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Archive of posts filed under the Suspense Movies category.

Drive Angry

Drive Angry

A 3D revenge action movie that centers on a man (Nicolas Cage) driven by rage who is chasing the people who killed his daughter and kidnapped her baby. The vendetta / rescue spins out of control as the chase gets bloodier by the mile, leaving bodies strewn along the highway.

Directed by: Patrick Lussier
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Amber Heard, David Morse, Billy Burke, Katy Mixon
Screenplay by: Todd Farmer, Patrick Lussier
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: Summit Entertainment
Release Date: February 11th, 2011

The Roommate

The Roommate

The story centers on Sara, a college student randomly assigned to a freshman dorm with a stranger named Rebecca. They start off as friends but things turn deadly as Rebecca begins to target people in Sara’s life.

Mallhi, an executive VP at Vertigo, wrote the screenplay under a pseudonym so it would be given fair consideration in the marketplace. It wasn’t until after Screen Gems made an offer on Roommate that Mallhi revealed that he wrote the spec.

Directed by: Christian E. Christiansen
Starring: Leighton Meester, Cam Gigandet, Matt Lanter, Billy Zane, Minka Kelly
Screenplay by: Sonny Mallhi
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: Sony ScreenGems
Release Date: February 1st, 2011

Kaboom

Kaboom

Featuring a gorgeous young cast, Kaboom is a hyper-stylized ”Twin Peaks” for the Coachella Generation and tells the story of Smith (Thomas Dekker), an ambisexual 18-year-old college freshman who stumbles upon a monstrous conspiracy in a seemingly idyllic Southern California seaside town. Smith’s everyday life in the dorms – hanging out with his arty, sarcastic best friend Stella (Haley Bennett,) hooking up with a beautiful free spirit named London (Juno Temple,) lusting for his gorgeous but dim surfer roommate Thor (Chris Zylka) – all gets turned upside-down after one fateful, terrifying night

Never underestimate the influence of John Waters. Apparently, he mentioned to Gregg Araki that, while he admired Araki’s recent, more serious films like Mysterious Skin, he really missed the questionable taste and confrontational panache of films like The Doom Generation and Totally F***ed Up. From that conversation Kaboom was born, and it does indeed share key touchstones with Araki’s earlier films, including scatological and absurd Valley-inflected dialogue, elements of campy gore and Araki’s troupe of arrestingly sexy guys and girls. But Kaboom also feels like a stealthily sophisticated synthesis of Araki’s various experiments in tone and cinematography, a product of someone hitting their prime as a radical, independent artist.

Any attempt to walk through a conventional plot synopsis for Kaboom feels like a feeble exercise. One could say that it concerns a sex-crazed bisexual college boy plunging headlong into a supernatural world of demons, cults, human sacrifice and potential Armageddon. But the film ultimately ends up being about, and existing in, a borderline psychotic, psychosexually-hyperactive imaginary universe that feels absolutely real and true – not so much prescient as an alternate version of reality. The film’s often chilling, drug-saturated paranoia (even we audience members start looking over our shoulders) makes the film feel like a mélange of The Manchurian Candidate and Liquid Sky.

What matters about Kaboom, other than its exceptional directorial control of outrageously over-the-top material, is that Araki is able to reveal beautiful moments of human emotion against the backdrop of a manic tableau. Great sadness and joy inflect even the silliest of scenes; the confusion and pain of the onset of adulthood is felt deeply throughout, and Araki evokes just the right amount of wistfulness for a more carefree time.

Directed by: Gregg Araki
Starring: Haley Bennett, Thomas Dekker, James Duval, Andy Fischer-Price, Brandy Futch
Screenplay by: Gregg Araki
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: IFC Films
Release Date: January 28th, 2011

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest

In this last installment, Lisbeth Salander (Noomi Rapace) lies in critical condition, a bullet wound to her head, in the intensive care unit of a Swedish city hospital. She’s fighting for her life in more ways than one: if and when she recovers, she’ll be taken back to Stockholm to stand trial for three murders.

