Showing posts with label hostel series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hostel series. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

It's Halloween, Isn't It?

Last night, Rachael and I watched quite a bit of Signs, which (like hundreds of the discs piled up behind me right now) I hadn't seen since I first bought the DVD. Not that I want this observation to reflect badly on the film, mind, because there's some brilliant, brilliant stuff in there. The scene in which Graham and Merrill run around the house shouting is particularly great, and if I'd have written and directed as much stuff like that as Shyamalan has I'd probably suffer from ego problems myself. (Come back in a few years to check on my progress in this regard).

We didn't make it to the end of Signs, however - perhaps it would have been more appropriate for tonight, the one night of the year Rachael seems more susceptible to scary fare. I even got her two thirds of the way through Dawn of the Dead a couple of years back (but how she ended up watching Hostel with me on Valentine's day, not to mention walking out of it before it was over, is another story altogether).

So, today being what it is, and all, the horror films are out in force. 30 Days of Night hits the UK today; Saw IV has been around since last weekend and is doing very well, it seems; the BBC are trotting out Carpenter's Halloween once again tonight - though I bet they ingratiously crop it down to 16:9, so don't bother - put the DVD on instead; and there's even a new, splattery clip from Aliens vs. Predator Requiem up for grabs. If you want to download it directly, I can offer you a WMV version, or my preferred Quicktime encode. Exploding heads and acid spurts to the face abound - and this version doesn't have th annoying IGN badge.

Paul W.S Anderson's involvement in this film has probably put most people off, and indeed, I'm epxecting little or nothing from the film. I certainly didn't think much of the first. I've gone into some detail about my feelings for Anderson already, and they haven't changed: he's a pretty capable hack who sets fairly easy targets and hits them sort-of-squarely most of the time. And that's not a bad thing, really - it just isn't a particularly good thing. While I haven't seen There Will Be Blood, I've seen all of PT Anderson's other features and I'll stick with his schlockier namesake, if I may - a fraction less ambition, a great deal less botchery.

I saw the third Resident Evil a week or so ago, and I did enjoy most of it, if only at a pretty low register. The odd bit here and there was even very interesting - the opening sequence that sets an Alice clone loose into a recreation of the first film's opening riffs quite enjoyably on the videogame mechanic of multiple lives/continues and repeatable levels (things we take for granted, they're so commonplace in games - but they didn't have to be). I liked the wireframe transitions from location to location again, which reminded me of nothing so much as negotating the map screen on a latter-day Metroid game. And the end of the film, which saw multiple Alices, ready to awaken and each try to defeat the evil Umbrella Corporation across the world seemed resonant with the myriad players of the games, globally controlling their identical avatars in identical missions.

Probably the film that best speaks to my experience of playing videogames in eXistenz, though this Resident Evil run a fairly close second (though, obviously, in this one respect only - I'm definitely not comparing Anderson to Cronenberg on any other terms).

So, I briefly mentioned the box office success of Saw IV. Looking at those opening weekend grosses, I'd say that every dollar over 20 million was worth another hearty laugh at Nikki Finke and her delusions of having halted the commercial success of so-called torture porn. That's over 11 million laughs, and I'll join you in every one.

On the other hand, each of those dollars is also worth a tear. How can a spiritless film like a Saw be so massively outgrossing Hostel Part 2? It was the angriest, smartest, most worthwhile horrror film since... er... well, at least Hostel Part 1 and it's getting trumped by the latest repetition of boring, witless carnival show.

And here's my prize Halloween link: The living horror of the looming strikes has studio execs and producers running hither and thither trying to put together their slates and sharpish. Variety's round-up does a good enough job of explaining which studio pictures are set to roll in time, so I won't paraphrase it here. Of specific interest to long time film ick readers, however, might be that Wolverine is getting a rewrite from Jamie Vanderbilt and Scott Silver. I say good. Very good. David Benioff's original script was as bad a script as I've ever read. I was concerned about this one because I've really been enjoying Gavin Hood's work so far - Tsotsi and Rendition - and now I'm just glad he looked past Benioff's, ill-structured, cliche stricken, senseless draft in order to sign on to a basic set-up that could so easily soar.

And..er... that's that. That being my first attempt at finding a new way to do this.

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Spoilertastic Hostel 2 Images

Look at these Hostel 2 images carefully and tell me they aren't stuffed with spoilers... or, possibly, they're cleverly constructed to mislead. The bottom one is giving me a real Countess Bathory vibe. In a few weeks, we'll see how right I am.


Thanks to Gray Digger for sending them over.






Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Hostel 2 Site Now Live

The Hostel 2 official site is now live. Hard to navigate - on my browser, at least - but live.

Monday, May 07, 2007

Direct Download Link For New International Hostel 2 Trailer

You can download the new Hostel 2 trailer right now. Remember to right-click and rename the filename to anything.wmv to get it to play.

Good trailer, isn't it?

Friday, May 04, 2007

A Rush Of Blood To The Head

The IESB have added two new Hostel 2 images to their gallery. Do they spoil anything? Judge for yourself...


Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Direct Download Link To Hostel 2 Full Trailer In Quicktime

Looking better than the flv version of a few days back, the Quicktime version of the full Hostel 2 trailer can now be downloaded directly.

Here are some lovely stills. The scene with the TV set (up top here) should ring bells to anybody who listened to the commentary tracks on the first DVD.







Friday, March 30, 2007

Hostel 2 Trailer That Plays Worldwide

Here's a Hostel 2 trailer you can download and watch anywhere in the world, bypassing the 'lock' on MTV's site that prevents it from playing outside of the USA.

It's hosted on a Russian site, which evokes golden memories of the cold war.

Nice to see some Jedi action, however briefly, and I'm pleased to see the German angle is being kept up too.

[EDIT: If that link is bust - as it sometimes is - try Slashfilm, who have the flv file on loan from me]

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Eli Roth Busy On... Hostel 1

As well as wrapping up post on Hostel 2, Eli Roth is at work on a new DVD of the first Hostel. We all knew it was coming. He promises it will be good, however:

I was putting together a lot elements today for the Hostel special edition DVD. Sony wants to do one and my feeling is I'm all for it, but it has to be great and have so many extras people really feel they got their money's worth and that Sony didn't double dip. It's gonna be awesome.

Something else he says, however, suggests that the making of the second Hostel film wasn't as fun as that of the first. What will this mean for the quality of the film?

...watching all those deleted scenes made me sad. I missed them. I missed filming with them. With Jay and Derek and Eythor and Barbara. There's a lot of great sh*t that got cut for time that I still love. I wish I could shot that film again. It was one of those magical experiences where everything came together. Seems so far from me now. And yet I'm still in it in a weird way. Crazy.

As I understand it, a different cut of the film was planned for a long time but now, it's been relegated to a series of deleted scenes and an alternative ending in isolation. One of the main reasons is the structure of the two films together, with the second film's plot depending quite strongly on how the first film ended.

Monday, March 19, 2007

Time-Delayed Eli Roth Blog

Eli Roth's new column at VH1 details the shooting of Hostel 2 like some kind of time-delayed blog. This first installment actually deals with the Death Proof shooting before Hostel 2 got off of the ground.

Friday, March 16, 2007

NYerdcon Hostel Clips In Quicktime

These Hostel 2 clips are very impressive. They were on YouTube, then they weren't, and now they're on the official Itallian Hostel 2 site - with Itallian subtitles.

The new trailer is due this time next week.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Hostel 2 Costumes Are Minor Spoilers




There's something very creepy going on behind Heather, but all three of these new Hostel 2 images promise a pretty high level of scares. The costumes in the second and third might be seen as minor spoiler material, also. Dress me up dollies go fetish wear... and chainsaw.

Click for bigness.

[EDIT: These pics seem to have originated on a German site]

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Hostel Round-Up

I think we can now safely assume that, in fact, the second Hostel film is largely located in Germany. There's the last few scenes of the first Hostel to take into account, for one thing; there's the German voice over on the teaser trailer; there's the new site set up at www.diehostel.de - not so much just a German site for the film as a fake site for 'the operation' in Germany, if you know what I mean. I like the site a lot, but I keep expecting it to suddenly make a really loud noise and for a big gruesome image to fill the screen - just like all of those 'watch closely for the ghostie' virals - so I haven't left it on for very long.

Of course, this may all be bluff to hide the big spoiler I've heard tell of. The spoiler had a good, clean source - but, personally, I'm starting to doubt it. I think Germany is very much where it's at. I think I was sent a deliberate piece of misinformation.

There's a new Hostel 2 poster too, but it's truly ugly. And not in a good way. It seems to be a bad photosphop blending of the previous images - the meat and the naked Bijou - so I assumed it was just a piece of bad fan work. Apparently not, however. Loads of sites are claiming this is official. If so, I'm very disappointed. This is a terrible poster.

Hostel 2 is released during June in most of the big territories.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Hostel 2 Clips On YouTube Now

Hurry - these are bound to be taken down within hours - but there are clips from Hostel 2 on YouTube right now.

