Amusement is a 2008 American anthology slasher film directed by John Simpson and starring Keir O'Donnell, Katheryn Winnick, Laura Breckenridge and Jessica Lucas.
[3] The film opens with yearbook photos of three girls, Tabitha Wright, Shelby Leds and Lisa Swan.
As well as the girls, the prologue introduces photos of an unnamed boy, and clippings of a psychological profile which describe him as "extremely dangerous."
Rob then drives after the truck to get its plates, but fails to catch up and returns only to discover the Jeep driver injured, and Shelby and the woman missing.
The Jeep driver goes alone to the front door, where he overhears the trucker talking on the phone, claiming he is the woman's father and that he was taking her to a rehabilitation facility for a drug addiction.
Sometime earlier, Lisa Swan and her boyfriend Dan begin searching for her roommate Cat, who had disappeared during a party the night before.
After letting him in, the caretaker shows Dan a music player and encourages him to play it, claiming there is a surprise in the end.
Unable to get in contact with Dan, Lisa sneaks into the house and meets an apparently deaf man, who leads her to a room filled with beds that have dead bodies stuffed into the mattresses.
After they were tasked to design miniature sets inside shoeboxes that can be viewed through peepholes, a male classmate - the unnamed poor boy from the prologue - demanded to see their work before showing his to Tabitha; it was of a rat chained up and its skin pulled back to reveal its organs.
Beyond either side, she finds Shelby and Lisa, bound and gagged and their skin pulled back similar to the rat in the boy's shoebox.
Just as the man is about to kill Shelby, Tabitha pretends to laugh, prompting him to open the glass wall and approach her.
Tabitha restarts the truck and drives away, narrating about how she and her friends had laughed at the killer when they were young, thinking that he was a joke.
[9] Sarah Law from GorePress.com criticised the film's bland direction, lack of scares, incoherent story, and dreadful script.