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Hostel Movie Review
Hostel Review

"Hostel" Overview

Rating: R
2006
Cast and Crew
Director : Eli RothProducer : Mike Fleiss,Eli Roth,Chris Briggs
Screenwiter : Eli Roth
Starring : Jay Hernandez,Derek Richardson,Eythor Gudjonsson,Jan Vlasak,Barbara Nedeljakova,Jennifer Lim,Rick Hoffman
This day and age, money can buy you just about anything. Sex. Power. Real
estate. Expensive cars. Yachts. Vacations. But once you’ve experienced all that
money can buy — and all the world has to offer — what can do you for
excitement? Is it possible to purchase something unforgettable when the very
essence of the word is your day-to-day life?
According to Hostel, extremely wealthy and over privileged businessman can buy
something they won’t soon forget: another human being’s life. Americans are
expensive, but if you’re open to the ethnicity of your purchase, you can get a
human for a fairly reasonable price. But we are not talking about selling
humans into slavery. These clients are purchasing “products” to torture and
kill.
Apparently, Hostel is based on real events. There is (or was) a legal practice
in Thailand in which victims volunteer to be murdered by a paying customers so
that their families get insurance money. Naturally, Hostel takes some major
creative liberties, but this movie has a unique idea, for sure, and that’s hard
to come by in a horror film.
Hostel follows young Americans Paxton (Jay Hernandez), Josh (Derek Richardson),
and Icelander Oli (Eythor Gudjonsson) as they embark upon a backpacking trip
through various European countries. They’re vacationing to see the sights,
smoke pot, party hardy, and screw some hot European chicks. As luck (or not)
would have it, they strike girl gold… but soon they soon wish they would have
picked a different pair of broads to mess around with.
The girls are really part of an elaborate (or plausibly elaborate) business —
called Elite Hunting — designed to seduce young tourists into partaking in
certain activities which lead to them getting drugged up, unconscious, and
relocated to a desolate, abandoned warehouse where they are chained to a chair
and tortured to death by clientele. These are some mighty sick businessmen.
Regarding the controversy about the extreme blood, gore, and graphic violence —
yes, it’s true. A man taking an electric screwdriver to another man’s body isn’
t even the tip of the iceberg. There is a scene in which a man takes a blow
torch to a woman’s eye, causing it to bulge out and rest on her cheek, hanging
by some membrane thing. Later, the eyeball is sliced off (which we see in full
detail) causing a yellow fluid to pour from the laceration. How the film
avoided an NC-17 rating is beyond me, especially considering the startling
amount of sexual content and nudity found in the first act. Note to parents:
this is not a movie to take the family to on a Sunday afternoon after church.
But that’s all the movie’s got going for it — shock value. Look — boobs! Gasp —
brain matter! Oh hell — that guy just got chopped in half with his own
chainsaw! Wow — I can’t believe we're watching this! All this shock stuff is
fine and dandy if you're a 17-year-old male hanging out with your guy friends
on Saturday night. But for anyone — and everyone — else, a horror movie cannot
run on shock value alone.
As usual, writer/director Eli Roth (Cabin Fever) is more concerned with
shocking audiences than delivering genuine tension and suspense. He has an
original and engaging premise, but fails to develop anything more than a
blood-and-guts freak show. It’s a shame that Hostel isn’t scary — in the least
— because if the gore relieved tension instead of replacing it, without a
doubt, Roth would have had one hell of a horror flick.
How much for a triple?
Reviewer: Blake French
hostel is a good film, kinda gory though !!
jus to comment on that last post,
i live in UK and hostel was out in the movies here !!
Hmmm, well that was an intense film best seen on xanax;) I doubt any part of
it was true and I think the Thailand tie-in is basicly mythology that directors
love to come up with and they desperagely try to tell people p
It is odd how fear is kind of projected out to strange locales like Thailand or
Eastern Europe. Oh well such is life....I mean things are spooky, gorey, fun.
For better or worse real life evil is often banal, bland and entirely
uncinematic.
I am amused at how many people believe the sort of "based on a true story" line
that directors come up with.
Have Fun,
Sends Steve
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