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Hostel: Part II

 
Movies:

Hostel Part II

  • Director: Eli Roth
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Sadistic Horror
  • Themes: Nightmare Vacations, Woman In Jeopardy
  • Main Cast: Lauren German, Roger Bart, Heather Matarazzo, Bijou Phillips, Richard Burgi
  • Release Year: 2007
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 94 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Three American students studying art in Rome are drawn into a grim world of torture and suffering in director Eli Roth's blackly comic sequel to the horror hit that shocked the world. Beth (Lauren German), Whitney (Bijou Phillips), and Lorna (Heather Matarazzo) have ventured outside of their stateside surroundings in order to get a more worldly appreciation of the arts. But sketching nudes all day can take its toll on even the most talented artist, and when class is over the three girls jump at the opportunity to experience Europe firsthand. As they set out on the train for an impromptu weekend trip, however, the coeds are surprised to cross paths with the beautiful model they had just been sketching. It appears that she, too, is preparing for a vacation that promises to be both relaxing and rejuvenating, and a generous invitation to join her at a remote hostel surrounded by soothing hot springs ultimately proves too tempting for the adventurous Americans to pass up. Unfortunately for the unsuspecting students, one person's idea of relaxing can be another's worst nightmare. Now on an unavoidable collision course with two American businessmen who long to get an edge on their competition by experiencing the thrill of the kill and a scythe-wielding woman who maintains her youthful visage using the Elizabeth Bathory method, these unsuspecting students are about to fall into a trap that remains one of the sadistic and wealthy elite's most well-guarded secrets. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Review

A few words come to mind while attempting to describe Eli Roth's sequel to the film that made "torture porn" a household term: vicious, reprehensible, vile, repulsive...even hilarious. Of course, any reader caught off guard by that last one may just want to stop reading right now, because Hostel: Part II certainly isn't a movie for everyone, and if one can't enter into the whole endeavor with a sense of humor and an acceptance that this may be something more than mere titillation, then there's really no need to bother. As sick a man as Roth may be considered by critics who choose to take the moral high ground, the fact remains that he's one of the sharpest genre specialists of his generation and he certainly understands that a well-placed laugh can make his darkest moments of horror all the more effective. Make no mistake, there are scenes in Hostel: Part II that will have some folks running for the doors, yet the smart scripting and the manner in which Roth toys with the viewer's sympathies and emotions are more pointed and unmistakably effective than anywhere in his previous body of work. Of course, all of the crimson-soaked Grand Guignol theatricals are present here, though most viewers will likely be surprised -- even disappointed -- that for most of the running time this sequel feels decidedly more tame than its predecessor. Whereas the first installment seemed like something of an American response to the notorious All Night Long trilogy that set a new precedent for Japanese horror in the 1990s, this sequel takes that concept and filters it through a decidedly Italian aesthetic. In addition to drawing visual influence from Dario Argento and employing the morbid humor of Mario Bava at his most nihilistic, Roth also recruited Italian beauty Edwige Fenech for a memorable scene, Luc Merenda for a key supporting role, and offers Cannibal Holocaust director Ruggero Deodato in one of the most thematically appropriate cameos in the history of horror cinema.

Despite the inherent baggage that goes along with being a "genre film," Hostel Part II is a mature film for a mature audience, and unlike many of the films lumped in with it by critics who would sooner label and forget rather than exert the effort to think about what they're seeing, there is something working beneath the surface here. This isn't your typical slasher sequel in which the new group of teens simply line up for the slaughter and the viewer is treated to a tired retread of the original -- Roth actually expands the universe presented in the first film and one can sense that he isn't simply cashing in. If the first film was a shot of a clock, the sequel is a look at the cogs and mechanics that make it tick. Viewers know there's an organization that will allow a client to experience the thrill of the kill for the right price, and in this expansion of the story we are shown precisely how that organization operates. Is it absurd? Yes, and the absurdity is alternately comic and horrifying. Not only that, but unlike the obnoxious, ugly American "bros" who sapped the viewer's sympathies in the first film, Roth sets his sequel comfortably apart by offering likable protagonists whom the audience can truly connect with. Heather Matarazzo turns in a fearless performance as the homesick American art student who documents every moment of her trip in an exquisitely detailed travel journal; Lauren German gets a killer character arc as the trust-fund girl who's always looking out for her traveling companions; and by opening up the story to offer a look into the lives of their potential executioners, Roth allows the viewer to invest in the characters in a manner that makes the ultimate payoff all the more effective. Time and again Roth displays a skillful sleight of hand that catches the viewer off guard, but it never feels forced. Whether building tension by showing something that isn't quite what it seems or using circumstance to shift character dynamics at the precise moment when it matters most, Roth has proven here that he truly understands the mechanics of the genre.