With the help of her friend, journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist), she will not only have to prove her innocence, but also identify and denounce those in authority who have allowed the vulnerable, like herself, to suffer abuse and violence. And, on her own, she will plot revenge – against the man who tried to kill her, and the corrupt government institutions that very nearly destroyed her life.

Directed by: Daniel Alfredson
Starring: Michael Nyqvist, Noomi Rapace, Lena Endre, Annika Hallin, Jacob Ericksson
Screenplay by: Jonas Frykberg, Stieg Larsson, Ulf Ryberg
MPAA Rating: R for strong violence, some sexual material and brief violence.
Studio: Nordisk Film, Music Box Films
Release Date: October 29th, 2010

The Debt

The Debt

Helen Mirren and Sam Worthington star in “The Debt,” the powerful story of Rachel Singer, a former Mossad agent who endeavored to capture and bring to trial a notorious Nazi war criminal—the Surgeon of Birkenau—in a secret Israeli mission that ended with his death on the streets of East Berlin.

Now, 30 years later, a man claiming to be the doctor has surfaced, and Rachel must go back to Eastern Europe to uncover the truth. Overwhelmed by haunting memories of her younger self and her two fellow agents, the still-celebrated heroine must relive the trauma of those events and confront the debt she has incurred.

Directed by: John Madden
Starring: Sam Worthington, Helen Mirren, Ciarán Hinds, Marton Csokas, Tom Wilkinson
Screenplay by: Jane Goldman, Peter Straughan, Matthew Vaughn
MPAA Rating: None.
Release Date: December 29th, 2010
Studio: Miramax Films

The Tourist

The Tourist

A remake of the 2005 French film written and directed by Jerome Salle. Thriller concerns an American tourist who finds his life in danger when a female Interpol agent uses him as a dupe to flush out an elusive criminal with whom she once had an affair.

Directed by: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
Starring: Johnny Depp, Angelina Jolie, Rufus Sewell, Clément Sibony, Timothy Dalton
Screenplay by: Julian Fellowes, Christopher McQuarrie, Jeffrey Nachmanoff, William Wheeler
MPAA Rating: None.
Release Date: December 10th, 2010
Studio: Columbia Pictures (Sony)

The Next Three Days

The Next Three Days

Life seems perfect for John Brennan until his wife, Lara, is arrested for a gruesome murder she says she didn’t commit. Three years into her sentence, John is struggling to hold his family together, raising their son and teaching at college while he pursues every means available to prove her innocence.

With the rejection of their final appeal, Lara becomes suicidal and John decides there is only one possible, bearable solution: to break his wife out of prison. Refusing to be deterred by impossible odds or his own inexperience, John devises an elaborate escape plot and plunges into a dangerous and unfamiliar world, ultimately risking everything for the woman he loves.

Directed by: Paul Haggis
Starring: Olivia Wilde, Elizabeth Banks, Liam Neeson, Russell Crowe, Jonathan Tucker
Screenplay by: Fred Cavayé, Paul Haggis
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: Lionsgate Films
Release Date: November 19th, 2010

Skyline

Skyline

Skyline takes place in a Los Angeles high-rise where a small group of survivors brave a mysterious attack of otherworldly origins. Faison is playing an entrepreneur who lures his longtime friend (Balfour) to the West Coast. After a night of partying, both wake to find a strange force is swallowing humanity off the face of the earth.

Directed by: Colin Strause, Greg Strause
Starring: Eric Balfour, Brittany Daniel, Donald Faison, David Zayas, Scottie Thompson
Screenplay by: Joshua Cordes, Liam O’Donnell
MPAA Rating: None.
Release Date: November 12nd, 2010

Fair Game

Naomi Watts and Sean Penn in Fair Game

A suspense-filled glimpse into the dark corridors of political power, Fair Game is a riveting action-thriller based on the autobiography of real-life undercover CIA operative Valerie Plame (Naomi Watts), whose career was destroyed and marriage strained to its limits when her covert identity was exposed by a politically motivated press leak.

As a covert officer in the CIA’s Counter-Proliferation Division, Valerie leads an investigation into the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Valerie’s husband, diplomat Joe Wilson (Sean Penn), is drawn into the investigation to substantiate an alleged sale of enriched uranium from Niger. But when the administration ignores his findings and uses the issue to support the call to war, Joe writes a New York Times editorial outlining his conclusions and ignites a firestorm of controversy.

