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P2 (Widescreen Edition)

P2 (Widescreen Edition)

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Actors: Rachel Nichols, Wes Bentley
Studio: Summit Entertainment
Category: DVD

List Price: $26.99
Buy Used: $4.30
You Save: $22.69 (84%)



New (51) Used (43) Collectible (1) from $4.30

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 81 reviews

Format: Ac-3, Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Ntsc, Subtitled, Widescreen
Languages: English (Subtitled), English (Original Language)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Region: 1
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 98 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: 66104228
UPC: 025195034722
EAN: 0025195034722

Theatrical Release Date: November 9, 2007
Release Date: April 8, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Stalker in a parking garage. You've got to give the makers of P2 credit: They've tapped a universal source of anxiety and stretched it out into a feature-length film. Underneath a Manhattan skyscraper, chic businesswoman Angela (Rachel Nichols) is knocking off for the Christmas holiday. Everybody else has cleared out of the garage--everybody but freaky-friendly attendant Tom (Wes Bentley), and his little dog too. Before long, Tom makes it clear that he'd like to have Angela for holiday dinner, whatever that might mean. Our heroine must summon all her resources, and the challenge of a low-cut dinner gown, to fight back. P2 (no, it's not the sequel to P) at least allows Angela a measure of common sense, as she actually thinks of some logical ways to fight back, and director Franck Khalfoun (working from an idea by Haute Tension guys Alexandre Aja and Gregory Levasseur) does indeed get the most out of the parking garage location. But the movie's at a loss to make these two characters interesting in any way, even at the Coyote vs. Roadrunner level. Tom's little quirks, like miming a dance to Elvis Presley's "Blue Christmas," feel like a desperate attempt to add flavor to an otherwise standard-issue creepo. Bentley (best known for American Beauty) does have the face of an obsessive, and Nichols has the face (and did we mention the cleavage?) of a movie star, so they're not hard to believe. But most of the time this movie is stuck on the wrong floor. --Robert Horton

Product Description
It's Christmas Eve, when even the most voracious corporate climbers generally head home by dinner time. But not ANGELA (Rachael Nichols). She's the last one left at the office, determined to close one more deal before the holiday. The long hours she keeps will have an impact, but not the kind she's been hoping for.


Customer Reviews:   Read 76 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars The rent-a-cop from Hell.   October 7, 2008
Aaron D.
P2 is about a woman who gets stuck at her office job on Christmas Eve only to be trapped in the building and tormented by a lonely Security guard. While the premise is lame, the film is actually not as bad as you would think and as a Security guard myself I liked the film for personal reasons. Not because I want to trap and torture any woman I work with but, let's face it, there aren't many movies out there in which someone in the rent-a-cop business like myself is a main character.

With that being said, since I'm familiar with building and parking garage security, I was critical of the movie in terms of its flaws. It's similar to how I watch military films only to look for mistakes since I am a former member of the U.S. Air Force as well. But unlike military films I watch horror films and thrillers for pure enjoyment and entertainment. As far as P2's flaws overall it was pretty accurate in terms of the building security. Once an office building closes, it CLOSES. Entering and exiting is very difficult. There's just one problem: Emergency Exits. You see every building has emergency exits. Its required by law and all emergency exits can not lock from the inside. It's impossible. If the building catches on fire that's your only way out. So the female protagonist in the film could have easily taken an emergency exit out of the building unless of course she didn't know where they were in which case she deserved to be trapped and tortured... I guess.

But I know, I know, it's just a movie. You're supposed to suspend disbelief long enough to be entertained and ultimately that's what I did. I was expecting a run of the mill horror/thriller with a couple of pretty faces and a story with no substance but what I got was a decent film with a fair amount of action, good acting, and a pretty good amount of blood and guts. However even though it's not your run of the mill horror film with a couple of pretty faces like I mentioned earlier, it IS your standard torture and revenge movie. You know... girl (or guy) gets trapped, escapes, plays a game of cat and mouse with the bad guy, and eventually gets revenge (most of the time). While P2 doesn't lack any brutality and pull any punches, it does lack some key things like common sense amongst other things.

This movie is a three and a half star rating but of course Amazon doesn't let you rate in halves which is fine so I decided to round the movie down to a three which, to me, is average. It's not a bad film but it's not great but then again with a movie about being trapped in a parking garage and office building there's only so far you can go (literally and figuratively). This movie is definitely worth checking out and would make a good rental but I wouldn't recommend buying it.



4 out of 5 stars P2   October 2, 2008
A. Mansfield (Pennsylvania, USA)
I thought this movie was good but could have a bit more thrilling parts to it. It shows that a woman does what she has to do in the situation of a stalker especially if he's a nut case like the man in this movie.


3 out of 5 stars This film has its moments   August 4, 2008
Rykre (Sacramento, California)
I've parked in major parking garages like this so I know there has to be some concern about one's safety. So, for employees that are of the very few left to go home, this is definitely a dangerous situation since these kinds of parking environments offer a probable means of shelter to the homeless and the desperate.

However, in this film, it's the security guard of the parking garage that is the threat to the last few people leaving the building.

What makes this movie rather unbelievable is how cafefully calculated the sick security guard happens to be. How can a man like this have a job there so long and remained on good terms for so long, then suddenly go on a killing spree in the building that he works for? He was sick in the mind. He had no grasp of reality on how he was thinking that he was doing the right thing to protect the girl. To protect her from her fellow employees (from a mild infraction of a means of sexual harassment) by killing them in front of her and expected her to thank him.

In this film, you get to enjoy some gore. One incident is when the security guard crushes one of her fellow employees up against a cement wall with the car. He was squished to a point when his guts were spilled out, then he backs up and rams him again to crush his head to squish his brains out. There were other means of gore, but that one stands out in my memory the most.

The one thing that does bother me about this film is how RCA (or who ever it is these days who have the rights to Elvis' music) allowed this sick security guard to dance and sing to his Elvis Presley records while he's psychologically torturing his victim. That's creating a distorted image for us to see in the future when we hear Elvis Presley music, especially at Christmas.

This movie moves kinda slow. Very little really happens throughout the film and I'm sure most of the budget went to some of the detailed gory visuals and, of course, paying for the use of Elvis Presley music.

I've seen a lot of low budget horror films. I don't know what compels me to do so because I seldom ever have seen one that I'd watch again. Most of my favorite horror films come from the eighties. And what's more, I enjoy psychological horror more than visual horror. If a film can scare me to death without depending on blood, death, or seeing anyone killed, than that's my idea of creative writing. Because psychological horror stands to be more true to everyday reality. We all have fears about things that can happen, but just hasn't happened yet.



5 out of 5 stars A movie about.... What?   July 27, 2008
D. Allen
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

P2 is a special movie. I say special because the movie really doesn't have a clear enemy or hero (in this case heroine). The reason I say this is because from the start, Angela is the usual businesswoman: overworked, self-centered, ignores others that don't directly affect her, don't really care about her family enough, and seems to be outright rude to other people. Then we have Thomas an isolated disturbed young man who probably was ignored by everyone but wants to have a friend but somewhere along the line a nut fell lose in his head. Then we have the location of the movie: a locked parking garage in a cold city on Christmas Eve on floor two (P2, the name of the film). In many ways parking garages means everything bad or good in our world: coldness, isolation, and finally death.

The movie sort of plays with your head. It's like one minute you're rooting for Thomas, then the next, Angela. I sort of felt bad for Thomas in some parts, then in others I hated his guts. With Angela, I sort of understood her position: I mean the business world is tough and sometimes you just ignore other people or be rude not because you are a bad person but because you just have so much going on in your plate.

Overall, I liked the movie. To me I really didn't know who was the winner at the end. Perhaps this movie is about our life in the current business world. Maybe we're forgetting the little guys, or the little things that make us people. Check out the film though. Be warned though, it doesn't have a whole lot of guts and gore, but it's still pretty good to satisfy your morbid humor.



3 out of 5 stars Yuletide terror in the garage   July 25, 2008
Jason Elin (Backwater, Alabama)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

As usual, Angela (Rachel Nichols) is working late. It's the Christmas season and she's one of the last people to leave. All she wants to do is get in her car, parked in the P2 level of the parking garage, and meet her family for festivities. As expected, her car won't start, and she solicits help from the building security guard Tom (played by that creepy guy from American Beauty). They have no luck with the car, and in no time at all, it's clear he has the building wired with more secret cameras and video surveillance than the Big Brother house. What is it with this guy and bad video footage?

As Angela walks aimlessly throughout the parking garage, the lights go out. Queue the scary appearance of Tom out of nowhere, as he tries the old "win her heart with a rag full of chloroform" technique. When she awakens, Tom has her in a fancy dress (read: tons of cleavage), chained to a table, and sitting in front of an impromptu Christmas dinner prepared via microwave. Yummy!

Interesting mind games ensue as Tom attempts to learn more about Angela as she slowly weaves a web of easily uncovered lies. It becomes quite intense when it's evident that Tom has been keeping track of Angela for quite some time, quoting facts about her family, job, life, and the late hours she keeps.

From there it's the classic cat and mouse game, as Tom chases Jerry, er, Angela throughout the building. With intimate knowledge and access to the building, and absolutely no qualms about ruthlessly murdering someone, Tom has an overwhelming advantage over Angela - not to mention the fact that she's getting absolutely atrocious cell-phone reception from Nextel while in the parking garage. Unfortunately, the movie never really gets out of the plot basement.

Will Angela survive, or will she suffer from Stockholm Syndrome? Will she show full frontal nudity? Will she make ignorant horror movie decisions throughout her ordeal? Will a rottweiler be portrayed as a ruthless killing machine? Will she turn into a revenge-seeking pyromaniac with a nasty leg wound? Sadly, the answer to all but one of those questions was the exact opposite of my hopes, and despite the fact that I was left wanting when the credits rolled, somehow I still enjoyed the ride.