Plots(1)

For handyman and ex-con Arkin (Josh Stewart) a quiet home and a family on vacation is an opportunity. For inside the house lies a jeweller's safe and inside the safe is a rare gem. Its Arkin's only hope of repaying his ex-wife's debt and keeping what's left of his family intact. Unfortunately for Arkin inside the house is also a box containing the latest specimen in a collection catalogued in blood bone and tears a human specimen packaged as bait. While the trap may have already sprung shut on parents Michael and Victoria cutting short their vacation before it could even begin the jaws have yet to close on teenage daughter Jill and eight-year-old Hannah. As the seconds tick down to midnight Arkin becomes a reluctant hero trapped by a masked Collector in a maze of lethal invention while trying to rescue the very family he came to rob. (Roadshow Entertainment)

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Reviews (7)

Isherwood 

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English This film has the same problem as Martyrs. It’s a twisted slaughter-fest in which we know nothing about the characters and therefore have no sympathy for them. In this case, that was obviously the point, but I still couldn't help that I was bored. It’s not because I loathed the film, but simply because pretty soon the barrage of sophisticated traps ate away at me. Then, you start digging into the logic of the plot and the behavior of the characters... and the film loses. ()

Remedy 

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English Home Alone (in hardcore mode) mashed up with the best of the Saw series. I can't go below 4 stars just for creating such an iconic villain that the viewer learns nothing substantial about the entire time (except that he revels in traps, torture, and murder). Within the subgenre of "butchery made for a few bucks" (cf. 3 million), this is a very well done little hell.[75%] ()

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J*A*S*M 

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English Poor hero! He ran up those stairs… I looked forward to The Collector and I can say it didn’t disappoint me. Unpleasant atmosphere, a lot of brutality (really a lot, quite possibly, the most brutal film of the year), a surprisingly high body count, and a score that helps generate a feeling of hopelessness to such an extent that if I’d listen it more, I’d go mad. On the other hand, it has one of the most unrealistic plots I’ve ever seen – it’s something that could never happen in the real world. There’s no point fretting about how it’s possible that several characters have been moving around in a mid-size family house for such a long time and yet manage to constantly miss each other, or why the killer makes his work so unnecessarily complicated, why he’s risking so much… This is how things work in this film, and if you’re willing to accept the rules, you’ll get a solid torture porn experience. ()

Goldbeater 

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English Home Alone with a twist; here the thief is the savior from a far worse guest. You can never have too many inventive "trap" movies, and the screenwriter of the middle instalments of the Saw franchise cannot be denied, but I have to admit that the older I get, the harder "torture porn" movies get to sit through, especially when there is an overabundance of fishing hooks in them. A solid horror flick, but one and done for me. ()

Othello 

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English I don't give a fuck about some logic and I honestly don't care how much an adult Kevin McAllister could spread around a house in two hours just to get it in there. What irks me more is how the film tries to be enlightened and innovative in the slasher genre and ends up piling on the same bunch of clichés that don't define this subgenre (get a clue already), but instead relegate it to the level of the already seen a billion times. There's that horny teenage duo again, there's that stupid hope in the arrival of a cop, there's that ending sucked out of a finger or something. Oh well. ()

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