Hostel (2005 film)

Hostel is a 2005 American horror film written and directed by Eli Roth. It stars Jay Hernandez, Derek Richardson, Eyþór Guðjónsson, and Barbara Nedeljáková about a mysterious organization that tortures and kills kidnapped tourists.

Hostel
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEli Roth
Produced by
Written byEli Roth
Starring
Music byNathan Barr
CinematographyMilan Chadima
Edited byGeorge Folsey Jr.
Production
companies
Distributed by
Release date
  • September 17, 2005 (2005-09-17) (TIFF)
  • January 6, 2006 (2006-01-06) (United States)
Running time
94 minutes[2]
Country
  • United States[1]
  • Czech Republic[1]
LanguageEnglish
Budget$4.8 million[3]
Box office$80.6 million[3]

It was produced by Eli Roth, Mike Fleiss, and Chris Briggs. It is the first installment of the Hostel trilogy, followed by Hostel: Part II and Hostel: Part III.

Plot

College students Paxton and Josh are travelling across Europe with their Icelandic friend Óli. In the Netherlands, they visit an Amsterdam nightclub, followed by a brothel. Unable to get back into their hostel because of a curfew, they accept the offer of a man named Alexei to stay at his apartment. He convinces them that, instead of going to Barcelona, they should visit a hostel in Slovakia which is filled with beautiful and desperate women and few tourists in contrast to Barcelona, where they would have to compete with other tourists for the local women.

The three board a train to Slovakia, where they encounter a strange Dutch Businessman who touches Josh's leg. Josh yells at him, causing him to leave.

Arriving in Slovakia, they are impressed by the beauty of the town and the grandeur of the hostel and find their roommates are two beautiful women, Natalya and Svetlana. The women invite them to the spa, and later to the disco. Outside the disco for some fresh air, Josh has a run in with a gang of local criminal kids who are Gypsies. The Dutch Businessman intervenes to defend him. Josh buys him a beer and apologizes for his reaction on the train.

Paxton and Josh have sex with Natalya and Svetlana, while Óli leaves with the desk girl, Vala. The next morning, Óli doesn't return, and cannot be contacted. The desk clerk tells them Óli checked out. The two are then approached by a Japanese woman named Kana, who shows them a photo of Óli and her friend Yuki, who is also missing. Later the group receive a message from Óli with a supposed selfie claiming he has gone home. Elsewhere, Óli is already killed and decapitated, while Yuki is being tortured. Josh is anxious to leave, but Paxton convinces him to stay one more night with Natalya and Svetlana. Both women later slip both men tranquilizer. Josh feels sick, goes back to the hostel and faints on his bed. Also feeling sick, Paxton goes to the bathroom but takes the wrong way and ends up locked in the pantry.

Josh wakes up in a dungeon-like room, where the Dutch Businessman begins maiming him with a drill. Musing over his dream of becoming a surgeon, the Dutch Businessman drills holes into Josh's body, slices his achilles tendons, then slits his throat with a scalpel.

Paxton wakes up in the disco and returns to the hostel and learns that he had supposedly checked out and his backpack was already at the front desk. Irritated, Paxton argues he didn’t check out and demands a room. In his new room, he is greeted by two women, who invite him to the spa in an eerily similar manner to Natalya and Svetlana. He finds a now rough-looking Natalya and Svetlana and asks them if they know where Josh is. They answered he went to an “art exhibit”, to where Paxton asks to go too. Natalya agrees to lead him to Josh and takes him to an old factory. There, Paxton sees Josh's mutilated corpse being stitched together by the Dutch Businessman. He is then captured and dragged, passing by several rooms where other people are being gruesomely tortured. He is restrained in a chair and prepped to be tortured by a German client named Johann. Paxton attempts to plead with the man by speaking German, but this only leads to him having a ball-gag placed in his mouth, which he eventually removes after Paxton vomits in fear thanks to having a chainsaw brandished at him.

