Hostel - The Director's Cut [Blu-ray] Review
Hostel is hands down my favorite horror movie torture of the new millennium. The scary thing about this film is that this could really happen. Reality always adds charm and horror factor in horror films, video games, etc. The directors had the idea for Hostel him as a friend by email when a page is really a murder-for-profit in Thailand ... what is "fragmented" in Director's Cut featurettes. Sun Fan Hostel The Director's Cut only oneMUST HAVE!
Even in Europe you live as well as other foreign countries during the growth, I can not image that happen to clueless backpackers trekking their way through unknown territory, language, and where people can care less if you are an American or not . You may think that you feel right (like many Americans) when traveling in a foreign country - but you / we do not.
Bottom line: People are Effing sick, and things like this happens inreal life every day, anywhere in the world - is simply not shown in the open for all to see. Hostel only "slices and nuts', cooks, in fact all that together and you are the first in a small package of meat. If you enjoyed this movie a low rating was because it could not cope with the peak of history and reality of extreme violence. It 'so simple. 5 stars!
Hostel - The Director's Cut [Blu-ray] Feature
- ISBN13: 0043396235632
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Hostel - The Director's Cut [Blu-ray] Overview
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 10/23/2007 Run time: 94 minutes Rating: Ur
Hostel - The Director's Cut [Blu-ray] Specifications
Well-made for the genre--the excessive-skin-displayed-before-gruesome-bloody-torture-begins genre--Hostel follows two randy Americans (Jay Hernandez, Friday Night Lights, and Derek Richardson, Dumb and Dumberer: When Harry Met Lloyd) and an even randier Icelander (Eythor Gudjonsson) as they trek to Slovakia, where they're told beautiful girls will have sex with anyone with an American accent. Unfortunately, the girls will also sell young Americans to a company that offers victims to anyone who will pay to torture and murder. To his credit, writer/director Eli Roth (Cabin Fever) takes his time setting things up, laying a realistic foundation that makes the inevitable spilling of much blood all the more gruesome. The sardonic joke, of course, is that Americans are worth the most in this brothel of blood because everyone else in the world wants to take revenge upon them. This dark humor and political subtext help set Hostel above its more brainless sadistic compatriots, like House of Wax or The Devil's Rejects. In general, though, there's something lacking; horror used to suggest some threat to the spirit--today's horror can conceive of nothing more troubling than torturing the flesh. For aficionados, Hostel features a nice cameo by Takashi Miike, director of bloody Japanese flicks like Audition and Ichi the Killer. --Bret Fetzer
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