These are the clips that were premiered at Nyerdcon last weekend, and though picture quality is hardly optimal, you might be left a little shaken.

Be sure and use a YouTube Download program or page to grab the clip for yourself before time is up.

Monday, February 26, 2007

We're Trying Out A New Look

Please, please leave us a comment below and let us know if you like the new look or not, and why. Check out some old stories using the search facility and random sampling of labels below to bug hunt the new format with posts that weren't conceived with the layout in mind. If anything untoward happens, let us know and we'll do our best to fix it.

We're listening to you and will make any necessary changes that are much wanted to ensure that film ick works for the readers in the way it should.

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Not Safe For Work: The Hostel 2 Poster With Two Bare Breasts And One Misplaced Head

There's a very clear version of the Hostel 2 Bijou Phillips poster at Horror Movies. It isn't safe for work but is quite interesting indeed.

Friday, February 16, 2007

Baron Munchausen Gets Deluxe In September

There's a 'Deluxe Edition' of Terry Gilliam's The Adventures of Baron Munchausen coming to DVD this September. Appopriately enough, the site that scooped Sony's plan is in Brazil.

Apparently, September is also the month that the long-discussed Hostel special edition will make it to DVD - hopefully with the extended cut and alternative endings - as well as another pressing of Jim Henson's Labyrinth.

Friday, February 02, 2007

A Dog With A Long Tail

David Hewlett has spoken to Arts Hub about his film, A Dog's Breakfast and just how it became the phenomenon it has.

I missed a chance to see the film yesterday because I was undergoing a marathon bout of violence, enacted upon my jaw by a polite medical professional armed with an entire tray of scary, shiny props from Hostel, or maybe even Brazil. Now I have a big hole inside my mouth, a constant pain to remind me that my next appointment is just a couple of days away, and didn't get to see a film I'm very keen to catch.

Trust me - I don't skip films as intriguing as this one for anything that still leaves me able to stand, walk or talk.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Bound To Be Banned


I think the MPAA are going to ban - or at least alter - this new Hostel 2 poster. Everybody was surprised that the last one was permitted, so it looks like Eli Roth and crew have really decided to push the boat out this time.

Click on it to make it bigger, and get a better look at just what is on that drillbit.

[EDIT: And, indeed, the above picture has turned out to be a fake. At this scale, of course, with the meaty drillbit enhanced, it does look suitably MPAA-challenging]

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Cabin Fever Sequel Details

The sequel to Cabin Fever is on it's way, of course, but this time without Eli Roth's directorial hand - he's far too busy with Hostel 2, Hostel 3, Cell and some other, as yet secret, stuff, and as I understand it, this sequel is moving ahead without any real contribution on his part.

It seems that the new Cabin Fever will be subtitled Spring Fever. This was also the name of a Harold Lloyd film, though I doubt the two will have much in common at all. Little is known about the plot, though it's clearly in the vein of the first, with good-looking teen protagonists, a flesh eating virus and wanton acts of violence. Look for this one to be set during spring break, however - hence the title. As was reported late last year, Ti West has written the script and will direct with principal photography imminent.

Sunday, December 31, 2006

The Best Films Of 2006

Here is my list of 2006's ten best films. At least, of the ones I've been lucky enough to see. I'll wrap things up with a couple of additional lists: films I didn't see that would have, otherwise, made it onto this list I think; and films that were pretty darn good but didn't make the ten, with special reference to a few derided films that didn't deserve all of the stick.

We'll start at number ten and work up the list, I think. I reserve the right to edit this should my awful memory remind me of a great film that, somehow, I overlooked (I suppose that's
kind of cheating).

I'm not going to go into my reasons that much here - if you're a regular reader, you'll already know; if not, you most likely don't care.

10.
The Break-Up

Peyton Reed is one of American studio cinema's secret weapons, like Peter Chelsom, Joseph Ruben, Audrey Wells or Richard LaGravanese. Every one of his films has been smart, very well crafted and undervalued.

9.
Where the Truth Lies

Atom Egoyan understands Hitchcock better than most other contemporary directors, learning from his more subtle techniques but not aping his more obvious stylings. A rich, complex film.

8.
The Queen

Peter Morgan's
Longford script was better on paper, but The Queen was the better crafted film. And, in fact, Helen Mirren was better in the final Prime Suspect but... hang on. I'm having a moment of doubt here. Maybe TV is better than cinema after all...