While cutting off Paxton's fingers, Johann unintentionally removes his restraints. As Paxton gets off the chair, Johann charges at him, but slips on the ball-gag and falls over, severing his own leg with a chainsaw. Paxton reaches for a gun and shoots Johann in the head, then proceeds to kill a guard, then leaves the room. He passes by a room where a man is getting rid of the various mutilated corpses by putting it into an incinerator, and kills him with a sledgehammer.

He then finds the elevator to the top floor and enters the dressing room, where he changes into business clothes and finds a business card for the Elite Hunting Club, which is an organization where rich people pay to kill and mutilate tourists.

On the way out, Paxton discovers Kana, who is being disfigured with a blow torch. Paxton kills the client and flees with Kana in a stolen car, pursued by guards. While driving, Paxton sees Natalya, Svetlana, and Alexei; he runs them over, killing them. While driving Paxton encounters the Gypsy delinquents and gives them candies and gum. The Gypsies then attack and kill the men of Elite Hunting pursuing Paxton with concrete blocks.

The two make it to the train station. Kana, seeing her disfigured face, kills herself by leaping in front of an oncoming train. Taking advantage of the commotion, Paxton boards another train unnoticed. Aboard, Paxton hears the voice of the Dutch Businessman. When the train stops in Vienna, Austria, Paxton follows him to a public restroom and kills him. He then boards another train.

Alternate ending

In the Director's Cut, Paxton kidnaps the Dutch Businessman's daughter instead of killing him. After finding her teddy bear in the restroom she was supposed to be in, the Dutch Businessman searches for his missing daughter, unaware that Paxton's train has just left.

Cast

Production

After the release of Cabin Fever, Eli Roth was met with praise from several industry figures. One such person was Quentin Tarantino, who listed the film in his "top 10" of the year and immediately reached out to Roth and offered to produce his next feature film. Roth was offered to direct many studio films, mostly horror remakes such as The Last House on the Left, The Fog, and a film in the Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise, among several others, but turned them all down on advice from Tarantino, who suggested he make an original horror film. While swimming in Tarantino's pool, Roth brainstormed an idea for a low-budget horror film based on a Thai "murder vacation" website he came across on the internet.[4] Tarantino loved the idea and encouraged Roth to immediately start writing a draft that day, which later formed the basis for Hostel.[5]

Roth had originally debated creating the film in the style of a fake documentary that would incorporate real people and locations from supposed real underground "death vacation" spots. When little information could be found on the topic, the idea was scrapped in favor of a fictional flowing narrative. Principal photography took place in the Czech Republic, and many scenes were shot in Český Krumlov.[6] The torture chamber scenes were filmed in the abandoned wing of an old Prague hospital.

The original music score was composed by frequent Roth collaborator Nathan Barr and commissioned The Prague Filmharmonic Orchestra to perform the score over a four day period in October 2005.

Release

Box office

Hostel opened theatrically on January 6, 2006, in the United States and earned $19.6 million in its first weekend, ranking number one in the box office.[7] By the end of its run, six weeks later, the film grossed $47.3 million in the US box office and $33.3 million internationally for a worldwide total of $80.6 million.[3]

Critical response

Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 61% based on 108 reviews and a weighted average of 5.84/10. The site's consensus stating, "Featuring lots of guts and gore, Hostel is a wildly entertaining corpse-filled journey—assuming one is entertained by corpses, guts, and gore, that is."[8] On Metacritic, the film had an average score of 55 out of 100 based on 21 reviews.[9]

Entertainment Weekly's film critic Owen Gleiberman commended the film's creativity, saying "You may or may not believe that slavering redneck psychos, of the kind who leer through Rob Zombie's The Devil's Rejects, can be found in the Southwest, but it's all too easy to envision this sort of depravity in the former Soviet bloc, the crack-up of which has produced a brutal marketplace of capitalistic fiendishness. The torture scenes in Hostel (snipped toes, sliced ankles, pulled eyeballs) are not, in essence, much different from the surgical terrors in the Saw films, only Roth, by presenting his characters as victims of the same world of flesh-for-fantasy they were grooving on in the first place, digs deep into the nightmare of a society ruled by the profit of illicit desire."[10]

