
John Cusack
Mike Enslin
Samuel L. Jackson
Gerald Olin
Mary McCormack
Lilly Enslin
Jasmine Jessica Anthony
Katie
Tony Shalhoub
Sam Farrell
Alexandra Silber
Young Woman at Bookstore
Noah Lee Margetts
Bellboy
William Armstrong
Clay
Paul Birchard
Mr. Innkeeper
Margot Leicester
Mrs. Innkeeper
Angel Oquendo
Taxi Cab Driver
Walter Lewis
Bookstore Cashier
Eric Meyers
Man #1 at Bookstore
Holly Hayes
Lady at Bookstore
Johann Urb
Surfer Dude
Andrew-Lee Potts
Mailbox Guy
Kim Thomson
Desk Clerk
Drew Powell
Assistant Hotel Manager
Isiah Whitlock, Jr.
Hotel Engineer
Benny Urquidez
Claw Hammer Maniac
Len Cariou
Mike's Father
Ray Nicholas
Factory Owner
Paul Kasey
Kevin O'Malley
Kevin Dobson
Priest
Peter Conboy
Man Outside Hotel Fire (uncredited)
Georgie Lee-Robinson
Bookstore Assistant (uncredited)
Bernadette Lords
Hotel Guest (uncredited)
Rob McGillivray
Bellboy (uncredited)
Kate Walsh
Mike Enslin's Ex-wife (uncredited)![1408 (2007) Original Trailer [FHD]](https://img.youtube.com/vi/lmB3FUVQ_28/hqdefault.jpg)
Released
en
$25,000,000.00
$133,000,000.00
- #hotel
- #hotel room
- #new york city
- #research
- #fire
- #husband wife relationship
- #window
- #loss of loved one
- #door
- #painting
- #telephone
- #haunted house
- #writer
- #based on short story
- #ghost hunter
- #adaptation
Reviews
(Watched the Theatrical version) 1408 is a solid psychological horror that pulls you into its dark and twisted world. John Cusack does an amazing job as Mike Enslin, a skeptic writer dealing with supernatural horrors while battling his own guilt over losing his daughter. His performance really makes the movie—he sells the fear, grief, and madness perfectly. That said, the endings are what re

The storyline and basis of the movie is kind of dumb. It is entertaining though with a lot of weird and crazy stuff happening in room 1408.

Great watch, would watch again, and can recommend. While the setup is a little bleh, it serves a point, but I could literal start the movie at Samuel L. Jackson's office and be fine. Once in 1408, the intensity creeps perfectly. It really gives you the atmosphere of a cat playing with its food. It'll mess your head a little, but that's just from a great John Cusack delivery and wonderful

Dolphin Sandwich. 1408 is based on one of horror writer Stephen King's short stories. It stars John Cusack as a supernatural investigator who rents room 1408 at The Hotel Dolphin in New York. It is said to be a most haunted room and the scene of many deaths. He soon finds his scepticism tested to the max. Although it has deep themes of grief et al, this essentially boils down to one man in a












