Toolbox Murders
Toolbox Murders | |
---|---|
DVD released by Lionsgate Films | |
Directed by | Tobe Hooper |
Produced by |
Tony DiDio Gary LaPoten Terence S. Potter Jacqueline Quella |
Written by |
Jace Anderson Adam Gierasch |
Based on |
The Toolbox Murders by Ann Kindberg, Robert Easter, and Neva Friedenn |
Starring |
Brent Roam Angela Bettis Juliet Landau Rance Howard Marco Rodriguez |
Music by | Joseph Conlan |
Cinematography | Steve Yedlin |
Editing by | Andrew Cohen |
Studio |
Alpine Pictures Scary Movies LLC Toolbox Murders, Inc. |
Distributed by |
Lionsgate Films Columbia TriStar Film Distribution International (Spain, theatrical)[1] Paramount Home Entertainment (Spain, home video) |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Toolbox Murders is a 2004 horror film directed by Tobe Hooper, and written by Jace Anderson and Adam Gierasch. It is a remake of the 1978 film The Toolbox Murders, and was followed by a 2013 sequel entitled Coffin Baby.
Plot
Daisy Rain goes to her apartment in the Lusman Arms, a former luxury hotel undergoing renovations, and is beaten to death with a hammer by a man wearing a balaclava. In another room, new tenants Nell and Steven Barrows, a teacher and a medical intern, are introduced to the amenities and a few of the residents by Byron, the building manager. As Steven works long hours, Nell is left alone most of the time, and befriends Julia Cunningham, a neighbor down the hall, and Chas Rooker, an elderly man who reveals some of the history of the structure, mentioning it was made by Jack Lusman, who disappeared mysteriously, and that builders died while working on it.
As days pass, the Lusman Arms are plagued by mysterious circumstance; strange noises are heard throughout it and coming from the intercoms, Nell finds a trinket containing human teeth in a wall, and Julia and another tenant vanish, having been killed (with a drill and a nail gun, respectively) by the ski masked murderer, who hides their bodies. While looking into Julia's disappearance, Nell speaks with Chas, who offers cryptic warnings about the nature of the building, and sneaks Nell a note reading "Look for her in Room 504". Nell takes the advice, and discovers that there is no Room 504, and that all the other floors lack apartments whose numbering should end with 4.
Nell goes to the Los Angeles Preservation Society, where an employee tells her that Jack Lusman was an occultist who associated with a society that tried to mix science and magic, and that the symbols (which Nell copies down on her arms) decorating the building are apart of a spell. The blueprints for the Lusman Arms also reveal that there is a townhouse hidden within the structure, hence all the missing rooms. Nell returns home, and finds a hatch on the roof of the building that allows entrance into the townhouse, where she uncovers a room dedicated to the Golden Age of Hollywood, torture chambers, and dozens of corpses. The killer, who had just butchered another tenant and the handyman, appears, and removes his mask to reveal that he is a monster, which the credits refer to as "Coffin Baby".
A teenage resident discovers that the webcam he had been using to spy on Julia had recorded her death, prompting him to go to Steven, who finds Nell's notes about the building, and goes looking for her along with the boy, Byron, and the doorman. The men send the teen to get the police after they find a passageway into Coffin Baby's lair, which they enter. Coffin Baby kills Byron and the doorman, and gives chase to Nell and Steven, the former of whom theorizes that Coffin Baby needs death and the Lusman Arms to continue existing. The Barrows are found by Chas, who tries to lead them to safety, and murmurs that Coffin Baby came into the world when he clawed his way out of his dead and buried mother's womb.
Coffin Baby leaps out from under a pile of human remains, fatally throws Chas at a wall, and captures Nell, but she is saved by Steven, who bludgeons Coffin Baby, and knocks a shelf onto him. The authorities arrive, and take Steven to a hospital, and as Nell returns to her apartment, the police lift up the debris that fell on Coffin Baby, who has disappeared. Coffin Baby crashes through Nell's window and tries to kill her, but is disoriented by the runes she had earlier drawn on her arms, distracting him long enough for a pair of police officers to barge in, and shoot him out a window, causing him to be hanged by a cord Nell had wrapped around his neck. The officers check on Nell, then go to the window, only to find that Coffin Baby has once again vanished.
Cast
- Angela Bettis as Nell Barrows
- Brent Roam as Steven Barrows
- Marco Rodríguez as Luis Saucedo
- Rance Howard as Charles "Chas" Rooker
- Juliet Landau as Julia Cunningham
- Adam Gierasch as Ned Lundy
- Greg Travis as Byron McLieb
- Christopher Doyle as Coffin Baby
- Adam Weisman as Austin Sterling
- Christina Venuti as Jennifer
- Sara Downing as Saffron Kirby
- Jamison Reeves as Hudson
- Stephanie Silverman as Dora Sterling
- Alan Polonsky as Philip Sterling
- Charlie Paulson as Hans
- Eric Ladin as Johnny Turnbull
- Sheri Moon Zombie as Daisy Rain
- Price Carson as Officer Daniel Stone
- Carlease Burke as Officer Melody Jacobs
- Bob McMinn as Shadow Man
- Ralph Morris as Nell's Father
Release
Toolbox Murders received a limited theatrical release in 2003 and 2004. The film was put out on DVD in the United States in 2005. It was originally rated NC-17, but some gory moments were trimmed for an R rating. The scenes were released as extras on the US release of the Toolbox Murders DVD.
Reception
The film currently holds a 47% "rotten" approval rating on the movie review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on fifteen reviews, with an average mean score of 5.9/10.[2]
Slant Magazine's review, while only marginally positive, called the film "not unlike an episode of Melrose Place as imagined by Lucio Fulci", and noted that it "may be Hooper's most impressive film in years".[3] Variety wrote, "Toolbox may not renew the splatter genre in any significant way, but the chills and kills prove Hooper, when armed with the right script, can still tighten the fright screws".[4]
References
- ↑ La masacre de Toolbox
- ↑ "Toolbox Murders (2004)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
- ↑ Gonzales, Ed (14 August 2004). "Toolbox Murders". Slant Magazine. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
- ↑ Edwards, Russell (28 July 2004). "Toolbox Murders". Variety. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
External links
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