German film historian Florian Evers pointed out the Holocaust imagery behind Hostel's horror iconography, connecting Roth's film to the Nazi exploitation genre.[11]

The Guardian film critic Peter Bradshaw wrote that Hostel was "actually silly, crass and queasy. And not in a good way".[12] David Edelstein of New York Magazine was equally negative, deriding director Roth with creating the horror subgenre "torture porn", or "gorno", using excessive violence to excite audiences like a sexual act.[13] Jean-François Rauger, a film critic for Le Monde, a French newspaper, and programmer of the Cinémathèque Française, listed Hostel as the best American film of 2006, calling it an example of modern consumerism.[14] Hostel won the 2006 Empire Award for Best Horror Film.

Slovak reaction to setting

The film's release was accompanied by strong complaints from Slovakia and the Czech Republic. Slovak and Czech officials were both disgusted and outraged by the film's portrayal of their countries as undeveloped, poor, and uncultured lands suffering from high criminality, war, and prostitution,[15] fearing it would "damage the good reputation of Slovakia" and make foreigners feel it was a dangerous place to be.[16] The tourist board of Slovakia invited Roth on an all-expenses-paid trip to their country so he could see it is not made up of run-down factories, ghettos, and kids who kill for bubble gum. Tomáš Galbavý, a Slovak Member of Parliament from the Slovak Democratic and Christian Union – Democratic Party, commented: "I am offended by this film. I think that all Slovaks should feel offended."[16]

Defending himself, Roth said the film was not meant to be offensive, arguing, "Americans do not even know that this country exists. My film is not a geographical work but aims to show Americans' ignorance of the world around them."[16][17] Roth has repeatedly argued that despite the many films in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre series, people still travel to Texas.[18]

References

  1. "Hostel (2006)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved September 16, 2019.
  2. "HOSTEL (18)". British Board of Film Classification. January 18, 2006. Retrieved January 28, 2012.
  3. "Hostel (2006)". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. February 17, 2006. Retrieved September 26, 2015.
  4. Pirnia, Garin (April 9, 2016). "11 Intense Facts About Hostel". Mental Floss. Retrieved May 28, 2019.
  5. Hill, Logan (December 29, 2005). "Scream Kings: Eli Roth and Quentin Tarantino". New York. Retrieved May 28, 2019.
  6. Schwinke, Theodore (July 5, 2006). "Eli Roth plans Czech shoot for Hostel 2". Screen International. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
  7. "Weekend Box Office Results for January 6-8, 2006". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. January 9, 2006. Retrieved September 26, 2015.
  8. "Hostel (2006)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved November 15, 2019.
  9. "Hostel (2006): Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved February 8, 2008.
  10. "Movie Review: Hostel". Entertainment Weekly.
  11. "Florian Evers". Vexierbilder des Holocaust, LIT, Munster, 2011.
  12. Peter Bradshaw: "Hostel" review, at Guardian Unlimited
  13. David Edelstein: Now Playing at Your Local Multiplex: Torture Porn, at New York Magazine, published on January 28th, 2006.
  14. Jean Francois Rauger (December 27, 2006). "Les films préférés des critiques du "Monde" en 2006". Le Monde (accessed with Google Translate). Retrieved May 13, 2009.
  15. Cameron, Rob (February 24, 2006). "Smash hit horror Hostel causes a stir among citizens of sleepy Slovakia". Radio Prague. Retrieved September 7, 2008.
  16. "Slovakia angered by horror film". BBC News. February 27, 2006. Retrieved September 7, 2008.
  17. "Hostel: April 2006 Archives".
  18. http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art43785.asp
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