7. Pan's Labyrinth

The most overrated film on this list, Pan's Labyrinth has much in common with the films at positions 2 and 1, particularly 1 but simply isn't as sophisticated or as well constructed. Not to say it isn't extremely well constructed. Another astonishing film from Guillermo del Toro - though it is reputed to be much better than his others, it simply is isn't. They're wonderful, every one.


6. Dave Chappelle's Block Party

Michel Gondry showed an entire skillset he hadn't flexed publicly before in what was, essentially, a documentary. Wonderfully judged, perfectly paced and - this year at least - unparallelled in creating a roof-raising atmosphere.

5.
Cars

Perhaps the most handsome film ever committed to celluloid,
Cars faced innumerable cinematic challenges head on and overcame them all with great invention and imagination. Case in point: the body of the car being immediately, and without question, accepted as a stand-in for both the 'body' and 'head' of a living being, at times shifting from one to the other in a single frame. This kind of design solution is the genius that sets Pixar apart from all other studios.

4.
Children of Men

Forrest Gump was, until now, the most intelligent and visually perfected example of computer effects in film - but not anymore: what Alfonso Cuaron imagined, his FX and camera teams bought vividly (sometimes, seemingly impossibly) to life. Children of Men is a simply structured film, walking a fine line between parable and a sci-fi slice-of-life, but on the clean, driving story hang a wealth of astute character moments, tense suspense scenes and questions that deserve careful consideration.

3.
Hostel

A wonderful union of populist crowd-pleasing and onion-skinned satire,
Hostel was for some months the most impressive film I'd seen this year. I'm certain that this movie will be considered a classic - both widely and very seriously - in the years to come. Hostel is not only a film with a lot of brilliantly dramatised ideas, it is a film that targets the audiences that both need to hear these ideas most and also those who will be most responsive to them (two very different audiences, mind) with pin-point accuracy - a bit like Borat, actually.

2.
Little Miss Sunshine

Simply, a masterpiece of mise-en-scene, editing and fuss-free, elegant, eloquent visual storytelling. The cast are wonderful, the script is witty but most of all, the film works best as a full, finished film. Dayton and Faris have blown me away with their sense of composition, camera and montage. Not a popular appraisal, I know, but watch it again, and pay close attention.

1.
Tideland

Sophisticated, rich, bold and brilliantly built, Tideland is Gilliam's best film since Brazil and one of the very few best films I have ever seen. Being this unpredictable can have costs to a film's integrity
, but not here: no matter where we go with Jeliza Rose, no matter how Gilliam takes his next slice into the film's subtext, it's all part of one incredible argument, one amazing, but coherent world view. A Vertigo for this age.

I've got lots more to say about Tideland in the next couple of weeks, as the DVD release draws near.

The following films could easily have made the list:
Brick, Superman Returns, Borat, Rumour Has It, Breakfast on Pluto, Syriana, The Dark, Volver, Angel-A, Monster House, Thank You For Smoking, Casino Royale; and these films were far from bad - in fact, really rather good - just not anything particularly 'special': The Hills Have Eyes, The Night Listener, The Piano Tuner of Earthquakes, Match Point, Sophie Scholl, Factotum.

In fact,
Casino Royale was perhaps my favourite film of the year - simply as I expected much, much less. This year's 40 Year Old Virgin.

Here are the films I missed which I suspect could
maybe have made the list (from what I know of them, or of their cast and crew's previous work, maybe from their coverage in the press): The Science of Sleep, Duck Season, Satellite, Don't Come Knocking, Bubble, The Illusionist, The Last King of Scotland, Edmond, The Puffy Chair, Art School Confidential, The Boss of it All, The Host, Lunacy, Stick It, Half Nelson, Find Me Guilty, The Fountain, A Scanner Darkly.

This last section is for films that I found somewhat lacking, though many were rather well received elsewhere:
Tzameti, Ellie Parker, Snakes on a Plane, Running Scared, Hard Candy, Nacho Libre, Lucky Number Slevin, Firewall, Talladega Nights, Pirates of the Caribbean 2.

I am disappointed with the low number of films from beyond the US and UK film industries in my top 10 list for the year, but this is more a result of the distribution patterns and the films offered to me than any personal taste. Looking back at the films of 2006 in, say, 2008, once I have been able to see and appreciate a larger range of films, I am certain that any list I might make would be very different. For sure, a great number of the films on an "all-time list" I might make would not be in the English language, though still, truth be told, not a majority, just a far bigger minority. Again, distribution factors are largely to blame, I'm sure (though, in fact, I
would argue that more great films have been made in Hollywood than any other specific film industry, both recently and back during the 'heyday' of the studio system - but that's a discussion for another time).