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HorrorMystery

1408

- The Dolphin Hotel invites you to stay in any of its stunning rooms. Except one.

A man who specializes in debunking paranormal occurrences checks into the fabled room 1408 in the Dolphin Hotel. Soon after settling in, he confronts genuine terror.

Release Date : 2007-06-22

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Dimension Filmsdi Bonaventura Pictures

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : Room 1408

Cast

John Cusack

Character Name : Mike Enslin

Original Name : John Cusack

Gender : Male

Samuel L. Jackson

Character Name : Gerald Olin

Original Name : Samuel L. Jackson

Gender : Male

Mary McCormack

Character Name : Lilly Enslin

Original Name : Mary McCormack

Gender : Female

Jasmine Jessica Anthony

Character Name : Katie

Original Name : Jasmine Jessica Anthony

Gender : Female

Tony Shalhoub

Character Name : Sam Farrell

Original Name : Tony Shalhoub

Gender : Male

Alexandra Silber

Character Name : Young Woman at Bookstore

Original Name : Alexandra Silber

Gender : Female

Noah Lee Margetts

Character Name : Bellboy

Original Name : Noah Lee Margetts

Gender : Male

William Armstrong

Character Name : Clay

Original Name : William Armstrong

Gender : Male

Paul Birchard

Character Name : Mr. Innkeeper

Original Name : Paul Birchard

Gender : Male

Margot Leicester

Character Name : Mrs. Innkeeper

Original Name : Margot Leicester

Gender : Female

Angel Oquendo

Character Name : Taxi Cab Driver

Original Name : Angel Oquendo

Gender : Male

Walter Lewis

Character Name : Bookstore Cashier

Original Name : Walter Lewis

Gender : Male

Eric Meyers

Character Name : Man #1 at Bookstore

Original Name : Eric Meyers

Gender : Male

Holly Hayes

Character Name : Lady at Bookstore

Original Name : Holly Hayes

Gender : Female

Johann Urb

Character Name : Surfer Dude

Original Name : Johann Urb

Gender : Male

Andrew-Lee Potts

Character Name : Mailbox Guy

Original Name : Andrew-Lee Potts

Gender : Male

Kim Thomson

Character Name : Desk Clerk

Original Name : Kim Thomson

Gender : Female

Drew Powell

Character Name : Assistant Hotel Manager

Original Name : Drew Powell

Gender : Male

Isiah Whitlock, Jr.

Character Name : Hotel Engineer

Original Name : Isiah Whitlock, Jr.

Gender : Male

Benny Urquidez

Character Name : Claw Hammer Maniac

Original Name : Benny Urquidez

Gender : Male

Len Cariou

Character Name : Mike's Father

Original Name : Len Cariou

Gender : Male

Ray Nicholas

Character Name : Factory Owner

Original Name : Ray Nicholas

Gender : Male

Paul Kasey

Character Name : Kevin O'Malley

Original Name : Paul Kasey

Gender : Male

George Cottle

Character Name : Mailbox Worker

Original Name : George Cottle

Gender : Male

William Willoughby

Character Name : Mailbox Worker

Original Name : William Willoughby

Gender : Male

Thomas A. McMahon

Character Name : Cop #1

Original Name : Thomas A. McMahon

Gender : Male

Kevin Dobson

Character Name : Priest

Original Name : Kevin Dobson

Gender : Male

Peter Conboy

Character Name : Man Outside Hotel Fire (uncredited)

Original Name : Peter Conboy

Gender : Male

Georgie Lee-Robinson

Character Name : Bookstore Assistant (uncredited)

Original Name : Georgie Lee-Robinson

Gender : Female

Bernadette Lords

Character Name : Hotel Guest (uncredited)

Original Name : Bernadette Lords

Gender : Female

Rob McGillivray

Character Name : Bellboy (uncredited)

Original Name : Rob McGillivray

Gender : Male

Kate Walsh

Character Name : Mike Enslin's Ex-wife (uncredited)

Original Name : Kate Walsh

Gender : Female

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Dolphin Sandwich. 1408 is based on one of horror writer Stephen King's short stories. It stars John Cusack as a supernatural investigator who rents room 1408 at The Hotel Dolphin in New York. It is said to be a most haunted room and the scene of many deaths. He soon finds his scepticism tested to the max. Although it has deep themes of grief et al, this essentially boils down to one man in a room being plagued by psychological and physical attacks, with the intended chills and shocks surreal in presentation. It's all very twisty and big on conundrums, which makes a second viewing something of a necessity, whilst Cusack's performance is also reason to check in for another viewing. However, it's not the scary movie some have lauded it as, in fact it's more fun-house palaver than anything terrifying, but there's no doubting the intelligence and skill of the writing. The mind is a curious, wonderful and troubling thing, and 1408 wants us to know it. 6/10

K

Kamurai

@Kamurai

2021-06-23

Great watch, would watch again, and can recommend. While the setup is a little bleh, it serves a point, but I could literal start the movie at Samuel L. Jackson's office and be fine. Once in 1408, the intensity creeps perfectly. It really gives you the atmosphere of a cat playing with its food. It'll mess your head a little, but that's just from a great John Cusack delivery and wonderful cinematic display. And the ending is almost perfect: the are two minors points that could be bad, but they're unclear. As the manager said, "It's and evil room.

A

Andre Gonzales

@SoSmooth1982

2023-08-21

The storyline and basis of the movie is kind of dumb. It is entertaining though with a lot of weird and crazy stuff happening in room 1408.

R

RalphRahal

@RalphRahal

2024-12-17

(Watched the Theatrical version) 1408 is a solid psychological horror that pulls you into its dark and twisted world. John Cusack does an amazing job as Mike Enslin, a skeptic writer dealing with supernatural horrors while battling his own guilt over losing his daughter. His performance really makes the movie—he sells the fear, grief, and madness perfectly. That said, the endings are what really stood out for me. The theatrical version felt too neat and safe. Sure, it wraps things up nicely, but for a movie this dark, it needed something heavier. The director’s cut hit harder—it’s bleak and sticks with you. The haunting moment with his daughter fit the tone of the movie so much better. It kept the unsettling vibe that should linger after a film like this. The production was great too. The way the room constantly changes and traps you with Mike was done so well, keeping you on edge the whole time. Overall, I enjoyed it, but the director’s cut is the real winner for me. It keeps the dark, disturbing feel that a movie like this needs.