By Jonathan Wojcik
ENTRY 28: 1408
Adapted from a short King story of the same name, 1408 was irected by Mikael Hafstrom and released in 2007. It is, by far, one of my all-time favorite horror movies.
Intrigued, he researches the Dolphin to find an actual verifiable history of mysterious deaths and disappearances associated with 1408, and he finds a legal loophole - originally an anti-discrimination law - requiring that a hotel admit him any room that is technically unoccupied.
Olin reveals that most of the incidents didn't even make the news; that dozens of them were ruled "natural" deaths or kept private to protect the families. There has been a grand total of 56 deaths in 1408, ranging from a man who drowned himself to death with nothing but a bowl of soup to one who slashed open his own neck and only died half-way through an attempt to sew himself together again.
Enslin will not be discouraged, not even when offered free access to the hotel's most private records of every hideous case. Olin even explains that the maids have to clean it in rotating shifts, keeping the door open at all times, and there was still an incident in which a maid blinded herself with scissors.
Enslin spends his first few minutes in the room mercilessly ridiculing the decor and even Olin into his tape recorder, complaining about the hideous wallpaper, a stain in the corner and the "predictably dull" paintings that include a schooner, an old woman reading to children and a recreation of "The Hunt."
The first peculiar incident comes when he's looking out the window and the room's alarm radio suddenly bursts to life, playing "We've Only Just Begun" by The Carpenters loudly enough that he sharply bumps his head on the surrounding frame. Shortly after, he notices that the toilet paper roll in the bathroom has already been replaced with a fresh one only minutes after using it to dry his hands.
Enslin tries to relax with a drink, but the radio beguns blaring the same song again at exactly the right moment to startle him a second time, causing him to spit out his whiskey. The radio's clock suddenly sets itself to an hour long countdown, and moments later, he experiences a strange tinnitus effect that dampens all other sound.
That damned song starts playing AGAIN, and he yanks the radio's cable out of the wall in a rage...which of course doesn't stop its countdown timer at all.
The phone rings, but when he answers, he can still hear a different phone ringing in another room, which has to be one of the pettiest annoyances the room will ever conjure; literally anything to make Enslin's stay a pain in the ass.
In response, the woman's voice apologizes to him that there will be a ten minute delay on his "sandwich."
He didn't order any sandwich, and the voice apologizes again, assuring him that he's more than welcome to substitute something else for his "french fries!" They even have macaroni salad and coleslaw!
His further agitation is met with a reminder that they'll have his dry cleaning ready for him in the morning, and he finally loses his temper, calling the poor lady a "bitch" and an "idiot" as he threatens to sue. At long last she actually acknowledges his words, but only to tell him sternly that she won't tolerate being spoken to in such a tone. We all know, of course, that she's not a woman or even a human at all.
She offers to put him in touch with the manager, but of course, leaves him on hold until the phone line finally cuts out. Classic.
If these sound like almost cartoon slapstick to read about, I can assure you, the timing is even more comedic to actually watch. There's a genuinely frightening tension to Enslin's suffering of course, but from a Trickster God sort of angle, the room's capers are infectiously wicked.
One of the truly eeriest moments, on the other hand, comes when he spots someone through a window across the street, and tries to get the other man's attention...
He subsequently sees a crazed woman with a hammer sneaking up on this man, who now has his own face, and he turns around in the nick of time to dodge the same woman in his own room before she's seemingly gone again, in the blink of an eye.
Next, he tries throwing a lamp out of his window into the traffic below, hoping to get any attention at all...but the lamp flat-out vanishes on its way down. He then hears a voice calling to him, that of his own dead daughter, and as he searches for its source, it so happens we can see that same damn lamp lying on the floor inside the room. Hilarious.
Now the room begins to replay a series of past guests, like flickering holograms, leaping out the window to their death, as if to show Enslin one way he can escape.
He ignores these, but can now hear a baby wailing in a neighboring room - a truly CLASSIC hotel annoyance! - but realizes perhaps the parents can hear him in turn. He tries beating on the wall and shouting for help, but the child's cries grow only louder and louder, impossibly louder, its sobs multiplying and echoing until Enslin is clutching his head in agony. He hurls a chair against the wall with all his might, but the chair shatters without leaving so much as a dent.
