Ride a White Swan: The Lives and Death of Marc Bolan
Book
From mod folk artist to flower power pixie elfin to the king of glam rockers, Marc Bolan was the...
A Field Guide to Reality
Book
'An extraordinary, wise, funny, adventurous and hallucinogenic book that combines fiction with...
Roger's Mushrooms (Pro)
Reference and Education
App
Roger’s Mushrooms is based upon the best selling works of Roger Phillips, author of Mushrooms, the...
Frontiers of Psychedelic Consciousness: Conversations with Albert Hofmann, Stanislav Grof, Rick Strassman, Jeremy Narby, Simon Posford, and Others
Book
After many dark years of zealous repression, there are now more than a dozen government-approved...
Cosmic Sounds by Zodiac
Album
• A classic 1967 Elektra edition, conceived by label head Jac Holzman, who claimed that the...
Dig Your Own Hole by The Chemical Brothers
Album
Chemical Brothers are a British electronic duo who first formed in Manchester in 1989, consisting of...
Orlando: A Biography
Virginia Woolf, Sandra M. Gilbert and Brenda Lyons
Book
Once described as the 'longest and most charming love-letter in literature', the Virginia Woolf's...
Peter Strickland recommended Midsommar (2019) in Movies (curated)
JT (287 KP) rated Escape Room (2019) in Movies
Mar 10, 2020
There have been a few incantations of this new age idea already; Escape Room (2017) & No Escape Room, but this one is probably the best of a bad bunch.
Six strangers each receive a cryptic puzzle box, which once opened invites them to compete for a $10,000 prize – if they can get through a series of deviously constructed rooms. The group comes from all walks of life, a gifted maths student, an Iraq War vet a blue collar trucker to name a few, each with a seemingly interconnected past.
After a frantic flash-forward where we see someone coming unstuck in one of the rooms, we are introduced to each of the characters one by one. There isn’t enough time to go into massive details, so it feels like we only scratch the surface as to what makes them tick.
Meeting in a plush reception area the game begins – although none of them realise it at first. The room starts to get hot and they soon discover that they are about to get burnt alive – unless they can work out the clues to escape.
The group quickly realise that they will have to work together in order to survive.
Aside from getting burnt alive they also face a winter themed room where the ice cracks beneath them, an upside down bar where the floor drops away and a hallucinogenic trip fest which is extremely freaky to watch.
During proceedings, in which there is a lot of infighting and panic, you half expect Billy the Puppet to come peddling out on his tricycle and explain the next part of the game. There are definite similarities to Saw, people are in a race against time before they ultimately meet a grizzly end, but because many people have experienced this style of entertainment before the reality is unnerving.
While the gore doesn’t reach Saw levels it provides enough tension, but it then starts to tail off a little towards the end. The conclusion is far too predictable although there is just enough intrigue to see what they will conjure up next.
Sudden Death
Book
"Splendid" --New York Times "Mind-bending." --Wall Street Journal "Brilliantly original. The best...
fantasy fiction