Directed by: Doug Liman
Starring: Naomi Watts, Sean Penn, Ty Burrell, Michael Kelly, Bruce McGill
Screenplay by: Jez Butterworth, John Butterworth, Valerie Plame
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for some language.
Studio: Summit Entertainment
Release Date: November 5th, 2010

My Soul to Take

My Soul to Take

From writer / director Wes Craven comes a suspense thriller that warns us evil is working 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. And if you have any chance at beating it, you’ll have to fight for your life 25/8. Released in 2D and 3D.

In the sleepy town of Riverton, legend tells of a serial killer who swore he would return to murder the seven children born the night he died. Now, 16 years later, people are disappearing again. Has the psychopath been reincarnated as one of the seven teens, or did he survive the night he was left for dead? Only one of the kids knows the answer.

Adam “Bug” Heller (Max Thieriot) was supposed to die on the bloody night his father went insane. Unaware of his dad’s terrifying crimes, he has been plagued by nightmares since he was a baby. But if Bug hopes to save his friends from the monster that’s returned, he must face an evil that won’t rest…until it finishes the job it began the day he was born.

Directed by: Wes Craven
Starring: Nick Lashaway, Zena Grey, Max Thieriot, Denzel Whitaker, Dennis Boutsikaris
Screenplay by: Wes Craven
MPAA Rating: R for strong bloody violence, and pervasive language including sexual references.
Studio: Rogue Pictures
Release Date: October 29th, 2010

Hereafter

Hereafter

Hereafter tells the story of three people who are touched by death in different ways. George (Matt Damon) is a blue-collar American who has a special connection to the afterlife. On the other side of the world, Marie (Cecile De France), a French journalist, has a near-death experience that shakes her reality. And when Marcus, a London schoolboy, loses the person closest to him, he desperately needs answers. Each on a path in search of the truth, their lives will intersect, forever changed by what they believe might–or must–exist in the hereafter.

The film also stars award-winning French actress Cécile de France (“A Secret”) as Marie, and twins Frankie and George McLaren. The international cast also includes Jay Mohr (“Street Kings,” TV’s “Gary Unmarried”), Bryce Dallas Howard (“Eclipse,” “Spider-Man 3”), Marthe Keller, Thierry Neuvic and Derek Jacobi.

Directed by: Clint Eastwood
Starring: Matt Damon, Bryce Dallas Howard, Jay Mohr, Cecile De France, Lyndsey Marshal
Screenplay by: Peter Morgan
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for mature thematic elements including disturbing disaster and accident images and brief strong language.
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Release Date: October 22nd, 2010

Red

John Malkovich, Bruce Willis and Morgan Freeman in Red

Frank (Bruce Willis), Joe (Morgan Freeman), Marvin (John Malkovich) and Victoria (Helen Mirren) used to be the CIA’s top agents – but the secrets they know just made them the Agency’s top targets. Now framed for assassination, they must use all of their collective cunning, experience and teamwork to stay one step ahead of their deadly pursuers and stay alive. To stop the operation, the team embarks on an impossible, cross-country mission to break into the top-secret CIA headquarters, where they will uncover one of the biggest conspiracies and cover-ups in government history.

“Red” is the story of Frank Moses (Willis), a former black-ops CIA agent, who is now living a quiet life. That is, until the day a hi-tech assassin shows up intent on killing him. With his identity compromised and the life of the woman he cares for, Sarah (Parker), endangered, Frank reassembles his old team (Freeman, Malkovich and Mirren) in a last ditch effort to survive. “Red” is based on the DC Comics graphic novel of the same name by Warren Ellis.

Directed by: Robert Schwentke
Starring: Bruce Willis, Morgan Freeman, Helen Mirren, Karl Urban, John Malkovich
Screenplay by: Warren Ellis, Cully Hamner, Erich Hoeber, Jon Hoeber
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for intense sequences of action violence and brief strong language.
Studio: Summit Entertainment
Release Date: October 15th, 2010