Review: The Rental, a thriller starring Dan Stevens, is worth the stay – San Antonio Express-News

Airbnb, Couchsurfing and similar platforms where you vacation in someones house instead of a hotel have taken a major hit due to COVID-19. Not only are people not traveling much but what used to be these apps primary appeal getting to play like a local in some exotic, far-flung destination now feels to some like playing Russian roulette.

Now comes The Rental, an effectively chilly little thriller about a vacation gone very wrong that is, for the home-sharing business, like a poisonous, little cinematic cherry on top of an especially toxic pandemic parfait.

Charlie (Dan Stevens), wife Michelle (Alison Brie), his business partner Mina (Sheila Vand) and his brother/Minas boyfriend, Josh (Jeremy Allen White) are urban, millennial Oregonians who decide to take a getaway weekend to somewhere along the states rugged coast.

Charlie and Mina, who have some sort of start-up thats about to pop, have long hours ahead of them so why not a little downtime before the real work starts? And theyre all best friends and that beautiful, well-appointed house online right along the beach above the crashing waves looks so perfect and its not going to book itself. What could possibly go wrong?

If you say everything, you certainly dont need a weatherman to know which way this wind is blowing.

Quick take: Suspense that hits home

Where to see it: Opens Thursday in theaters; on demand starting Friday

As directed by actor Dave Franco, in his feature debut, from a script by Franco and Joe Swanberg (the director of Drinking Buddies and Digging for Fire), The Rental is a lean, well-crafted ensemble piece where the horror is less about jump scares and as much about what frights comes from within our two, picture-perfect couples arent quite what they appear as without.

But, yeah, there is something weird about this place. It could be the rangy, intolerant guy, Taylor (the always solid Toby Huss, Halt and Catch Fire) who manages the house for his brother. He turned down an online request from Mina, whos Middle Eastern, to rent the property but approved Charlie a mere hour later.

Mina wants to make a stink about that but everyone else minimizes her feelings, telling her basically to get over it. I mean, look at this house! Check out that view! Have you seen the hot tub?

Or it could be something else altogether thats the problem.

Though the stories are different, The Rental is reminiscent of the 2015 film The Gift, the feature-film directorial debut of another young actor, Joel Edgerton. Both feature tight-knit ensembles and psychological tension that comes from situations that feel emotionally and physically authentic. The Rental even has the added benefit at clocking in at less than 90 minutes so theres little wasted time.

Having said that, there is one big logic flaw in The Rental that might have you ready to throw the remote at the screen but, thankfully, the rest of the film is diverting enough that its not completely weighed down by it.

If nothing else, The Rental might make you pause for a few seconds, with a finger hovering nervously over the mouse, before booking that next dream vacation.

Have a good trip.

Running time: 88 minutes

Rating: R (violence, profanity, drug use, sexuality)

cary.darling@chron.com

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Review: The Rental, a thriller starring Dan Stevens, is worth the stay - San Antonio Express-News

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