It may be just another white-kids-get-killed chiller, but it's a solidly made white-kids-get-killed chiller; nothing new, yet expertly put together.
The Ruins (2008)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:80
Fresh:37
Rotten:43
Average Rating:5.4/10
Consensus: Despite a solid cast and truly frightening source material, The Ruins founders, thanks to a weak script and an excess of gore.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for strong violence and gruesome images, language, some sexuality and nudity.
Runtime: 1 hr 31 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Theatrical Release:Apr 4, 2008 Wide
Box Office: $17,402,425
Synopsis: Author Scott Smith adapts his own popular 2006 novel in this unsettling and surprising horror yarn. In its first half hour, THE RUINS seems to be cut from the same... Author Scott Smith adapts his own popular 2006 novel in this unsettling and surprising horror yarn. In its first half hour, THE RUINS seems to be cut from the same "body-count-of-young-Americans-abroad" cloth as HOSTEL and TURISTAS, but the film has a supernatural element not present in either of those works, keeping it clear of the overpopulated slasher and torture genres. A talented young cast also ensures that Smith's tale reaches the screen with plenty of genuine chills intact. While vacationing on the Yucatan Peninsula, 20-something Americans Jeff (Jonathan Tucker), Amy (Jena Malone), Eric (Shawn Ashmore), and Stacy (Laura Ramsey), befriend German traveler Mathias (Joe Anderson), who invites them to accompany him into the jungle to meet up with his archaeologist brother at an "off the map" Mayan temple. They agree, but once they arrive, angry locals shoot one of their party and refuse to allow them to leave. The Americans and Mathias retreat to the top of the temple, only to find the archaeological camp deserted. Mathias falls into the temple and is badly injured, but that is only the beginning of their troubles, as it soon becomes apparent that the vines covering the temple are alive in a way that goes beyond normal vegetation. It may be tempting to summarize THE RUINS by saying that it's about killer plants, but that would be undermining its strong points. The latter two thirds of the film play out like a very grim five-character stage play about survival, with large servings of death and desperation, without resorting to the fake scares that many horror films use as a crutch. The gore, while often quite nasty, is also necessary to the story, which takes on a heavy psychological component as the characters begin to fear for their lives. [More]
Starring: Jonathan Tucker, Jena Malone, Shawn Ashmore, Laura Ramsey
Starring: Jonathan Tucker, Jena Malone, Shawn Ashmore, Laura Ramsey, Joe Anderson
Director: Carter Smith
Director: Carter Smith
Screenwriter: Scott B. Smith
Producer: Ben Stiller, Stuart Cornfield, Chris Bender
Composer: Graeme Revell
Studio: Dreamworks SKG
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Release:
Jul 8, 2008
Reviews for The Ruins
THE RUINS has turned over a new leaf in horror and will get inside even the thickest of horror fans' skin.
Gore hounds will definitely be pleased as The Ruins boasts some of the most sickening blood and guts this side of snuff films.
Loved the book, enjoyed the movie. Jonathan Tucker ably leads a cast of uninteresting co-stars.
These are the beautiful people, and by the end of The Ruins we'll have spent a lot of time watching them go downhill.
[The filmmakers] avoid unwanted laughs only by resorting to relentless sadism. They let us know right off that nothing good will follow, and they carry it straight through to the abandon-all-hope-and-wait-for-the-sequel ending.
Stripped of the novel's kudzu-like excess, the story loses its timeless, nightmarish, existential power and becomes another cautionary tale in which beautiful and privileged post-9/11 young people learn the world is no longer safe for Americans.
... A strong addition to a genre filled with movies that rarely receive the care that obviously went into its making.
...one's interest tends to flag in between the appreciatively gruesome set-pieces...
Throw out your Chia Pets, burn your Daffodils, and kick your local Venus Flytrap, "The Ruins" is a very good little horror film...
It's just weird: the movie fixed the flaws in the book, but screwed up the stuff that was most effective on the page. Go figure.
A bottle of Roundup would be worth a lot of money in this particular locale. Too bad there's no equivalent product for use on movies like this.
There's really nothing in the film of any entertainment value, not even the inadvertent sort.
Smith directs the movie in a completely rudimentary fashion, straight out of Horror 101.
There are a handful of intense sequences and a few scenes of squirm-inducing gore in The Ruins, but not much else. The film is based on Scott Smith’s excellent book, but does little to capture the novel’s sense of terror and hopelessness.
If you've read The Ruins, you can probably guess there will come a point at which the movie succumbs to silliness. And sure enough, that moment arrives...
a shocking and disturbing experience that slaughters any comedic notions audiences may have after realizing they're watching a movie about killer flowers.
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