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Vacancy DVD
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List Price: $19.94
Amazon.com's Price: $19.49
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Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Sony
EAN: 0043396182882
Format: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Sony Pictures
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Sony Pictures
Region Code: 99
Release Date: August 14, 2007
Running Time: 85 minutes
Sales Rank: 5870
Studio: Sony Pictures
Theatrical Release Date: April 20, 2007




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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
A suspenseful classic thriller in the tradition of Alfred Hitchcock starring Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale that will keep you on the edge of your seat and your heart pounding! 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 videos they find in their room 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.System Requirements:Running Time: 85 Mins.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: HORROR Rating: R UPC: 043396182882 Manufacturer No: 18288

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



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Vacancy on Blu-ray

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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - deplorably pathetic beyond any grasp of anything sane or meaningful
2007's Vacancy is so bad, it goes far beyond the stretch of imaginative words one can use to describe in no uncertain terms, how truly horrible a film can actually be. The accolades that some reviewers give this, makes me cringe with fright to fully comprehend that another breathing, living human being actually thought this was worth any iota of time to even consider this more than a one star rating. The understanding that two people in a hotel who find a vhs tape with other people getting mauled ... Read More



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - deplorably pathetic beyond any grasp of anything sane or meaningful
2007's Vacancy is so bad, it goes far beyond the stretch of imaginative words one can use to describe in no uncertain terms, how truly horrible a film can actually be. The accolades that some reviewers give this, makes me cringe with fright to fully comprehend that another breathing, living human being actually thought this was worth any iota of time to even consider this more than a one star rating. The understanding that two people in a hotel who find a vhs tape with other people getting mauled ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Tunnels Of Love...
David and Amy Fox (Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale) are in the final days of their marriage. They simply can't get past the grief of losing their son, Charlie. Now, all the couple does is fight and snipe at each other. This is their last trip together before their divorce. David, not being the greatest navigator, has gotten them lost in a desolate area. To make matters worse, the car's engine gives out. Luckily, there's a small, lonely motel within walking distance. So, the Foxes bicker and argue ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Keeps you guessing
My husband bought this for me and I love it. Has the suspense to keep you on the edge of your seat and guessing. Give a try you just may like it.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Predictable but entertaining
A la the very obvious backdrop of Psycho, Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale deliver nearly shrill preformances in a somewhat predictable outcome as they are trapped in a horror story.

Wilson and Beckinsale, in perhaps the most hostile couple ever caught on film, are driving in the middle of the night, hopelessly lost. Way off course and hating each other by the minute (they just had to throw in the telltale photograph of their son who has died under unknown conditions), they stop at a ... Read More





 



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