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Film Poster

Page Revisions:

(March 9, 2025) Original
(March 16, 2025) New Posters (#2-#5)

Release Date:

March 21, 2025

Synopsis:

From IMDb: “Follows a thief who breaks into a luxury SUV, only to realize that he has slipped into a sophisticated and deadly trap.”

Poster Rating: C+ / C (2) / C- (2)

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Review: (#1, C+) For a film like this, trying to create unique affectations would certainly be difficult and while they’ve come up with some interesting elements, probably lifted from 1960s/70s design motifs, it doesn’t have the energy or excitement one would hope and expect.

(#2-#3) If you were wondering what this movie was about, this is not going to answer that question without serious investigation. The tagline “thou shalt not steal” gives a clue as does the position of the car window used to frame the lower portion of the actors’ faces but even that’s not going to give you much of an idea. This pair, inverting the leads, might appeal to some Anthony Hopkins fans but Bill Skarsgård isn’t easily recognized without being behind a surfeit of makeup. (#4-#5) Using the color scheme of the first design but taking out all but the slimmest reference to the car locale (the rearview mirror isn’t easily recognized and only fits into the first design, the second being even more ambiguous.) makes this pair of character posters feel utterly bland and forgettable.

Trailer Rating: C+

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Review: (#1, C+) As many single-perspective films have shown, it’s difficult to make a movie with someone trapped in a single place, that being a phone booth, a coffin, or, in this case, a car. Similar to Willem Dafoe’s locked-apartment feature Inside, this trailer struggles to find a way to present the concept and entice an audience at the same time but without enough success.

Oscar Prospects:

None.

Trailer #1

Posters



Poster #1Poster #2Poster #3

Poster #4Poster #5

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