In the year 2007, we live in a society dominated by war and warlike mentality. The topic of torture is a frequent debate on the nightly news, and as a storyteller Roth is well aware of that fact. Torture does not make for a pleasurable viewing experience, yet it is a valid topic, since it is both pressing and current. In the 1970s, filmmakers like Wes Craven, Bob Clark, and Tobe Hooper were responding to their environments in much the same manner that Roth is today. The horror genre has always provided thoughtful artists with a means of holding a mirror to society -- a distorted mirror no doubt, but a mirror nonetheless -- and the cold truth is that most folks won't like what they see in that reflection. We try so hard to forget about the true horrors of the world by latching on to the latest reality television craze or taking news in small doses from glossy media outlets, and when someone like Roth throws that back in our faces, we get angry. In the end it's easy to write something like Hostel Part II off -- at best it's unpleasant and at worst, as some critics would lead us to believe, it's the bane of humanity. As absurd as it may have seemed to point this out in the midst of the summer blockbuster season, when Hostel Part II was released, film is at its core an art -- and an artist's responsibility is to comment on the topics that affect them. Sure, some folks will always prefer their art to be easily digestible, and that's all well and good. The problem arises when we start blaming the artist for all of society's ills instead of using their works as a catalyst for taking stock of our own lives. Roth's film reflects modern society at its worst, but the duty of an artist is to respond to their surroundings. When an actor in Rob Zombie's The Devil's Rejects expressed reservation during the production of a particularly tense scene, the director responded that art isn't safe. Whether or not filmmakers like Zombie and Roth produce art that adheres to our particular ideas of "entertainment" or "decency" is subjective, but to deny that their works are a reflection of society at a very specific point in time is to be willfully blind of the world we live in. When that happens -- and when artists are not afforded the opportunity to express themselves on the grounds that some may take offence to the manner in which they choose to do so -- is when things have the potential to get truly terrifying in the real world and not just up on the silver screen. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Vera Jordanova - Axelle; Jay Hernandez - Paxton; Jordan Ladd - Stephanie; Milan Knazko - Sasha; Edwige Fenech - Art Class Professor; Stanislav Ianevski - Miroslav; Patrik Zigo - Bubblegum Gang Leader; Zuzana Geislerova - Inya; Ivan Furak - Big Guard; Monika Malacova - Mrs Bathory; Davide Dominici - Riccardo; Petr Vancura - Pavel; Roman Janecka - Roman; Milda Havlas - Desk Clerk Jedi; Lilian Malkina - Make-up Woman; Susana Bequer - Italian Translator; Luc Merenda - Italian Detective; Ruggero Deodato - The Italian Cannibal; Philip Waley - Monitor Guard Czelsifan; Rostislav Osicka - Monitor Guard Boxr; Petr Blaha - Drunk Italian; Jiri Barton - Knife Wielding Italian; Michaela Kaplanova - Todd's Hooker; Nada Vanatkova - Italian Nurse; Jan Nemejovsky - The Doctor; Pierre Peyrichout - Army Man; Riccardo Trombetta - Electrocution Victim; Ota Filip - Muttonchop Guard; Jiri Hajdyla - train waiter; Mirek Cipra - Tub Guard; Mark Taylor - Sir Bruce Bonus; Guilherme Bolliger - Paul Bullen; Christopher Hewitt - Drunk British Slob; Karel Vanasek - Devilku Puppet; Barbara Nedeljáková - Natalya; Dan Frisch - Decapitated Fanny Pack Man; David Baxa - Hammer Man; Rick James - Nail Man; Mira Nosek - Van Driver; Martin Faltyn - Senior Cozzi; Monika Hladovva - Train Waitress; Iveta Rucka - Stuart's Hooker; Stephanie Bauman - Axelle's Next Victims; Mollie Andron - Axelle's Next Victims; Adam Gazik - Bubble Gum Kid; Adrian Kotlar - Bubble Gum Kid; Adriana Godlova - Bubble Gum Kid; Ares Kotlar - Bubble Gum Kid; Andrea Varadiova - Bubble Gum Kid; Dana Matiova - Bubble Gum Kid; Ervin Varadi - Bubble Gum Kid; Frantisek Dumka - Bubble Gum Kid; Frantisek Kotlar - Bubble Gum Kid; Jakub Surmai - Bubble Gum Kid; Josef Adamovic - Bubble Gum Kid; Lukas Cajkovsky - Bubble Gum Kid; Nikolas Conka - Bubble Gum Kid; Ondrej Caajkonvsky - Bubble Gum Kid; Petr Conka - Bubble Gum Kid; Radek Entner - Bubble Gum Kid; Radek Hrdlicka - Bubble Gum Kid; Stanislav Conka - Bubble Gum Kid; Vladimir Churan - Bubble Gum Kid; Rick Hoffman - The American Bussinesman; Derek Richardson - Josh; Jana Kaderabková - Svetlana

