A newlywed couple finds their lake-country honeymoon descend into chaos after Paul finds Bea wandering and disoriented in the middle of the night.A newlywed couple finds their lake-country honeymoon descend into chaos after Paul finds Bea wandering and disoriented in the middle of the night.A newlywed couple finds their lake-country honeymoon descend into chaos after Paul finds Bea wandering and disoriented in the middle of the night.
- Awards
- 5 nominations total
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAfter several years of penning unsold scripts, writer/director Leigh Janiak and co-writer Phil Graziadei finally hit on the idea for Honeymoon after being inspired by the micro-budget horror movie Monsters (2010). They started writing in mid-2011. Found the person who became their producer end of 2011. Took 2012 to get financing and shot it early 2013. Janiak said it was pretty quick in the grand scheme of things once the actual script started. But the process of getting there was long.
- GoofsWhen Bea and Paul enter the restaurant, the door stays open behind them. When they make their way back towards the door after the owner tells them to leave, it is closed.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WhatCulture Horror: 10 Best Horror Movie Romances (2021)
Featured review
I would have given this movie 8 if it had a better. honestly, I am sick and tired of horror films that build up a mystery, only to never solve the mystery. This was a promising movie. I was hooked into it. There was an intriguing mystery and clues were thrown all around.
And for what? An ending with almost NO explanation at all. This is so freaking cliche now. I am sick of horror movies doing this. We want to know why these things were going on. We do NOT want to always have to write the ending on our own. That is the screenwriter's job. But people nowadays make films without and ending that explains what was going on.
Ambiguous endings have their place, no doubt. But only when the clues that came before it are meaningful to the end. Here they are not. It was lazy and the ending invalidated the whole movie.
And for what? An ending with almost NO explanation at all. This is so freaking cliche now. I am sick of horror movies doing this. We want to know why these things were going on. We do NOT want to always have to write the ending on our own. That is the screenwriter's job. But people nowadays make films without and ending that explains what was going on.
Ambiguous endings have their place, no doubt. But only when the clues that came before it are meaningful to the end. Here they are not. It was lazy and the ending invalidated the whole movie.
- Foxbarking
- Aug 4, 2019
- Permalink
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $9,318
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $4,131
- Sep 14, 2014
- Gross worldwide
- $24,343
- Runtime1 hour 27 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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