For an initiation stunt, five college women are locked in a Kentucky hospital built in 1910 where 63,000 people died from a disease known as the "white plague". Deep under the hospital is the "Death Tunnel" which once were used to secretly remove the dead from the grounds.
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People are voting emotionally.
If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.
A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.
Look, let's not dance around the simple fact that this film is the most awful film you could possibly watch. There is not a single part of the film I enjoyed... in fact within the first 16 minutes I wanted to get up and walk away; however unfortunately I made the grave mistake of staying thinking "it can't possibly get worse"... "it must get better" but I was wrong. DO NOT BUY THIS FILM! It's not worth your time never mind your money. So now I'm writing for the sake of it since there needs to be a minimum of 10 lines in the review and quite frankly the film is not worth 10 lines describing how terrible it is. If you were to have a sh*t, then eat this sh*t throw it up, eat it and then sh*t it out again it would be a more pleasant experience than watching this film, I beg you not to get this film, you WILL regret it.
Despite all of the other reviews claiming otherwise, this is a great film full of excitement, shocks, and twists. A must watch for every horror lover! Editing - the overall impression I received is that this film was well edited, especially for a low budget film. The special effects were superb, and while, as other reviews have pointed out, there are a few flaws, such as the cloud incident, these can often be overlooked while you are caught up in the story. '5 girls sent to a dark scary place as a student prank' is often an overused device in film, but there are several starkly original elements of the film, which you will discover yourself.
This film could have been so much more, but the writers and the director were using drugs when they put this piece of crap together. Seriously.... what was the point? Being a Louisville native and having my grandfather pass away from T.B. at the real Waverly Hills back in the 1930's, I was really interested in what they were going to do with this film. They had a golden opportunity to do something great. They had more enough material to make another "Shinning," "Poltergeist" or even "Amityville Horror" but they ruined it! They choose the bottom of the barrel when it came to actors, the worst possible storyline and a director that couldn't find a camera even if they taped his bag of weed to the lens! Stupid gives this movie too much credit. You'll get more entertainment from watching a slasher movie made about the Teletubbies. Save an hour and a half of your time. Do something more constructive like wash your car in the rain, watch the paint dry on a park bench or count the number of hairs on your arm. Avoid this film!!
Based liberally on true events involving a 1930s Kentucky sanatorium. A party with the theme of "Truth or Scare" goes horribly wrong and five college girls wake up trapped inside an abandoned sanatorium formerly used to house patients dying of TB. The only way out is a tunnel that was designed to take the dead out of the building without other patients viewing and losing what little hope they had left. A mystery voice on a speaker system reminds the five girls they are each on a different floor and must survive five hours. The girls encounter visions of ghosts past and they must fight for dear life to prevent history from repeating itself.The story is eerie, acting is good enough for this genre; but movie itself is just poor. Some grisly and gruesome scenes. Strong language is over used. Most viewers will be brought in by the R rating. The cast is full of eye candy and includes: Steffany Huckaby, Kristin Novak, Jason Lasater, Annie Burgstede, Melanie Lewis and Yolanda Pecoraro.