Aja, Gregory Levasseur
Story: Alexandre Aja, Gregory Levasseur
Producer: Alexandre Aja, Gregory Levasseur, Patrick Wachsberger, Erik Feig
Composer: Tomandandy
Studio: Summit Entertainment
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Reviews for P2
Directed without much imagination, P2 is gory and gruesome, yet never scary or affecting.
By no means is 'P2' the end-all, be-all of thriller/horrors but it is a perfectly enjoyable little slice of mindless fun.
Routine but skillful, P2 takes a bare-bones premise and uses it to string up a series of escalatingly tense situations.
The same old grim game of cat and mouse. Sure, we hope the mouse gets away. But mostly we just want the whole thing to end.
Cheerfully manipulative, P2 is the kind of movie that invites audiences to yell back at the screen and cheer.
P2 would be no more absurd as a movie about a vending machine button or a confused bingo dealer.
There's a fine line between the gloriously grotesque and the repulsively grisly, and the picture crosses it too often.
Goofy even when he's being grotesque, Bentley turns P2 into a comedy without going so far as to make fun of it.
Doesn't exactly advance the genre -- think Red Eye with twice the gore and triple the dumb -- but some above-the-call performances and a nifty use of its setting make this two-hander a genuinely creepy diversion.
The ingredients of modern horror kill the atmosphere and make P2 less scary, not more.
P2 is gory, scary, creepy, gripping, and sometimes ridiculous (in the sublime sense). What more can any horror fan ask for in their Christmas stalking?
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