Credit

David Baxa - Art Director, Eythor Gudjonsson - Associate Producer, Mark Bakunas - Associate Producer, Gabriel Roth - Associate Producer, Pavel Vencl - Boom Operator, Ales Pekarek - Boom Operator, Sona Tichackova - Casting, Kelly Martin-Wagner - Casting, Ivan Vorlicek - Casting, Ashton Hinkinson Ltd. - Casting, Gregory Nicotero - Conception, Howard Berger - Conception, Dan Frisch - Co-producer, Philip Waley - Co-producer, Susanna Puisto - Costume Designer, Mark Taylor - First Assistant Director, Eli Roth - Director, Gabriel Roth - Second Unit Director, George Folsey, Jr. - Editor, Scott Spiegel - Executive Producer, Quentin Tarantino - Executive Producer, Boaz Yakin - Executive Producer, Anni Buchanan - Hair Styles, Barbara Kichi - Hair Styles, Jam Ondrovcak - Location Manager, Nathan Barr - Composer (Music Score), Anni Buchanan - Makeup, Lucie Liskova - Makeup, Jana Dopitova - Makeup, Lisa Buscher - Makeup, Gregory Nicotero - Makeup Special Effects, Howard Berger - Makeup Special Effects, K.N.B. EFX Group - Makeup Special Effects, Shane Daly - Camera Operator, Jaromir Sedina - Camera Operator, Robb Wilson King - Production Designer, Milan Chadima - Cinematographer, Vaclav Mottl - Production Manager, Faramarz Khalaj - Production Manager, Mike Fleiss - Producer, Eli Roth - Producer, Christopher Briggs - Producer, Tim Webb - Recording, Tomas Belohradsky - Sound/Sound Designer, Vaclav Pacal - Stunts, Robert "Robin" Lahoda - Stunts, David Mottl - Stunts, Kamila Zenkerova - Stunts, Jindrich Klaus - Stunts, Bara Slavikova - Stunts, Pavel Vokoun - Stunts Coordinator, Martin Pryca - Special Effects Supervisor, Philip Waley - Unit Production Manager, Eli Roth - Screenwriter, Tony Vizina - Production Assistant, Gary Beach - Visual Effects Supervisor, Vincent Cirelli - Visual Effects Supervisor, Avi Das - Visual Effects Supervisor, James Morioka - Sound Effects Editor, David Brickley - Technical Director, Anthony T. Fung - Technical Director, Scott Kilburn - Technical Director, Alisa Buckley - Unit Publicist, Filip Majer - First Assistant Camera, Lenka Dimitrovová - First Assistant Camera, Petr Konrad - Gaffer, Pavel Proisl - Grip, Ludek Hynek - Key Grip, Bruno Coon - Music Editor, Silvia Janculova - Production Coordinator, Bernard Mazauric - Production Supervisor, Vojta Fric - Production Supervisor, Milan Janostik - Properties Master, Chris Jenkins - Re-Recording Mixer, Frank A. Montaño - Re-Recording Mixer, Kazi Kopecká - Script Supervisor, Jaromir Sedina - Steadicam Operator, Kami Asgar - Supervising Sound Editor, Brian T. Best - Supervising Sound Editor, Sean McCormack - Supervising Sound Editor, Glenn Morris - Visual Effects Producer, Bridget Allen - Visual Effects Producer, Jan Soufek - Art Department Assistant, Jan Svoboda - Assistant Art Director, Mark Boley - Assistant Hair, Peter Petrik - Assistant Location Manager, Jacob Riehle - Assistant Sound Editor, Petr Berta Sulc - Best Boy Electric, Lukas Srajer - Best Boy Grip, Chris Gehrt - Casting Assistant, Zuzana Studena - Casting Assistant, Celeste Leger - Casting Associate, Dita Valentinova - Costumes Assistant, Sarka Zvolenska - Costumes Supervisor, Devin Joseph - Dialogue Editor, Michal Soun - Draftsman, Petr Cejka - Electrician, Ivan Janousek - Electrician, Daniel Kafka - Electrician, Ales Kohout - Electrician, Dalibor Suchy - Electrician, Martin Tichy - Electrician, Jiri Zelenka - Electrician, Martin Bublik - Electrician, Jan Brumlich - Electrician, Jan Natejka - Electrician, Jan Sankot - Electrician, Storm Bohemia - Extra Casting, Emil Linka - Extra Casting, Bjarney Ludviksdottir - Extra Casting, Michal Snajdr - First Assistant Accountant, Vincent Guisetti - Foley Artist, "PK" Spencer - Foley Artist, Karen Davidsen - Personal Assistant, Olina Edney - Personal Assistant, Tawnya Brown - Personal Assistant, Jed Strahm - Personal Assistant, Sárka Halastova - Personal Assistant, Tereza Mandic-Listikova - Personal Assistant, Diana Alikas - Personal Assistant, David Marks - Post Production Assistant, Katerina Ryskova - Production Accountant, Lukas Kraina - Second Assistant Accountant, Adam Krulis - Second Assistant Camera, Marcin Studniarek - Second Assistant Camera, Martina Gotthansova - Second Second Assistant Director, Philip Lee Seeger - Second Unit Assistant Director, Jaroslav Fiala - Set Dresser, Jaromir Vaverka - Set Dresser, Karel Kubis - Set Production Assistant, Ludek Vomacka - Set Production Assistant, Jakub Kadlec - Transportation Coordinator, Luma Pictures - Visual Effects, Barbed Wire FX - Visual Effects, Karel Vanasek - Set Decorator, Rick James - Cable Person, Eda Raban - Craft Service/Catering, E.D.A. Catering - Craft Service/Catering, Catering Matous - Craft Service/Catering, Antonin Nedvidk - Craft Service/Catering, Rostislav Belolavek - Craft Service/Catering, Jaroslav David - Craft Service/Catering, Zdenek Vávra - Driver, Mirek Kolacek - Driver, Rudolf Merta - Driver, Tomas Prazan - Driver, Tomas Pelc - Driver, Libor Muller - Driver, Jiri Ventura - Driver, Pepino Svenek - Driver, Miroslav Holy - Driver, Frantisek Sladek - Driver, Ladislav Vacik - Driver, Ludvik Janecek - Driver, Vaclas Chaloupka - Driver, Jiri Nekolny - Driver, Kyle Rochlin - Foley Mixer, Vratislav Vosicka - Generator Operator, Tomas Rezler - Generator Operator, Eduard Konrad - Generator Operator, Eva Dvorakova - Set Medic/First Aid, Ondrej Pryca - Special Effects Technician, Marija Nikolic - Art Department Coordinator, Brad Wilhite - Assistant Editor, Charles Kaplan - Assistant Editor, Tim Tuchrello - First Assistant Sound Editor, Robert Freitas - Mold Department, Joe Giles - Mold Department, Christopher Cera - Mold Department, Grady Holder - Mold Department, Lino Stavole - Mold Department, Jim Leonard - Mold Department, A.J. Venuto - Mold Department, Barry Crane - Mold Department, Jeff Deist - Mold Department, Brian Goehring - Mold Department, Brandon Whynaucht - Mold Department, Jakub Eliasek - Stage Director, Alfred Berger - Compositor, Chris Chappell - Compositor, Anthony R. Davis - Compositor, Wolfgang Maschin - Compositor, Miljohn Ruperto - Compositor, Philip Sisk - Compositor, Michael Guttman - Matchmove Artist, Paul Hopkins - Matchmove Artist, Michael Orlando - Matchmove Artist, Thana Siripopungul - Painter (digital), Chris Bradley - Painter (digital), Joey Sila - Painter (digital), Wendy Klein - Painter (digital), Raphael Pimentel - Painter (digital), Burke Roane - Painter (digital), John Hazzard - Painter (digital), Pavel Pranevsky - Painter (digital), Charles Scott IV - Painter (digital), Ben Neall - Painter (digital), Cajun Hylton - Painter (digital), Jason Locke - Painter (digital), Milan Babik - Assistant Set Decorator

