Uma Thurman's The Bride continues her vengeance quest against her ex-boss, Bill, and his associates in Tarantino's eagerly awaited sequel.
Following the grisly 1997 Cube and its 2002 sequel, Cube 2: Hypercube, Cube Zero stretches the originals The Twilight Zone-like, strangers-in-a-box theme a little thin. Fortunately, there's a difference this time. The hero is not just another disoriented captive of the Cube's interconnected--often lethal--rooms, but rather a geek named Eric (Zachary Bennett) who sits in a control station wrestling with his conscience about inflicting misery on innocent people. Taking orders over the phone from some almighty, unknown power in a distant office, Eric reaches a breaking point and enters the maze himself, intent on helping a woman (Stephanie Moore) who doubts his motives. The existential bent of the prior films becomes even more Kafkaesque this time with the arrival of a white-collar team of tormentors, bureaucratic tyrants who can't or won't explain the point of the Cube. Imaginative writer-director Ernie Barbarash rescues what might have been a tedious formula flick. --Tom Keogh
Cube: Six Strangers awaken from their daily lives to find themselves trapped in a surreal prison - a seemingly endless maze of interlocking cubical chambers armed with lethal booby traps. None of these people knows why or how they were imprisoned. But it soon emerges that each of them has a skill that could contribute to their escape. Who created this diabolical maze and why? There are unanswered questions on every side whilst personality conflicts and struggles for power em
Angela bridges (Rachel Nichols) an ambitious and gorgeous young lawyer hurries out her upscale Manhatten office on the way to see her family. She descends to parking level P2 she tries to start her car. The engine won't turn. She tries again. It won't start. She is trapped in a haunting underground world - a world which is inhabited by a dark and forgotten soul who is watching her every move. Brooding in his subterranean office Thomas (Wes Bently) spends his days alone isolated underground. watching people come and go with little contact with or interest in the outside world. Except for Angela. Thomas develops a disturbing obsession for Angela. As the prospect of spending another Christmas alone becomes all but certain something seething inside Thomas snaps.
A cop on the track of a criminal finds himself in the midst of an unfinished subway tunnel when his flashlight reveals a startling discovery: a three metre long scorpion-like Bug. With one slice of its massive tail the bug fells the man and devours him. FBI agent Matt Pollack is brought in to investigate and when forensics reveal the source of the problem he turns to his friend and entomologist Emily Foster for help. Her studies have chilling results.Matt and a team of c
P2 is a rollercoaster ride of a film where shocks are delivered fast furiously and with the utmost brutality. With sinister twists and disturbing realism P2 is the ultimate fear-inducing horror movie that will shock and frighten right through to its unforgettable blood-curdling climax. It is Christmas Eve and underneath a Manhattan skyscraper ambitious young executive Angela (Rachel Nichols) is dismayed when her car won't start. The garage is deserted and her phone doesn't get a signal underground. Angela is relieved when Thomas (Wes Bentley) the handsome seemingly helpful garage attendant offers to look at the car. Unable to get the engine to start he invites Angela to share a Christmas meal with him. She laughs off the invitation but it quickly becomes clear the extremity of her situation is no laughing matter - Thomas has been watching her closely for months and his dinner invitation is not optional. If Angela wants to live to see Christmas morning she must find a way to escape from level P2 of the parking garage. P2 is an accomplished horror-thriller from the partnership of director Frank Khalfoun and writer Alexandra Aja whose previous collaborations on The Hills Have Eyes remake and High Tension have established them as a glaring force within the horror genre. With a dark eerie setting and strong fear inducing script P2 does not fail to live up to the high standards of this partnership's previous releases.
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