If this sounds like your cup of crud - and you know who you are - you probably won't be disappointed.
Hostel: Part II (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:103
Fresh:45
Rotten:58
Average Rating:5/10
Consensus: Offering up more of the familiar sadism and gore, Hostel: Part II will surely thrill horror fans.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for sadistic scenes of torture and bloody violence, terror, nudity, sexual content, language and some drug content.
Runtime: 1 hr 35 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Theatrical Release:Jun 8, 2007 Wide
Box Office: $17,544,812
Synopsis: With only one film under his belt and the endorsement of Quentin Tarantino, Eli Roth became a virtual horror brand with HOSTEL (2005), a yarn about a group of thrill-seeking American college dudes... With only one film under his belt and the endorsement of Quentin Tarantino, Eli Roth became a virtual horror brand with HOSTEL (2005), a yarn about a group of thrill-seeking American college dudes backpacking through Europe, only to be seduced into a Slovakian money-for-torture ring where they become the prey. The sequel begins right where that film left off, filling us in on the whereabouts of lone survivor Paxton (Jay Hernandez)---but before long, we see that gender roles are reversed and we are traveling with sensible Beth (Lauren German), hedonistic Whitney (Bijou Phillips), and virginal Lorna (Heather Matarazzo). After tussling with a gaggle of shifty men on a train, they meet Axelle (Vera Jordanova), a gorgeous woman who persuades them to follow her to a rejuvenating spa in Slovakia. As the trio checks into the same infamous hostel, Roth shows us the inner workings of the previously mysterious torture club. Once the girls are put up on the auction block, online bidding begins among the club's members--who are revealed to be prominent international businesspeople. After Beth and Whitney are won by type-A American corporate jerk Todd (Richard Burgi), who believes that killing someone will give him power, and his reluctant associate, Stuart (Roger Bart), the film shifts to the preparations for their inaugural slayings within the bloody walls of the warehouse. For those who embraced HOSTEL's abrupt tonal shifts and very realistic gore, Roth serves up amplified doses of both in his follow-up. Astute horror fans will find a few amusing in-jokes among the carnage, but beware---things get incredibly strong, and Roth's charnelhouse chic intends to offend. In fact, HOSTEL II may stand as the most glaring example of the MPAA's bias in favor of violence over sexuality when it comes the boundary between R and NC-17. [More]
Starring: Jay Hernandez, Bijou Phillips, Roger Bart, Lauren German
Starring: Jay Hernandez, Bijou Phillips, Roger Bart, Lauren German, Heather Matarazzo, Milan Knazko, Richard Burgi
Director: Eli Roth
Director: Eli Roth
Screenwriter: Eli Roth
Producer: Mike Fleiss, Eli Roth, Chris Briggs
Composer: Nathan Barr
Studio: Lions Gate Films
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Reviews for Hostel: Part II
Similarly gory and exploitative as its torture-porn predecessor, writer/director Eli Roth's horror sequel is nothing more than a makeover of "Hostel" substituted with female characters.
Ends up there is a moral to the story, one sure to delight the bamboozled pseudo-intellectuals who laughably defended Hostel as a geo-political critique of American arrogance and the culture of torture.
No doubt about it: Roth is a talented guy. But it would be nice to see him use his skills in the service of something other than more sadistic, pandering, pornographic violence.
Any semblance of suspense quickly gives way to buzz saws, drill bits and sickles. And the movie ends so abruptly, one has to think the filmmakers ran out of either money or prosthetic body parts.
It's beautifully put-together and it builds to a satisfying climax in which Roth implies that if men are capable of great violence and women are capable of great violence, then that would include just about all of us sitting in the audience, too.
Hostel: Part II has something that most bigger-budgeted and more heavily promoted sequels don't: the ambition to not only repeat the experience of its predecessor, but to expand and improve upon it.
Some might call it a mess, but, unlike the average horror sequel that's completely devoid of new ideas, this is a mess that you just can't stop watching.
Fans of horror, and more importantly those who believe in the inherent evil of humans, will feel right at home watching this one.
It's something of an accomplishment to stage deaths so disgusting, the main reaction is nervous laughter.
All it has to say is: Here's human purée served fresh and hot, come and get it.
Roth theoretically ups the prurient ante by making the ugly American tourists in a Slovakian death factory girls instead of horny guys. But Part II is oddly less engaging, and likely will be even for all of those cinematic sadists.
The real surprise of Hostel: Part II is how few surprises it has to offer -- that, and how quickly it comes to an ending.
Roth might have chutzpah, but, sadly he doesn't have any interest in actually scaring us. The moviemaking is driven only by contempt; he wants to nauseate us into submission.
Social commentary, gore galore, and a truly disturbing denouement: This is Roth's best nightmare yet.
Inevitably lacks the element of vicious surprise that helped make Hostel a surprise hit, but it's a worthy follow-up with a couple of nifty tricks up its sleeve.
Like every other sequel these days, the conclusion of this one offers the hopefully tantalizing possibility of yet another one. In this case, however, the set-up actually is intriguing, and a sequel might well be worthwhile. Not for everybody, of course.
Sports glossier production values, but its driving motivation -- to push the boundaries of exploitative nastiness -- remains just as low.
Latest News for Hostel: Part II
June 30, 2008:
A Writer/Director for Hostel III? ![]()
It looks like Scott Spiegel will be taking over for Eli Roth where Hostel III is concerned -- and it also looks like the sequel will be heading straight to video. More...
June 24, 2008:
Eli Roth Won't Write, Direct Hostel III ![]()
Looks like a third Hostel movie is officially on the way -- and it'll arrive without Eli Roth writing or directing. More...
January 22, 2008:
I Know Who Killed Me, Norbit, Daddy Day Camp Lead Razzie Noms
No awards season -- even a strike-tainted one -- would be complete without the Razzies, right? Of course not. And that's why we've thoughtfully assembled all of this year's... More...
December 19, 2007:
MPAA Rejects Taxi to the Dark Side Poster
The poster submitted by ThinkFilm for Taxi to the Dark Side -- the Alex Gibney documentary opening January 11 -- has been rejected by the MPAA. More...
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