A man becomes the superintendent of a large New York City apartment building where people mysteriously go missing.A man becomes the superintendent of a large New York City apartment building where people mysteriously go missing.A man becomes the superintendent of a large New York City apartment building where people mysteriously go missing.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Mattea Conforti
- Rose
- (as Mattea Marie Conforti)
Alexandra Essoe
- Ms. Daigle
- (as Alex Essoe)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Worst movie ever for adding Voice Overs that were nowhere near what the actor or actress actually said. You can tell so easily that it makes the producers look stupid!
Val Kilmer, Patrick "The 4400" John Fleuger and the excellent Louisa "Jane Wants A Boyfriend" Krause lead in this novel little thriller that is worth 90 minutes of your attention.
It tells the story of a former police officer who takes a job as maintenance worker within an apartment building. He moves in with his two daughters but quickly begins to have suspicions about the mysterious janitor.
The Super's plot is pretty standard stuff with two twists, one of which you'll see coming within the first few minutes of the film. The cast are great, do a brilliant job and the whole thing looks polished.
Arguably more a thriller than a horror it didn't blow me away in any regard but I can't deny that I did walk away relatively entertained. It's one of those passable movies throughout with a payoff that is satisfactory but just barely.
Likeable Louisa Krause really helped the movie for me and alongside Val Kilmer (Who is back on form) it's the cast that really lift the movie to an above average level.
A harmless 90 minutes of viewing.
The Good:
Some great cinematography
Solid cast
Kilmer is better than he has been in years
The Bad:
Doesn't flow very well
Finale is somewhat eyebrow raising
It tells the story of a former police officer who takes a job as maintenance worker within an apartment building. He moves in with his two daughters but quickly begins to have suspicions about the mysterious janitor.
The Super's plot is pretty standard stuff with two twists, one of which you'll see coming within the first few minutes of the film. The cast are great, do a brilliant job and the whole thing looks polished.
Arguably more a thriller than a horror it didn't blow me away in any regard but I can't deny that I did walk away relatively entertained. It's one of those passable movies throughout with a payoff that is satisfactory but just barely.
Likeable Louisa Krause really helped the movie for me and alongside Val Kilmer (Who is back on form) it's the cast that really lift the movie to an above average level.
A harmless 90 minutes of viewing.
The Good:
Some great cinematography
Solid cast
Kilmer is better than he has been in years
The Bad:
Doesn't flow very well
Finale is somewhat eyebrow raising
A widowed father takes a job as a building super in the hopes of stabilizing the lives of his troubled daughters following the death of his wife. The body count rises as the building's tenants are picked off one at a time for the most anti climactic reasons ever.
The most disappointing thing about the movie is how much potential it wasted. What starts out as a suspenseful tale of a newly single dad trying his best to protect his family quickly degenerates into a cheap, gory mess of a movie that seems like it was written by two different people. It ultimately reaches its climax with bad voice overs, nonsense motivations, and what might probably be the stupidest decision made by any woman in a horror movie in a decade.
With the exception of the oldest daughter, the acting is quite good, including a creepy turn by Val Kilmer, and the big bad, who does a great parody of Patrick Bateman. The poor man's Laura Linney does well with what she's given, but I spent a good portion of her scenes wondering what her point was. Ultimately the shift in tone is too glaring, and by moving the focus away from dad as a protector only kills the momentum.
This is one of those movies that could be a fantastic entry into its niche genre given a more coherent script and better direction. While I wouldn't call this a time waster, I will have forgotten about it pretty much right after I click the SUBMIT button.
The most disappointing thing about the movie is how much potential it wasted. What starts out as a suspenseful tale of a newly single dad trying his best to protect his family quickly degenerates into a cheap, gory mess of a movie that seems like it was written by two different people. It ultimately reaches its climax with bad voice overs, nonsense motivations, and what might probably be the stupidest decision made by any woman in a horror movie in a decade.
With the exception of the oldest daughter, the acting is quite good, including a creepy turn by Val Kilmer, and the big bad, who does a great parody of Patrick Bateman. The poor man's Laura Linney does well with what she's given, but I spent a good portion of her scenes wondering what her point was. Ultimately the shift in tone is too glaring, and by moving the focus away from dad as a protector only kills the momentum.
This is one of those movies that could be a fantastic entry into its niche genre given a more coherent script and better direction. While I wouldn't call this a time waster, I will have forgotten about it pretty much right after I click the SUBMIT button.
After seeing the trailer for this on Netflix I thought it looked interesting. It started very well, building tension and developing the story. Val Kilmer is fine (though a little hammy) in his role as a creepy janitor, although much of his dialogue appeared to have been (badly) dubbed from an early point in the film. I won't spoil it with details, but suffice to say that the last half an hour doesn't make a lot of sense, is a bit cliched, has some dialogue obviously overdubbed with different dialogue (maybe they decided the film wasn't worth the effort of re-shooting the scenes?) and doesn't satisfy with the ending, which had me scratching my head a bit, wondering how it explained some of the earlier scenes. So a mixed bag; Some good scenes early on, a decent cast, nicely shot, just don't expect to feel it was really worthwhile at the end of it.
This movie tried, but it failed.
It seems like they wanted to re-write part of the ending so they just re-dubbed different dialogue over the old lines, it's glaringly obvious.
The "twist" ending is so ridiculous, you'll be rolling your eyes for the last 15 minutes and it's just been done so many times, and much better elsewhere.
Don't bother. The movie starts out good, then is a boring hour with a ridiculous ending.
I'm easily entertained, but this movie is a mess.
It seems like they wanted to re-write part of the ending so they just re-dubbed different dialogue over the old lines, it's glaringly obvious.
The "twist" ending is so ridiculous, you'll be rolling your eyes for the last 15 minutes and it's just been done so many times, and much better elsewhere.
Don't bother. The movie starts out good, then is a boring hour with a ridiculous ending.
I'm easily entertained, but this movie is a mess.
Did you know
- TriviaVal Kilmer has said that the hardest part of making the film was "looking for ways to maximize the vocal options" due to his cancer recovery. He elaborated further, saying, "My vocal cords and everything is perfect in my mouth except my swollen tongue. And that was challenging."
- GoofsWhen Violet is explaining to Beverley about Rose, her mouth doesn't match some of the dialogue.
- Crazy creditsThere is a brief scene midway through the credits showing Walter coming back to life.
- ConnectionsFeatures Wolf! Wolf! (1944)
- SoundtracksBeautiful Dreamer
Performed by Randy Crenshaw
- How long is The Super?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $2,300,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $19,513
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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