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  1. Along with the ones you mentioned, I’ve seen Host, Followed, Profile, Untitled Horror Movie, Dashcam, Deadware, Searching, and Open Windows. Loved all of them. I think Host is one of the best horror movies I’ve seen. It’s under an hour so there’s no room for annoying, boring fluff.

  2. The whole concept has been done before in Joe Swanberg’s segment of V/H/S and last year’s Elijah Wood/Sasha Grey thriller Open Windows, but The Den handles the format better than both of those....

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  4. Nov 7, 2014 · Reviews. Open Windows. Brian Tallerico November 07, 2014. Tweet. Open Windows. Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch. Heavily inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's influence on Brian De Palma , Nacho Vigalondo ’s “Open Windows” goes from crazy to Crazy to CRAZY, but maintains enough energy and cultural currency to keep the entertainment value high.

  5. www.metacritic.com › movie › open-windowsOpen Windows - Metacritic

    Nov 7, 2014 · This movie just tries to go bigger and crazier as the plot progresses, and it gets so confusing and aggravating that you don't care by the time you get to the final act. Open Windows was a huge disappointment for me. If you want effective laptop horror, I suggest The Den or Unfriended.

    • (10)
    • Nacho Vigalondo
    • Not Rated
  6. TL,DR: Yes, open your windows you need to remove the humidity from your room. If the outside air is too hot there's nothing you can do and keeping your windows closed without another way to remove the heat and humidity you're generating will make you a lot more uncomfortable.

  7. Sep 27, 2014 · It will make sense in the end. It always does.” Unfortunately, Pierre is full of shit. The film ends with an unnecessary, Scooby-Doo–style twist that only further complicates things, rather than offering up any sort of cohesion or closure. Still, for all of the movie’s flaws, you have to applaud Vigalondo for his audacity and ambition.

  8. Oct 2, 2014 · By Adam DiLeo. Posted: Oct 2, 2014 4:51 pm. Nacho Vigalondo’s fortuitously topical thriller Open Windows rests entirely on a gimmick that at times borders on the absurd. Somewhere between 1984...

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