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 The Forsaken
 Release Date - April 27, 2001 Nationwide
 Distributor - Screen Gems
 Duration - 105 Mins
 Type - Suspense/Horror ( Rated R)
 Writer : J.S. Cardone.
 Producer : Carol Kottenbrook and Scott Einbinder.
 Director : J.S. Cardone.
 Starring : Kerr Smith, Brendan Fehr, Johnathon Schaech, A.J. Buckley, Izabella Miko.
 Synopsis
Sean picks up a hitchhiker, Nick, while driving cross country to deliver a car and to attend his sister's wedding. Except Nick is no ordinary guy: he is a vampire hunter with a mission. On their journey they pick up Megan, who had been left for dead on the side of the road by a band of nomadic vampires. They must find and kill their leader in order to save themselves from the fate of the undead, including Sean, who also becomes afllicted.
 Critic Reviews
With all this new information, it’s no surprise that a new millennium vampire movie brings it all together. Unfortunately, The Forsaken doesn’t infuse the genre with new life. Our slacker heroes are Sean ( Kerr Smith ), a young film editor, and Nick ( Brendan Fehr ), a wandering vagrant who’s got another role in life that he chooses to keep secret. Sean is delivering a car from California to Florida, and even before he picks up the hitchhiking Nick, he senses that something is wrong – odd noises, disturbing dreams, nothing terribly clear. However, things really start to go wild after Nick lures Sean into giving him a ride. There are scary people sharing the highway with Sean, and before you know it he’s playing co-vampire hunter and rescuer of damsels in distress. Considering its modest budget, this is a relatively tight production, but it doesn’t have a lot interesting to say. Vampires are nasty, victims scream a lot, and vampire hunters are heroic. Except for the slacker talk, there’s nothing new here. And energetic editing doesn’t make up for a mundane storyline – quick cuts and flashbacks can’t energize listless material, although it does hide a lack of special effects and make it very difficult to tell what’s happening during some of the violence. Buckets of blood plus some nudity early in the film also can’t sustain audience interest for long. It would simply be quickly filed under ‘plain old forgettable cinema’ except for two surprising aspects of the film. The positive point is the acting, which is better than you’d expect. They’re not exactly asked to out-De Niro De Niro, but Smith and Fehr do a good enough job in the lead roles to hold our interest after it might otherwise have faded. And the supporting performances are also decent. Unfortunately, this unexpected strength is more than counter-acted by the film’s other remarkable element – its profound misogyny. The female characters in The Forsaken have only three roles – monsters, cannon fodder, or in need of rescue. There’s no in-between – no real people of the female gender. Women are just ‘bitches,’ and the resulting unpleasantness makes it real easy to ignore this film’s limited strengths
  For rating reasons : filmrating.com, mpaa.com                                    For Parents : Parentalguide.com