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In this fresh, subversive take on the found-footage horror genre from the makers of SPLICE and CUBE, a faceless voyeur's twisted manipulation of a young couple escalates into a deadly cat-and-mouse game, as seen from the perspective of hidden cameras he's concealed throughout their house.
Rating
PG
Director
Randall Cole
Studio
Tribeca Films
Writer
Randall Cole
- Considering its mostly poor reviews I found the film to be quite entertaining. Being set in Toronto is a plus!Reply
- Strangely compelling, and sinister & creepy...though now I'm singing "Da Doo Ron Ron" non-stop. That song will never be the same again.Reply
- I really enjoyed it! It was creepy and rather un-settling, and I liked the fact it didn't show too much or give you all the answers.Reply
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- A stylish and well-made found footage serial killer film, 388 Arletta Avenue mixes Michael Haneke's masterful film Cache together with the older found footage stalker film Alone With Her. Despite being well made, 388 Arletta Avenue never achieves the heights of either film. Engaging throughout, it never manages to be creepy and just ultimately fizzles out.Reply
- this was a good movie but i was hoping to see a little more of devon sawa i think he is a great actor this movie was slow in parts but it was still very goodReply
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- 388 Arletta Avenue manages to use the terrorized-couple genre to provide a timely commentary on supposedly safe homes and distant wars.Reply
- The visuals in Randall Cole's paranoia chiller 388 Arletta Avenue evoke Michael Haneke's Caché and Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window in the way they make domesticity seem terrifying.Reply
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