He rather foolishly considers escaping out the window, inching along a narrow concrete rim to reach the neighboring room.
And as he hauls himself back up, the window BEGINS to close, just slowly enough that he barely, barely makes it back inside.
vFor the first time, he considers trying his laptop and connecting to the wi-fi. He tries to skype with his wife, who hasn't seen or heard from him in quite some time, but just as he's giving her his current whereabouts and imploring her to call the police, the room's fire sprinkles activate and short out the computer. At every turn, 1408 waits until the worst possible moment.
Searching further, he finds a vent that shows him a city park, where he had his last nasty argument with his father before the old man's dementia landed him in a home. His father had tried to talk sense into him that he should stay with his spouse, since she's also mourning their daughter and needs him now more than ever. As the past Enslin storms off, his father also looks directly towards the current Enslin, and one wonders if either person really had gazed up at something all that time ago, never knowing why.
Inside the refrigerator is nothing but a window to the Hotel office, where manager Olin begins arguing with the author about spirituality and faith, questioning why he took the loss of his daughter as an excuse to dunk on belief in the supernatural. This becomes (intentionally) one of the absolute peak funniet moments in the film, when the audience is gifted the sight of how this really looks when he completely loses his cool, and it can truly only be appreciated as a clip:
Direct Video Link
My god, the snarls. The "YOU LITTLE" worked into his frothing. This scene is a work of art.
He should know better by now when it seems as if his laptop is working again. It automatically starts up another call with his wife, who tells him that she already sent the police...and they're in room 1408, finding no trace of his presence or anything else unusual. She asks if she should meet him there, and he realizes she could only find herself trapped in the same psychological hell.
...but wait a minute...why seawater now? Didn't we see something about the ocean already?
It was, nonetheless, the most terrifying and vivid nightmare he had ever experienced, every detail fresh in his mind, including the regrets and mistakes it had shown him from throughout his life. He's come out of the ordeal a changed man, and spends the following days reconnecting with his wife.
Enslin rediscovers his passion for writing, pouring his nightmarish vision, the strange real-world coincidences and its impact on his personal relationships into a tell-all autobiographical horror story combo deal. It is a sensation and financial goldmine almost overnight, he makes amends with his father, and he's back on track to fix his marriage.
...Then one day, he needs to mail a package, and the post office suddenly informs him that they're closed for remodeling. Huh? He's already inside! How can they be remodeling?!

SURPRIIIIIIIIIIIISE!!!
Oh my god. He still has the toothpick in his mouth from when he walked into the post office. IT WASN'T. FAKE. The fucking room LET HIM GO FOR AN ENTIRE YEAR AND PULLED HIM BACK THROUGH FUCKING TIME FOR NO REASON, AT ALL, EXCEPT TO BE A SHITHEAD.
The spitefulness is UNREAL, and it's STILL about to get worse. Worse than you can even imagine. The room is in the utter shambles you would expect from an entire year of rotting and moldering, all except for one perfectly pristine, brand new white door.
"Open it" says Enslin, bitterly, as if impatient to see where this is going already.
You think this is the most vindictive, most heartless the room could ever possibly get.
But then...
BUT THEN...
Direct Video Link
I KNOW it's dark. I KNOW it's sad. I KNOW it's cruel. But how can at least part of you not die wheezing at the ultimate sick, twisted punchline of his daughter exploding, in a fountain of ashes, as that fucking radio plays that FUCKING song again. JESUS. This is a moment that "ruined" this movie for reviewers on the basis that it was completely over-the-top ridiculous, as if that's not the entire point and entire appeal, and I don't mean in a tired "so bad it's good" way.
Enslin has barely begun dusting dead daughter doppelganger off his jacket when the radio countdown appears to finally, finally approach zero, the end of that single hour nobody has ever survived, and I think you know what happens. I think you know that the clock simply starts over again. Room 1408 has absolutely nothing resembling a face, but as those digital numbers rewind back to sixty minutes, it exudes the same energy as a slowly spreading, curling grin.
