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2024 film by Natalie Erika James From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Apartment 7A is a 2024 American psychological horror[2] film directed by Natalie Erika James from a screenplay she co-wrote with Christian White and Skylar James. It serves as a prequel to Rosemary's Baby (1968). Julia Garner, Dianne Wiest, Jim Sturgess, and Kevin McNally star.
Apartment 7A | |
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Directed by | Natalie Erika James |
Screenplay by |
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Story by | Skylar James |
Based on | Rosemary's Baby by Ira Levin |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Arnau Valls Colomer |
Edited by | Andy Canny |
Music by |
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Production companies | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 104 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Apartment 7A had its premiere at Fantastic Fest on September 20, 2024, before being released simultaneously on Paramount+ and on digital video on demand on September 27.
New York City dancer Terry Gionoffrio sustains a serious ankle injury mid-performance in a Broadway production. She becomes known as "the girl who fell" and unsuccessfully auditions for dancing parts. She follows Broadway producer Alan Marchand home to the Bramford apartment building and becomes sick from her anti-pain medication. She is befriended by elderly Bramford residents Minnie and Roman Castevet, who offer her an apartment rent-free. Unpacking, she comes across a ballet slipper labeled Joan Cebulski.
The Castevets invite her for cocktails at Alan's apartment, but she discovers the Castevets have cried off and she is the only guest. She has a drink and becomes disoriented. After a frightening dream, she wakes in bed in Marchand's apartment. He implies they had sex and says she made the chorus for his show.
Another neighbor, Lily Gardenia, gives Terry a salve for her ankle, and she has another frightening dream, but in the morning her ankle is markedly better. The Castevets give her a talisman necklace for Christmas.
She visits obstetrician neighbor Dr. Sapirstein and discovers she is pregnant. The Castevets persuade Terry to give them the baby while she focuses on her career. Terry is cast in the lead role after her rival suffers a twisted ankle.
Lily attacks Terry in the night, saying she "has to end it", then has a heart attack. The next day, the Castevets tell her Lily is in a coma.
Terry discovers a secret passageway into Lily's apartment and finds a grimoire containing images of her talisman and a chained woman giving birth to a demon. She steals it.
Experiencing pain, Terry calls Dr. Sapirstein. He tells her to pack a bag and come in, as she may be experiencing perinatal hysteria and should be admitted for the protection of herself and the baby.
Terry flees, leaving the talisman. Finding Joan Cebulski's name in an old Playbill, she visits the theater; the manager says Joan left six months earlier, promising to retrieve her belongings the next day. In Joan's suitcase, Terry finds a rosary and a Bible with Revelation 12:9 underlined. A nun reveals that Joan had been subjected to "ungodly things", and was being chased when she ran into an oncoming bus, killing her.
At a back-alley abortionist, Terry involuntarily kicks the abortionist, who has a seizure. Terry says she must deal with the pregnancy alone.
At the Bramford, Terry finds a temple with ritual tools in a sub-basement. Alan taunts her, saying this is where she was impregnated. She stabs him with an athame. A horned figure appears. She flees to her apartment and tries to stab herself in the stomach but falls to the floor, writhing in pain. Roman tells Terry her son will be Satan's heir and change the world. He and Minnie take her to a group, who welcome her. Minnie replaces the talisman around Terry's neck, and Roman declares God dead and 1965 to be year one. He raises a toast to Satan, which Terry joins. She dances to the window and throws herself out to her death.
As Minnie and Roman approach the crime scene, they see Rosemary and Guy Woodhouse being interviewed by police.[a]
In addition, Amy Leeson and Scott Hume appear as married couples Rosemary and Guy Woodhouse, respectively.[f]
In 2008, a remake of Rosemary's Baby (1968) was in development from producers Michael Bay, Andrew Form, and Brad Fuller.[10] It fell through later that year.[11][12]
In March 2021, it was reported Natalie Erika James would direct the psychological thriller film Apartment 7A. James co-wrote the screenplay with Christian White, based on a previous draft of the script written by Skylar James. John Krasinski, Allyson Seeger, Bay, Form and Fuller produced the film, which was a joint-venture production between Paramount Players, Sunday Night Productions, and Platinum Dunes. Following the success of the A Quiet Place franchise, the project was among several scripts that the studio was developing with a similar tone. Apartment 7A was chosen from those projects to quickly enter pre-production.[13]
In January 2022, Julia Garner was revealed to be starring in the leading role.[3] In March, Dianne Wiest joined the cast.[4] By the time filming had ended, additional casting announcements included Marli Siu,[7] Rosy McEwen,[9] Jim Sturgess, Kevin McNally, Andrew Buchan and Kobna Holdbrook-Smith.[8]
Principal photography began in London on March 15, 2022.[14] On June 4, it was announced that filming had wrapped.[15][7] Later that month, Bloody Disgusting reported that the film was secretly a prequel to Rosemary's Baby, the film adaptation of Ira Levin's eponymous 1967 novel.[16][17] In August, the Writers Guild of America determined the film's final writing credits and confirmed it to be based on Levin's novel.[18] Reshoots took place in April and May 2023.[19]
Apartment 7A premiered at Fantastic Fest on September 20, 2024,[20][21] before being simultaneously released in the United States via video-on-demand and on Paramount+ on September 27.[22] The film was released on DVD separately and as part of a "2 Movie Collection" along with Rosemary's Baby on November 5, 2024.[citation needed]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 41% of 80 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.6/10. The website's consensus reads: "Apartment 7A is slickly assembled and solidly acted, but the lingering memory of Rosemary's Baby and a predictable prequel template make for a sub(par)lease."[23] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 49 out of 100, based on 19 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[24]
John Anderson of The Wall Street Journal called it "a highly stylish effort at recycling".[25] Writing for IGN Movies, Katie Rife noted that "although the film’s themes and horror are rote, creative choreography and strong performances from the core cast make it an entertaining watch".[26] The film was also praised by Robert Englund.[27]
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