Reeks like the day old apple you left lying in you back seat after a long hot miserable driving day.
The Forsaken (2001)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:53
Fresh:4
Rotten:49
Average Rating:3.3/10
Consensus: It's all been done before, and done better.
Runtime: 1 hr 31 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
US Box Office: $6,258,942
Synopsis: Driving cross-country to deliver a vintage Mercedes, Sean (Kerr Smith) does the one thing he wasn't supposed to do -- pick up a hitchhiker. From that moment on, his road trip is transformed into a... Driving cross-country to deliver a vintage Mercedes, Sean (Kerr Smith) does the one thing he wasn't supposed to do -- pick up a hitchhiker. From that moment on, his road trip is transformed into a surreal and terrifying nightmare. Sean's new companion, Nick (Brendan Fehr), is not the laid back, aimless traveler he seems to be. He is a hunter. And his prey are a roving band of forsaken youths who feed upon hapless victims found in the dead of night—in a word, vampires. When Sean and Nick pick up the dazed and frightened Megan (Izabella Miko), whom the killers had left for dead, she becomes a human lure for the vampires. The stakes are raised when Sean himself is infected. The only cure for them all is to kill the host organism, Kit (Johnathon Schaech), the vicious leader. It's a deadly race against time to escape the fate of their enemies— joining the ranks of the insatiable undead forever. -- © 2001 Screen Gems [More]
Starring: Kerr Smith, Brendan Fehr, Johnathon Schaech, Izabella Miko
Starring: Kerr Smith, Brendan Fehr, Johnathon Schaech, Izabella Miko, Simon Rex, Alexis Thorpe, Phina Oruche
Director: J.S. Cardone
Director: J.S. Cardone
Studio: Screen Gems
Reviews for The Forsaken
Get out the garlic and the crosses and send this unholy film back to hell.
This slight but not altogether uninteresting monster opera can be a hoot.
The flick's ultrahip style is forced, always in your face and results in more posturing than plot.
The writer/director then squanders his wayward energies on repetitive, ham-fisted action and boring violence.
The Forsaken tries too hard to be the sexiest new entrant in the vampire movie genre. And it fails.
Stripped to its essentials, this could have been an intriguing vampire movie.
Too familiar, too derivative and too inferior to its predecessors to have any reason to exist.
Even if you're nostalgic for, say, Galaxy of Terror or Death Race 2000, you're better off waiting for this one on video.
There are serious amounts of vampire letting, and some unintentional chuckles.
Doesn’t infuse the vampire genre with new life, instead leaving it as listless as a dot-com stock.
It's not a scary movie, it's a vampire movie. And in reality, it's kind of a bad vampire movie.
The vampires are ignoble and exist beyond the constraints of physics, the guns are large.
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