Picking up the phone again, he's asked if he's ready to check out yet, and he tells her no. "Not your way." It's then that she cheerfully informs him that his wife just called, and they'll be sending her straight up! He tells the room it can't have her, and that he's done arguing with it.
He puts the phone down, and the plastic receiver slowly melts as the slowly warping voice offers a surreal monologue:
Direct Video Link
This scene and dialog is lifted straight from the short story, and of every moment in either version, it feels the most like King had to have seen it in an actual dream. It feels like the kind of thing I used to dream about, something cryptically weird in an almost innocuous but still disturbing and impossible way.
After being briefly jump-scared by a vision of a burned Enslin, Olin can see a man running off with a little girl in his rear view window, and in the very final moments, we see a vision of a contented Enslin following his daughter's voice out of the charred Hotel, fading through the wall. In this version, the room has been successfully destroyed and will never be reopened.
In another ending, Mike survives, and Olin presents the couple with the tape recorder, both of them hearing the impossible recording of their "ghost" daughter. Another alternate ending has only Mike able to hear this sound, keeping the secret to himself.
In the fourth and, darkest ending, the widowed Lily meets up with Mike's publisher, Sam, to go over the recovered memoirs of his final hour in the room, but as they begin to read the transcript of his recordings... the door to the office slams shut on its own. Is this the first time any "first-hand" record of the room's activities have escaped its confines? And if so, is that a vehicle through which it can "travel?"
MONSTER ANALYSIS: ROOM 1408

Hahahahaha. HAHAHAHA. You thought Lasser Glass was a gargantuan dickbag, but it's practically the portable "home game" version of this wallpapered C-word, the Gameboy Color to 1408's Nintendo 64. They are not, however, interchangeable in the nature of their powers or their character. Lasser exclusively "fooled the senses" to hide danger, tricking victims into offing themselves or one another by disguising their true surroundings. This stinker, on the other hand, appears to have godlike command over the physical reality and passage of time within its walls, which it uses exclusively to torture its guests until they knowingly choose the escape of death. And while Lasser reeks of a cold, hateful malevolence with an ambiguous undertone of amusement, Roomie is indisputably having an absolute BLAST.
I spoke fairly early of this narrative's "slapstick" pacing, and later of how many critics assume it was an accident. No, this is not a "comedy film," yes, it is meant to be (and is often successfully) scary, and yes, its villain is also intentionally "funny." Despite some narrow-minded reactions to the contrary, these things can all very easily coexist in the same work, something people seem to have no difficulty accepting when it's a villain like Freddy Krueger or the Batman Clown.
And that juvenile boredom, coupled with nigh-omnipotence and an absolute absence of all compassion, is a far more terrifying combination than only one or two of these elements together, all the moreso from something taking a form as inhuman and as insidious as a tacky hotel room. You aren't aware of this monster until you're already inside this monster, like a pitcher plant or an antlion adapted especially for a diet of human despair. There's actually an additional "Dante's Inferno" theme to the film as each phase mirrors one of hell's nine levels, and as interesting as that is I still can't bring myself to care about it as much as I care about the room's almost lovably deranged personality, so gleeful in its fiendishness that it feels darkly easier to laugh along with its more childish sensibilities than its little wall-mirror counterpart. Once the mayhem begins, it never lets up for a full minute until the epic troll of that time-jump fake-out.
Olin doesn't even state that EVERY guest has died or mutilated themselves; he says that "no one lasts an hour," but he only says there have been four actual deaths (and the unfortunate maid) in the years he's worked there, and that it was only after the fourth suicide that his bosses agreed to shut down the room. There's no way only four people were ever checked in at all during his time as manager, right? It sounds possible that a whole lot of victims are actually let go with little more than a scare, and even Enslin might have still been able to leave after the first few "pranks." He didn't even try to leave after his hand was injured, but verbally abused "customer service" instead, and I kind of wonder if that wasn't his point of no return. After all, she's not going to tolerate being spoken to in that manner, and instead of an apology, he called her more names!
All we really know, I think, is that Room 1408 is the horror monster version of this: