| R.S.V.P. |  | Director: Mark Anthony Galluzzo Actors: James M. Churchman, Sharon Bruneau, Scott Workman, A. Scott, Charley Allen Studio: Lions Gate Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy Used: $0.46 as of 9/9/2010 06:25 CDT details You Save: $14.52 (97%)
New (17) Used (45) from $0.46
Seller: abundatrade Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 87,079
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Discs: 1 Running Time: 100 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
ISBN: 1589713478 UPC: 658149816527 EAN: 9781589713475 ASIN: B00009W0U7
Theatrical Release Date: 2002 Release Date: August 26, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Description Philosophy student Nick Collier and his friends have just graduated from college. Before the working world comes and scatters them all in different directions, Nick plans one get together for everyone to celebrate. The party is a smashing success -- such a success, in fact, that its host never wants it to end. The only way Nick feels he can achieve this is to kill them off, one by one...
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 10
Its just a time killer June 8, 2008 A. marrero This film is not what I expected after reading the reviews on here. The film drew me in and the writer did a great job of taking us into this laid back party with about a dozen stoners and some of the more intellectual dialoque was interesting. Yet, the main premise of the movie the serial killings failed. They were yawners. Nothing groundbreaking, not suspenseful, nothing to make you think. As for the end it was just plain st-pid. I wouldn't have paid the 75 cents plus shipping that I did for it if I had known. I would only recommend this film if you happen to come across it on tv and have the time to kill- for atleast it probably won't bore you though it won't necessarily entertain you either.
Hipster Horror July 2, 2007 S. Kennedy (WOODSTOCK, IL USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm not going to analyze this film to death,(no pun intended), as that's already been done. I just wanted to point out a few things that I was struck by. First, this is an entertaining horror film. Not a slash-a-minute gorefest, but still with its' scary moments - and it holds the interest with the acting. I was not overly impressed with Rick Ottos' performance. It was O.K., but I thought it was a somewhat less believable version of Christian Bales' performance in American Psycho. Coincidence? Maybe. I was struck by the excellent cinematography, especially the exterior scenes, and by the SOUNDTRACK! No one has mentioned the soundtrack, but it was ultra-cool. It would be great to spin at your cocktail party, really lively and hip. Alas, no soundtrack CD available.
MINUS five stars, actually July 2, 2007 J. W. Hickey (Manhattan area) 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
Bought this DVD to view Quinn's last movie. The product is a disservice to him the other two adults in the otherwise amateurish cast.
With pretensions as an homage to Hitchcock's ROPE (and an apparent unfamiliarity with the even more famous Agatha Christie favorite AND THEN THERE WERE NONE/ TEN LITTLE ... INDIANS), this is NOT, as others here have described, a "horror" film but merely a "slasher" "film."
Made for (and apparently by) stoned frat boys, it contains not one character, situation, or patchwork of "dialogue" that is genuine or convincing. Quinn actually plays the Jimmy Stewart role from ROPE, which would have been far more interesting had it been assigned to Banks. The amount of substance abuse celebrated ad tedium in what passes (or flunks) as plot action suggests a work environment before Quinn's death by drug overdose that is too sinister to be merely ironic.
If one is too drunk or bonged out to know what's on the screen, this tripe might rate the one star allotted to it. And the only thing more inane than the "movie" itself is the accompanying commentary.
One of Glenn's last roles. May 4, 2007 Amanda Davis 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Being an Angel fan, when I saw Glenn (Doyle) Quinn's name listed I had to see it , I really didn't expect much because I hadn't even heard of the film until after his death, but it was a pretty good movie, worth watching i/m/o & in this one at least you don't know for certain whose involved in the crimes & who isn't until the end. Some of it you see but the way it is cut you don't see the whole truth until the end. I enjoyed this film.
Glenn Quinn's last movie December 3, 2005 Mike Bolts (Superior, Wi) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Rick Otto (The Good Humor Man, Phantoms) plays Nick who is studying serial killers and gets too carried away thinking that he can stage the perfect and ultimate mass murder without getting nagged. He invites his friends over for a "going away" party for another friend who is leaving and one by one they vanish. This thriller also stars Jason Mewes (Dogma, Vulgar), Reno Wilson (City of Industry, Whiteboyz), Nora Zeheter (American Pie, Tart), Jeanne Chinn (Totally Blonde, Lethal Weapon 4), Lucas Babin (Brick, School of Rock) Daniel Joseph (Locusts, In & Out), Jonathan Banks (48 Hrs., Dark Blue), Grace Zabriskie (The Grudge, Armageddon), Majandra Delfino (Tv's Roswell, Celeste in the City), Brandi Andres (Tomcats, Kiss The Girls) and the late Glenn Quinn (Tv's Angel, Campfire Tales) who passed away in December of 2002 from a heroine overdose which this being his last. Quinn and Otto dish out excellent performances and Jason Mewes does his usual thing, which is still good. Those elements are the glue that holds this piece together along with the direction. Written by the Director. Modern day remake of Alfred Hitchcock's Rope which had James Stewart in the role as the Professor.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 10
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