One Missed Call

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One Missed Call


If you are familiar with this product, please update the details list so it is complete!
Detail Value
Binding
DVD
Brand
Warner Brothers
EAN
0085391139126
Weight
1 pounds
Label
Warner Home Video
List Price
$14.98
Manufacturer
Warner Home Video
MPN
113912
Product Group
DVD
Product Type Name
ABIS_DVD
Publisher
Warner Home Video
Studio
Warner Home Video
Title
One Missed Call
UPC
085391139126
Number Of Items
1
Format
NTSC
Release Date
2008-04-22
Languages
English
Creator
Reinhold Heil
Actor
Rhoda Griffis
Aspect Ratio
1.85:1
Audience Rating
PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Original Release Date
2008-01-01
Region Code
1
Running Time
87
Theatrical Release Date
2008
Additional Features
Director
Number Of Discs

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User Reviews: One Missed Call

Ranked #11 in the category Art House & International DVDs
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Video Quality
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Special Features

Featured Review

July 6, 2009 at 11:29 am
Ken_McAlinden
Reviewed by Ken_McAlinden
One Missed Call

Directed By: Eric Valette

Starring: Shannyn Sossamon, Ed Burns, Ana Claudia Talancón, Ray Wise, Azura Skye, Johnny Lewis


Studio: Warner Brothers

Year: 2007

Rated: PG-13

Film Length: 87 Minutes

Aspect Ratio: 16:9

Subtitles: English SDH, French, Spanish

Release Date: April 22, 2008

 

The Film

One Missed Call is a Hollywood remake of the Japanese horror film Chakushin ari. It falls into the high concept Japanese horror genre blending elements of The Ring and The Grudge. The story centers on a group of friends who are dying one by one under mysterious circumstances. Each death is followed by a call to a friend's cell phone from the number of the latest victim. The call results in a voice mail message with a future dated time stamp that contains the last moments of the call recipient's life. From that moment on, the call recipient begins to have strange waking hallucinations until, at the appointed time, they die under unusual circumstances with a red hard candy mysteriously appearing in their mouths. Central to the story are Beth (Sossoman), a student of child psychology connected to many of the victims in the chain of cell phone deaths, and Jack (Burns), a police officer whose sister was one of the earliest victims. With Jack's aid, Beth must ultimately race against the clock when she receives a voice mail message indicating she has less than a day to live.

This film is pretty much a mess. It throws a lot of things at the wall, so to speak, but does not wait to see if any of them stick before throwing more. The plot seems ripe for social satire on modern cell phone culture, but the film never makes anything of it. The hot button issue of child abuse is raised at multiple points in the film, but it ultimately has nothing to say about that either. As a matter of fact, the one scene where the child psychology student played by Sossoman actually interacts with a child is the most unintentionally hilarious in the whole film. The very fact that the film is so derivative of other recent entries in the Japanese horror genre creates an opportunity for subversion and satire, but the filmmakers do not appear to even have considered that. Finally, the Ray Wise character seems tailor-made to give a comeuppance to both reality television and televangelists, but …you guessed it… nada.

What the viewer is left with is a series of competent if unspectacular performances from a cast that wanders lost through a pointless exercise in slasher film teenage body count mixed with random nightmarish imagery. An attempt at throwing a plot twist into the explanation for the haunted cell phones is moderately interesting, but ultimately disappointing since it amounts to an inadequate explanation for the phenomenon. While I have no problem with movies that sometimes leave things mysterious and unexplained, I have no patience for films which settle for poor half-explanations.

The Video

The film comes to DVD with both a widescreen presentation that fills the entire 16:9 enhanced frame and a 4:3 presentation on separate sides of a double-sided single layered DVD-10 "flipper". I only watched the 16:9 presentation for the purpose of this review. The transfer is adequate, but at times appears to have the contrast boosted unnaturally in the video domain to artificially bring up shadow detail. This results in some grain-like noise appearing in certain darker scenes that pulses with digital artifacts. This is not a pervasive issue, but it does show up at least four to five times throughout the film. Edge ringing is not an issue.

The Audio

The English Dolby Digital 5.1 track encoded at a 384 kbps presents a modestly dimensional mix with very good dynamics that scores some points for avoiding the use of heavy underscore, allowing some of the tensest passages of the film to unfurl with only ambient sounds. Unfortunately, it occasionally loses points for excessive use of "stingers" to triple underline moments that are supposed to be scary. There is an asthma inhaler sound effect that has to be heard to be believed. Alternate 384 kbps Dolby Digital 5.1 tracks are available in Spanish and French.

The Packaging

The double-sided single-layered DVD-10 is packaged in a standard Amaray-style case with no inserts. The creepy cover art is scarier than anything in the movie, and makes this a rare new release DVD without any images of the primary cast on the cover.

The Extras

The DVD includes no bonus materials.

When this disc is first spun up, the viewer is greeted with the following skippable promotional spots, all presented with Dolby Digital 2.0 stereo sound and in letterboxed 4:3 video unless indicated otherwise below:
  • Anti-Piracy PSA using clips from Casablanca(1:00 - 4:3 full frame)
  • DVD Trailer for The Sick House -This trailer includes gruesome images that I would not expect to see on a DVD for a PG-13 movie - (2:06 - 16:9 enhanced video)
  • DVD Trailer for Otis(2:00)
  • DVD Trailer for The Orphanage(:48 - 16:9 enhanced video)
  • DTV Trailer for Lost Boys: The Tribe (1:29)
  • Anti-tobacco PSA (:30)

Summary


A very disappointing horror film from Warner Bros. gets an adequate audio/video presentation and no extras whatsoever on DVD. I would take a pass on this one unless you are just dying to see a film that scored a perfect zero on the Rotten Tomatoes "Tomatometer".


Article: One Missed Call

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