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Wikipedia: Hostel: Part II
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Hostel: Part II

Final U.S. movie poster for the film
Directed by Eli Roth
Produced by Scott Spiegel
Boaz Yakin
Quentin Tarantino
Written by Eli Roth
Starring Lauren German
Bijou Phillips
Heather Matarazzo
Jay Hernandez
Jordan Ladd
Roger Bart
Vera Jordanova
Richard Burgi
Music by Nathan Barr
Cinematography Milan Chadima
Editing by George Folsey Jr.
Brad E. Wilhite
Distributed by Screen Gems
LIONSGATE
Release date(s) June 8, 2007
Running time 94 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $10.2 million[1]
Gross revenue $35,619,521
Preceded by Hostel
Followed by Hostel: Part III

Hostel: Part II is the 2007 sequel to writer-director Eli Roth's 2005 horror film Hostel. The film was released on June 8, 2007 in the United States. Like its predecessor, the film is set in Slovakia and centers on a facility in which rich clients pay to torture and kill kidnapped victims. The film performed poorly at the box office totaling just $17 million by the end of its theatrical run[2] whereas the original made $19 million in its opening weekend alone. However, it had beaten its budget. Eli Roth shot scenes for the movie in the Prague online brothel Big Sister and in Iceland, the Blue Lagoon.[3]

Contents

Plot

About a week after the events of Hostel, the film opens with Paxton (Jay Hernandez) in seclusion with his girlfriend Stephanie (Cabin Fever's Jordan Ladd). The two argue, and the next morning Stephanie wakes up to discover Paxton's headless body seated at the kitchen table with their cat licking blood from his neck. Meanwhile, in Slovakia, a mysterious package is delivered to Sasha (Milan Kňažko), the owner of Elite Hunting. From the reaction of Sasha's hounddogs and the size of the box, it is left to the audience to deduce that this package contains Paxton's head. In Italy, art students Beth (Lauren German), Whitney (Bijou Phillips) and Lorna (Heather Matarazzo) are convinced by Axelle (Vera Jordanova), a nude model they are sketching, to join her on a vacation to a luxurious spa. The four travel to a small Slovakian village and check into the local hostel, where the desk clerk uploads their passport photos to an auction website, where hotshot American businessman Todd (Richard Burgi) bids on Whitney and Beth for himself and his passive best friend Stuart (Roger Bart).

