Well, I've watched a few movies recently, but most of them have been discussed in this topic. I've yet to see Slumdog Millionaire, and I have no intention of watching Benjamin Button. I do, however, plan on re-watching Mulholland Drive, since I haven't seen it in ages and people talking about it make me want to watch it again.
Still have to get around to Adaptation. Anyway...
Quarantine is a story about a bunch of people who get locked in an old apartment building because of exposure to some sort of SUPER ULTRA MEGA PSYCHO AWESOME strand of the
motherfucking rabies virus. My brother told me that he disliked the movie because of the camera angles which immediately intrigued me. The movie is shot from the perspective of one camera, ala documentary, real-time "Hey, I'm a dude with a camera on my shoulder running away from people who ate too many antacid tablets." It's interesting, although not the first movie to employ this method (Cloverfield did it and, in my opinion, they did it better). The storyline is all right, the acting is all right, the characters propel the story along nicely, and then a little girl bites off part of her mother's cheek. The movie has no soundtrack, but the ambient sounds more than make up for it; I found it rather refreshing to watch a horror movie without cheesy music cues letting me know when the bad stuff was going to happen. The worst of the movie's problems, though, has to do with pacing. The movie creeps along, then the action happens and it's suddenly over. The whole opening part at the fire station could have been cut and no one would have cared.
All in all, this movie was definitely worth the rental. I wish I would have caught it in the theatre, if only to experience the surround sound.
EDIT: Thank you, Steel