“No Vacancy—Just Regret”
If Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho made people afraid of motels, and 2007’s Vacancy made them double-check for hidden cameras, then Vacancy 2: The First Cut makes you afraid of something far worse—direct-to-video horror sequels.
Directed by Eric Bross (who clearly made this under contractual duress or after losing a very specific bet), this prequel to Vacancy manages to turn what was once a tight, claustrophobic thriller into a limp, wheezing corpse of a movie that even Norman Bates would have refused to check into.
This isn’t so much a horror film as it is a 90-minute brochure for why franchises should stop after one decent idea.
Plot: The Motel 6 of Murder
The film opens with a man named Smith (Scott G. Anderson), a creepy drifter with all the charisma of a wet napkin, checking into the Meadow View Inn. Within minutes, he brutally murders a woman. It’s a strong start—until the movie decides to explain everything wrong with itself immediately afterward.
You see, the motel staff—who apparently moonlight as the world’s most incompetent pornographers—have been secretly filming guests for money. They catch Smith’s murder on camera, freak out, and then… instead of calling the police, decide, “Hey, maybe this guy’s onto something!”
Thus, the birth of their new business model: turning their sleazy peep-show operation into a snuff film franchise. Because what could possibly go wrong when you team up with a serial killer who looks like he smells of expired deli meat?
Enter our unlucky trio of victims: Jessica (Agnes Bruckner), her boyfriend Caleb (Trevor Wright), and third-wheel extraordinaire Tanner (Arjay Smith). They stop for the night, blissfully unaware that the motel’s customer service policy includes “stabbing and screaming after checkout.”
Before you can say “TripAdvisor one-star review,” they discover hidden cameras, masked killers, and enough cliché jump scares to fill a community college screenwriting course.
Jessica spends the second half of the film running, screaming, stabbing, and hiding from men who appear to be having as little fun as she is. Tanner gets tortured (of course), Caleb gets gutted, and Jessica—clearly the only one with functioning neurons—manages to turn the tables in a finale that’s equal parts predictable and unintentionally funny.
By the end, Smith gets set on fire (don’t worry, it doesn’t take), the cops don’t believe Jessica’s story (of course they don’t), and Smith limps off to open the motel from the first movie, proving once again that cinematic evil has no union regulations.
Characters: People You Forget While Watching Them
Let’s be honest—no one comes to Vacancy 2 expecting Shakespearean depth. But the cast here gives us something even more tragic: total emotional bankruptcy.
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Agnes Bruckner (Jessica) tries her best to be a convincing final girl, but her performance lands somewhere between “mildly irritated commuter” and “I just spilled coffee on my blouse.”
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Trevor Wright (Caleb) exists solely to die, which he does efficiently, like a man fulfilling a contractual obligation.
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Arjay Smith (Tanner) deserves credit for surviving longer than his dialogue should allow.
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David Moscow (Gordon the motel manager) spends most of the film looking like he’s trying to remember his lines—or why he agreed to this at all.
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And then there’s Smith (Scott G. Anderson), our villain. Imagine if a background extra from Texas Chainsaw Massacre got his own spin-off. That’s Smith. He’s supposed to be terrifying, but he has the screen presence of a damp rug and the menace of a mall Santa who’s two beers past caring.
The “First Cut” That Should Have Been the Last
As a prequel, Vacancy 2 promises to show us how the snuff film operation began. Instead, it gives us a 90-minute PowerPoint presentation on how not to make a horror movie.
The biggest issue? Zero suspense. Vacancy (2007) was sharp, minimalistic, and claustrophobic—a horror story grounded in fear and realism. Vacancy 2, meanwhile, thinks “claustrophobia” means “please stop watching.”
Every scare is telegraphed, every death predictable. The tension is flatter than the Kansas prairie. Even the gore, which could’ve redeemed the film through sheer shock value, feels like a bored intern’s attempt at a Halloween prop test.
And the direction? Imagine a found-footage film without the found footage or the footage that’s worth finding.
The Villains’ Business Plan: Dumb and Dumberer
Let’s pause for a moment to appreciate just how dumb these criminals are.
They go from running a voyeuristic sex-tape scam (still illegal but at least profitable) to producing full-on murder porn—on VHS, no less. VHS. In 2008. That’s like deciding to start a pirate radio station in the age of Spotify.
Their plan hinges on two things: that no one ever checks out alive, and that no one ever questions the suspicious number of guests who disappear.
It’s a miracle this business lasted long enough to justify even one sequel.
If Gordon and Smith had opened a Waffle House instead, they’d have made more money and fewer enemies.
Production Values: Motel Hell, But Cheaper
Everything about Vacancy 2 screams “straight to DVD.” The lighting alternates between “flashlight in a closet” and “the world’s longest power outage.” The soundtrack is mostly ambient humming punctuated by stock scream effects. The editing feels like someone used Windows Movie Maker on fast-forward.
Even the motel itself—supposedly the film’s main character—looks less like a house of horror and more like a moderately disappointing Airbnb.
By the third act, you can practically hear the production team whispering, “We’ll fix it in post.” Spoiler: they did not.
The “Prequel” Problem: Explaining What No One Asked For
Do we really need to know how the murder motel from Vacancy got its start? Absolutely not. Did anyone ask for a lore-heavy origin story about the economics of rural snuff filmmaking? Again, no.
But Hollywood’s motto has always been “Why stop when you can ruin it?”
This film doesn’t deepen the mythology; it dilutes it. It takes what was once eerie—the faceless terror of being watched—and turns it into a bureaucratic nightmare of logistics and staffing.
It’s like finding out Freddy Krueger has to file HR paperwork before haunting your dreams.
A Comedy of (Un)Terrors
Here’s where Vacancy 2 accidentally shines: it’s so humorlessly dumb that it becomes unintentionally hilarious.
The dialogue is full of gems like “We can’t call the cops—they’ll find the cameras!” and “No one’s gonna miss them, they’re tourists!” delivered with the conviction of actors rehearsing for an amateur murder-mystery dinner.
Even the deaths, meant to shock, often provoke giggles. One poor soul gets stabbed in the stomach so slowly it looks like a cooking tutorial. Another death is so bloodless it could air on the Hallmark Channel.
By the time Jessica sets the trailer ablaze in the climax, you’re less invested in her survival and more curious whether the fire will mercifully consume the script too.
Ending: The Setup Nobody Wanted
In a final insult to logic and taste, Vacancy 2 ends with Smith—now scarred, smoking, and miraculously alive—setting up the original motel from Vacancy. He even hands a trucker one of his snuff tapes like it’s a mixtape he’s proud of.
“Hey man, I call this one Murder, Volume One.”
It’s meant to be ominous, but it plays like a deleted scene from Clerks 3: Homicide Edition.
Final Thoughts: Check Out Early
Vacancy 2: The First Cut is less a horror film and more a cautionary tale about the dangers of unnecessary prequels. It takes a simple, effective premise and stretches it into a dull, bloodless exercise in mediocrity.
The acting is wooden, the villains are idiotic, and the scares are as stale as the motel breakfast buffet.
If you ever find yourself watching this, take a page from the survivors: run. Run fast. And whatever you do, don’t check in.
Grade: D (for “Don’t”)
Vacancy 2 doesn’t just fail to fill the vacancy left by the original—it burns the building down and forgets to hit “record.”

