High stakes gambling takes on a sinister new meaning in this third chapter of the terrifying Hostel series. While attending a bachelor party in Las Vegas, four friends are enticed by two sexy escorts to join them at a private party way off the Strip. Once there, they are horrified to find themselves the subjects of a perverse game of torture, where members of the Elite Hunting Club are hosting the most sadistic show in town.
Eli Roth's Hostel and Hostel Part II were far from masterpieces. They did, however, influence a new wave of cinema. For better or for worse, they ignited a new hunger in mainstream audiences. People started to pay for gore; the bloodier the better. But although some of the desire is still there, the fact this third instalment in the Hostel series is a home entertainment exclusive may suggest that we are reaching the end of this wave of pain and sadism.
The first two Hostel instalments were competently made. Roth clearly has intelligence when it comes to directing, and his skill at composing a shot and exploiting it for pure nastiness is remarkable. This third picture in the series is helmed by Scott Spiegel, a director who has brought us a cluster of straight-to-video movies while also appearing as an extra in a long CV of films. Sadly for him, Hostel: Part III doesn't prove he has much talent either side of the camera. It is a horrible, pointless and, above all, boring piece of work that bears little resemblance to the first two films.
The main difference is the change in format. Instead of a group of ignorant American twenty-somethings visiting a European country, here we have a group of ignorant American thirty-somethings partying it up in Las Vegas. They are on a stag night (or, as they call it in the USA, a bachelor party) and go looking for booze and women. Ah, that's something that hasn't really changed since Parts I and II. Women still remove their clothes at every opportunity.
All the young men are rather obnoxious. A large portion of the film is devoted to following them round on their adventures in the city of sin while they make misogynist, racist and homophobic jokes, gamble and consume a lot of alcohol. The idea of adultery, or cheating on one's fiancée, is also handled with distasteful flippancy.
But distasteful is the name of the game in the world of Hostel, and before long we are being treated to a man having his face peeled away from his skull while rich business men and women pay to watch. It isn't pleasant, but then again, it isn't supposed to be. There's no point pretending that this type of scene is not the very reason people watch this kind of film, and as the violence increases, so does the tediousness. There's something empty and tired in the torture scenes that wasn't apparent in the previous films. Perhaps this is the most disturbing aspect of all.
The only scene that offers anything remotely interesting to think about occurs towards the end of the film when the 'corporation' controlling the blood-letting decide to arm one of the tortured so he can fight the man who has caused him so much pain. It is a curious scene, as it switches the tone of the film completely. Suddenly, the sadistic pleasure the viewer may be feeling from watching the violence is legitimised. Self-defence is acceptable, right? We can feel good about this, can't we? He deserves it, doesn't he? The film offers no easier answers, but it certainly raises some interesting questions about viewer participation in onscreen brutality.
Leaving this small, fleeting moment of intelligence aside, Hostel: Part III utterly fails to evoke the stylish, visual excitement Roth brought to the horror genre. It combines lazy characterisation, poor acting and repulsive gore. And that's not a very attractive mixture. To add insult to blood-soaked injury, Sony's blu-ray disc release for the film contains perhaps the worst HD transfer a film has ever received in the UK. If the movie was a modern classic, I'd be furious. In this instance, however, I can't be bothered to waste much emotion on a work so artless and insignificant.
We will publish your review of Hostel: Part III [Blu-ray] on Blu Ray within a few days as long as it meets our guidelines.
None of your personal details will be passed on to any other third party.
Please note this is a region B Blu-ray and will require a region B or region free Blu-ray player in order to play High stakes gambling takes on a sinister new meaning in this third chapter of the terrifying Hostel series While attending a bachelor party in Las Vegas four friends are enticed by two sexy escorts to join them at a private party way off the Strip Once there they are horrified to find themselves the subjects of a perverse game of torture where members of the Elite Hunting Club are hosting the most sadistic show in town
Scott Spiegel directs this straight-to-DVD third instalment of the horror franchise. When four friends arrive in Las Vegas for a bachelor party, they meet a group of attractive women who invite them to go with them to a private party. Unfortunately for the boys, the venue turns out to be a gruesome torture chamber where members of the Elite Hunting Club are hosting the most sadistic show in town.
This site uses cookies.
More details in our privacy policy