Film Review: Ti West’s ‘The Innkeepers’ is Terrifying Horror Gem

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CHICAGO – Ti West’s “The Innkeepers” is one of the most effective horror movies of the last several years, a true gem of the genre that reminds a scary movie junkie like myself why I fell in love with them in the first place. With his stellar production values and a perfection of the slow burn pace that he employed in the arthouse hit “House of the Devil,” West takes a leap to the forefront of directors working in modern horror. Don’t miss this one.

HollywoodChicago.com Oscarman rating: 4.5/5.0
Rating: 4.5/5.0

“The Innkeepers” requires patience. There are long chunks in which nothing substantial happens and modern horror fans weaned on the “Saw” franchise may long for a Jigsaw Killer or Bloody Mary to spice things up. Trust me. It’s worth the patience. And it’s not like “House of the Devil” where virtually nothing happens for an hour. There’s a sense throughout “The Innkeepers” that something isn’t right and there are a few high-caliber scares within the burn like an amazing bed scene and another one with a piano. I can’t even talk about the basement without getting the chills. So the burn in “Innkeepers,” while slow, is nowhere near the slow simmer of West’s previous film. It’s more like a build – a fire that grows slowly and then explodes in a fireball in the final reel.

StarRead Brian Tallerico’s full review of “The Innkeepers” in our reviews section.

Once again, West structures his film around a sweet, somewhat naïve heroine, this time played expertly by Sara Paxton. The film is primarily a two-character piece with a pair of hotel workers – Claire (Paxton) and Luke (Pat Healy) – spending one final weekend in a creepy old hotel that is closing down. The fact that the hotel will soon be unoccupied means that most of the rooms, including the entire third floor, are empty, which allows Claire and Luke a lot of free time to work on his website that claims that the hotel is haunted. They take turns manning the front desk and wandering the old building with their recorder looking for ghostly sounds. Unlike most horror movies, they also have basic human interaction like getting coffee next door and some flirtation at least from one direction. The second night they drink Schlitz and finally get the liquid courage to go into the super-creepy basement.

Claire and Luke are not completely alone. The first night of the final weekend includes a mother (Alison Bartlett) who always seems angry and a psychic (who also happens to be a former actress) named Leanne Reese-Jones (Kelly McGillis, the new queen of indie horror after “Stakeland” and this one). Claire happens to be a big fan of Reese-Jones and her work on TV but the psychic becomes more than just a celebrity when the subject of ghostly activity arises. Maybe she can help Claire and Luke contact the other side. When a final guest (George Riddle) arrives on the final night and demands a room on the abandoned third floor, the creepiness is turned up another notch. It’s a modern day minor variation on “The Shining” complete with a terrifying bathroom scene and rooms you don’t want to go in.

StarContinue reading for Brian Tallerico’s full “The Innkeepers” review.

“The Innkeepers” stars Sara Paxton, Pat Healy, Alison Bartlett, Jake Ryan, Kelly McGillis, and George Riddle. It was written and directed by Ti West. It is On Demand now and opening in Chicago theaters tomorrow on February 3rd, 2012.

The Innkeepers
The Innkeepers
Photo credit: Magnolia

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