Later that night, at the village's "Harvest Festival", Lorna discovers that Beth has inherited a vast fortune from her mother. Stuart approaches Beth and the two share a friendly, if awkward, conversation. An intoxicated Lorna leaves to go on a boat ride with Roman, a charismatic local, who proceeds to kidnap Lorna with the help of two accomplices. A local walks up to Beth and asks her for a dance, she declines. He responds with "I could have helped you." Beth doesn't understand and shortly afterward the hostel's clerk approaches and tells her "He won't bother you anymore." Beth and Whitney leave the party, while Axelle volunteers to stay behind and wait for Lorna.

The next morning the three girls head to the local spa to relax. Basking in the relaxing atmosphere of the hot springs, Beth is able to fall somewhat at ease and dozes off. Meanwhile, a naked Lorna is shackled upside-down in a large room, where a woman named Mrs. Bathory (Monika Malacova) enters, undresses, and lies beneath Lorna. She then proceeds to slowly kill Lorna by cutting her with a long scythe and bathing in her blood, then slitting her throat with a sickle. At the spa, Beth awakens to find herself alone and her belongings stolen. As she looks for her friends, she notices several men approaching and surrounding her. Fearing for her life, she climbs over the spa's walls. While making her escape, she is ambushed by the "Bubblegum Gang", a gang of violent children. Before they are able to descend upon her, however, Axelle and Sasha appear and ward them away from her. Axelle escorts a flustered but somewhat relieved Beth to their vehicle. With Axelle and Beth away, Sasha confronts the children. He is angered that they interfered with his "business operations." As punishment, and to warn against future transgressions, Sasha draws out his gun and has one of the children brought forward before him. Sasha summarily kills the boy, and the rest of the gang flees.

After being taken to Sasha's mansion, Beth realizes that Sasha and Axelle are responsible for Whitney and Lorna's disappearances after seeing the men who tried to kidnap her at the spa coming up the stairs of Sasha's home. She tries to hide and discovers a room filled with severed heads, including Paxton's, before being captured and taken to the factory. At the factory, a sobbing Whitney is strapped to a chair in one of the cells while an old woman applies makeup to her face. Whitney severely bites the woman's nose and escapes, only to be captured by the guards.

Stuart then enters his room where Beth is strapped to a chair with a sack over her head. Stuart looks around the room at the tools with horror. He then takes the sack off Beth's head and explains about Elite Hunting. He then unties her from the chair and lets her think she is escaping. He then punches Beth in the face. Whitney is taken to Todd's cell and strapped to a chair, where he taunts and terrorizes her with a circular saw. Overwhelmed with excitement, Todd accidentally cuts into her face with a power saw, maiming her, which disturbs him so much that he now realizes the horrors of Elite Hunting. He tries to leave, claiming he no longer wants to kill her (and presumably going to the police). The guard explains that he must kill her if he wants to leave; when he refuses, the guards set the dogs on him, killing him for violating his contract.

The guards then bandage Whitney and show her photograph to other clients in adjoining cells, offering her at a discount. They go to a room where a cannibalistic client (Ruggero Deodato) puts in his bid. He is then shown cannibalising Miroslav (Stanislav Ianevski) who Whitney met at the Harvest festival. The young man's right foot is gone and on his left, several layers of flesh are missing. The man continues to cut off pieces of the young man's flesh with a knife and fork and eat it while listening to Habenera from Carmen. The guards then move to another, where the man bids. He is shown torturing a man on a caged bed that electrocutes the victim.

