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- Duration: 3:09
- Published: 31 May 2007
- Uploaded: 31 Jul 2011
- Author: DimensionFilms
Name | 1408 |
---|---|
Caption | Theatrical release poster |
Director | Mikael Håfström |
Producer | Lorenzo di Bonaventura |
Writer | Matt GreenbergScott AlexanderLarry Karaszewski |
Story | Stephen King |
Starring | John CusackSamuel L. JacksonMary McCormack |
Music | Gabriel Yared |
Cinematography | Benoît Delhomme |
Editing | Peter Boyle |
Distributor | Dimension FilmsMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Released | June 22, 2007 |
Runtime | 106 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $25 million |
Gross | $131,998,242 |
The film follows Mike Enslin, an author who specializes in the horror genre. Mike's career is essentially based on investigating allegedly haunted houses, although his repeatedly unfruitful studies have left him disillusioned and pessimistic. Through an anonymous warning (via postcard), Mike eventually learns of the Dolphin Hotel in New York City, which houses the infamous "Room 1408". Interested yet skeptical, Mike decides to spend one night in the hotel although manager Olin (Jackson) warns him strongly against it. Mike has a series of bizarre experiences in the room.
Once inside the room, Mike pulls out his Mini Cassette recorder and dictates on the room's dull and tired appearance, unimpressed thus far. During his examination, the radio suddenly starts blaring "We've Only Just Begun" by the Carpenters, but Mike assumes this is just a trick of Olin's. Later the song plays again, and the digital display flickers and changes to read "60:00," echoing Olin's warning that no one lasts in the room more than an hour. Shortly after this, Mike becomes deafened by a loud ringing, and his hand is crushed by a window sill, then scalded when he attempts to wash it in the sink and boiling steam comes out the faucet. Mike begins to attempt to leave the room, but all his attempts fail: the doorknob falls off the door, and when he climbs out onto the window ledge, the windows to the other rooms have vanished. All the while Mike is assailed by spectral visions of a blade-wielding maniac, and former victims of the room killing themselves. He also hallucinates visions of his family, including his mentally ill father and his daughter's time in the hospital before her death.
Desperate, Mike uses his laptop to contact his wife Lily by video chat, but the conversation ends abruptly when the sprinkler system shorts out his laptop after Mike informs Lily where he is. Mike attempts to call for help again by climbing into the air vents. However, he is chased through the air vents back into the room by a corpse-like figure. The room temperature drops to subzero when the laptop suddenly begins to work again, and Lily tells him the police have entered 1408, but the room is empty. A doppelgänger of Mike appears in a new chat window and urges Lily to come to the hotel herself, winking at Mike. The room shakes violently and suddenly floods with water. Mike surfaces on a beach, the result of a surfing accident earlier in the film, and after returning to a normal life and reconciling with Lily, he assumes it was a dream. However, he visits the post office and recognizes a construction crew working as the hotel staff. They then proceed to destroy the walls of the room, revealing Mike is still trapped in 1408, now burnt and destroyed. A vision of Katie appears to Mike, and after some reluctance he embraces her in tears, before she crumbles to dust. Mike hears the alarm clock begin to play and searches for it, collapsing onto his side and seeing it under the rubble as it counts down. When the countdown ends, the room is suddenly restored to normal, and the alarm clock resets itself to 60:00.
The phone rings, and the friendly female voice of the hotel operator informs him that he can relive the hour over and over again, or take advantage of their "express checkout system," that is, death. Mike sees a hangman's knot and has a vision of him hanging himself, but refuses. The operator then reminds him that Lily is on her way to the room, and Mike responds the room cannot have her. Mike uses the bottle of alcohol from Olin to make a Molotov Cocktail and solemnly sets the room on fire, smoking a cigarette as the flames spread. Meanwhile, the hotel is evacuated and Lily is seen in traffic on her way to the hotel when the crowd emerges on the street. Mike declares 1408 the scariest site he has ever visited and hurls his ashtray through the closed window, causing a backdraft that consumes the room and Mike in flames. Firefighters enter the room and pull Mike to safety, while in his office Olin smiles and whispers "Well done, Mr. Enslin." Later, as Mike recovers in a New York hospital, with Lily at his bedside, he tells her about Katie, but Lily doesn't believe him. The two reconcile and Mike moves back in with Lily, and during the move she hands him a box of items retrieved from the rubble of 1408. Mike finds his tape recorder and after some tinkering gets it to play, and the recorder replays his conversation with Katie. Lily overhears and stares at Mike in shock while Mike solemnly stares back as if he were saying "I told you so".
The original ending sees the backdraft engulfing the room as Mike hides under the table, happy to see the room destroyed as he dies. During Mike's funeral, Olin approaches Lily and Mike's agent where he unsuccessfully attempts to give her a box of Mike's possessions, including the tape recorder. Before being cut off, Olin claims that the room was successfully destroyed and that it will no longer harm anyone ever again, which is why he claims "Mike did not die in vain". Going back to his car, Olin listens to the recording in his car, becoming visibly upset when he hears Katie's voice on the tape. He looks in the car mirror and imagines seeing a glimpse of Enslin's burnt corpse in the backseat. Having heard and seen enough, Olin places the tape recorder back in the box and drives off. The film ends at the gutted room, with an apparition of Mike looking out the window and smoking a cigarette. He hears his daughter calling his name, and disappears as he walks towards the room's door. A sound of a door closing is heard and the screen blacks out.
James Berardinelli awarded the film three stars out of four, praising it as "the best horror film of the year". He offered significant praise for Cusack's performance as Mike Enslin, writing that "this is John Cusack's movie to carry, and he has no problem taking it where it needs to go". He found the film to be a refreshing experience, believing it "reminds us what it's like to be scared in a theater rather than overwhelmed by buckets of blood and gore". Many critics believed the film to be far superior to other adaptations of Stephen King novels and stories. Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote a very positive review, describing the film as "one of the good Stephen King adaptations, one that maintains its author's sly sense of humor and satiric view of human nature". He ultimately believed the film to be a "more genuinely scary movie than most horror films".
Several critics, however, found the film to be underwhelming. Wesley Morris of The Boston Globe wrote a mixed review, describing the film as "a lot of consonants and no vowels". He went on to compare the film unfavorably to The Shining, a similar King adaptation, believing 1408 lacked that film's "lunging horror and dramatic architecture". Although he believed the film "conjures a wonderful anticipatory mood of dread in the first 30 minutes", he ultimately believed the film "then blows it to stylish smithereens". Rob Salem of the Toronto Star awarded the film two stars out of four, believing it to be a predictable, "hit and miss" production. Like Morris, Salem wrote that "Even as haunted hotel King movies go, 1408 is certainly no Shining. Not even the TV-movie version."
Category:2007 films Category:2000s horror films Category:American horror films Category:English-language films Category:Films directed by Mikael Håfström Category:Films based on Stephen King's works Category:Films about writers Category:Films set in New York City Category:Supernatural horror films Category:The Weinstein Company films Category:MGM films
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