The deranged and sadistic Stuart, now torturing Beth and blaming her for his friend's death, accepts the offer and kills Whitney. As he returns to finish with Beth, she seduces him into releasing her from the chair, then fights him off as he lies on her and chains Stuart to the chair. Beth grills Stuart for the code to the cell, then sticks a needle in his ear when he refuses to tell her. Stuart tells Beth the code, but she still needs to be buzzed through the door, which inadvertently summons Sasha and the guards to the room. Beth offers to buy her freedom with part of her inheritance. When Sasha explains to her that she must kill somebody to leave, Beth cuts off Stuart's genitals and tosses them to one of the guard dogs; Beth then orders Stuart to be left to bleed to death as he screams in pain. Per the standard contract, Beth is given an Elite Hunting tattoo. In the closing sequence, Axelle is lured from the village festival into the woods by the Bubblegum Gang, where Beth surprises and beheads her, allowing the gang to play football (soccer) with her head. The film then ends on a shot of Axelle's decapitated body with the Bubblegum Gang dancing in the background.

Cast

Eli Roth, his brother Gabriel, and co-producer Dan Frisch make cameo appearances as heads on sticks.
Ruggero Deodato made a cameo appearance as a cannibalistic client.

Marketing

An initial movie poster for the film.

Lions Gate showed the first 5 minutes of Hostel 2 before select screenings of Bug, which opened on May 25, 2007.[4] In one of the trailers the narrator says "It's only a movie," which was the tagline to the controversial horror film The Last House on the Left directed by Wes Craven. It was promoted in commercials on TV as having "the most shocking ending in horror movie history".

Director Eli Roth and cast member Bijou Phillips attended UFC 71 during which the movie was promoted.

At the date of the U.S. premiere of the movie on June 8, 2007, interviews with the Hostel 2 director Eli Roth were released at Big Sister[5].

Reaction

Box office

The film was considered by many a box office bomb.[6][7][8] It opened in 6th place with only $8.2 million and went on to total $17.6 million by the end of its theatrical run. The film made more than its budget of $10.2 million.[9] Comparatively, the original, with a much more modest budget of $4.8 million, opened at #1 with $19 million ($2 million more than Part II's final gross) and went on to make over $47 million.[10]

Director Eli Roth blamed piracy for the film's box office results.[11]

Critical reception

Critical reaction to Hostel: Part II, like the first film, was mixed, with Metareviews site Rotten Tomatoes showed a 44% overall (rotten) rating, with the "Cream of the Crop" scoring it at a 47% overall.[12]

Restriction

The film has been restricted to adults in most countries. However, it has been cut in Germany, Malaysia and Singapore, and the "German Extended Version" (in which Lorna's torture and death scene was edited out) version has subsequently been banned in Germany. The court in Munich decided that releasing the movie in this or the uncut version is to be punished[13]. Only a heavily edited "not under 18" version is still available. It was banned in New Zealand, after the distributor refused to cut the scene showing the torture of Lorna to receive an R18 certificate. The film, with the scene in question edited out, was later released on DVD on 30 April 2008.

On October 8 2007, the film was cited in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom as an example where stills from the film could be illegal to possess under the proposed law to criminalise possession of "extreme pornography". MP Charles Walker claimed that although he had never seen the film, he was "assured by trusted sources" that it was "From beginning to end, it depicts obscene, misogynistic acts of brutality against women — an hour and a half of brutality".[14]

Writer and attorney Julie Hilden defended Hostel Part II critically and artistically in her essay "Why are critics so hostile to Hostel Part II?".[15]

Former Slovak minister of culture and actor Milan Kňažko played Sasha, the head of the torture ring. He also defended the first film.

Elizabeth Báthory

The scene in which a woman tortures and bathes in the blood of a victim is a reference to a 16th century serial killer named Elizabeth Báthory, (identified in credits). Regarded as one of the most prolific serial killers in history, Báthory tortured and murdered up to 612 victims. In popular mythology, her blood-lust was driven by a belief that bathing in the blood of virgins would retain her youth. Although part of Hungary at the time, Čachtice Castle, Báthory's home, is now in Slovakia - the country in which Hostel is set.

Hostel: Part III

In June 2008, it was announced that Scott Spiegel, one of the producers of Hostel and Hostel: Part II, was in talks to write and direct a third film in the series. As of August 13, 2008, little is known of this film, aside from the fact that it will most likely be a direct-to-DVD release.[16]

References

External links


 
 

 

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