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The Hills Have Eyes
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Directed by Wes Craven.
Horror auteur Wes Craven followed his threadbare but horrifically compelling cult classic Last House on the Left with this wonderfully demented morality fable about a bloody war of attrition between two extremely different families. The story opens on the journey of the Carters, a mildly dysfunctional extended family led by patriarch "Big Bob" Carter (Russ Grieve), as they travel across the California desert in search of an inherited silver mine. When a broken axle leaves them stranded in the middle of a former nuclear testing site, their attempts to find help lead them unwittingly into the territory of a savage family of cave-dwelling cannibals, the apparent progeny of the bearlike Jupiter (James Whitworth) and an abducted prostitute. Jupiter's eldest son Pluto (professional movie weirdo Michael Berryman) leads the first brutal attack on the defenseless Carters who, through necessity, are driven to equally extreme measures in order to survive. Though the film is not overtly bloody, the scenes depicting this confrontation are rendered with an unflinching directness, and the violations visited on the Carters are so brutal as to make the survivors' regression into savagery all the more convincing. No one is spared from the nightmare: Jupiter's boys have even kidnapped the youngest member of the Carter family -- a mere infant -- to serve as fodder for their next barbecue, and the baby becomes the main point of contention between the rival clans. Craven nevertheless refuses to take the easy way out by depicting his "monsters" as soullessly evil; parallels between either family's "values" are clearly drawn as the differences between the two clans begin to blur. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide
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Dr_GorDr_Gor Re:Ask the Doctor...
by Dr_Gor in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"Yeah, you're right, Rizzo. As I have mentioned before, the SAW movies are not my favorites for exactly that reason. I mentioned this as an example of REALISM in the sense that there were NO supernatural elements at all... The things in the movie COULD have happened although it is not very likely. For one, I would have figured out that the guy laying in the middle of the floor was not dead, ESPECIALLY if I were a DOCTOR... in an effort to get my hands on that gun I would convince the guy at the other end of the room to slide the toilet tank lid as hard is he could at the 'body' to move it a few inches in my direction so I could grab it. ("If I get out of here so do you..."). Then it would be 'game over'. Jigsaw would have no choice but to release me or he would die before I did... and his 'electrocution-buddy' wouldn't dare pull the trigger on that once I have a hold of his 'boss' because he would get it too... simple, hu ... " [More]
El_AaronEl_Aaron Which Ones Scare Me
by El_Aaron in Real Horror
liked it.
"First of all, I wanna say sorry for my freakin' long absence but I'm back now! Now onto the big stuff. I think what scares me about horror movies is when you have an extremely suspensful scene, like in I Am Legend. Also, I get scared when a particular scene makes me jump out of my seat, and I got a few of those in Salem's Lot. Lastly, I think the most important scare copmes from the villiian of the tale. I think the scariest are from Halloween, Hellraiser, Manhunter, Silence Of The Lambs, The Hills Have Eyes, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Anyone agree? " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re: hard to scare
by Dr_Gor in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"Thank you for that, Miss June. You are a very sweet and charming and beautiful young lady as well! I have never worried about what people think about me so I have never been afraid to speak my mind. It is nice to know, however, that all of you sweet and pretty young ladies like me and as long as I have that, then nothing else really matters. I DO have some thoughts on movies that are genuinely scary.... besides "The Exorcist" , which is STILL considered by many people (myself included) to be the 'scariest movie ever made', there ARE some others, both old and new, that I thought were genuinely frightening. "Darkness Falls" I thought was quite terrifying (although I know a lot of people don't agree with this) perhaps because I have had similar experiences with creatures such as this... "The Ring" , the first one, I found to be quite creepy as well... Some others I feel worth mention would include; "The Haunting" (original) "The Legend Of Hell House" ... " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re: hard to scare
by Dr_Gor in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"Thank you for joining our humble group, thulsadoom! And thank you for your post! It is a pleasure to have you here! I would assume that you are a fan of "Conan: The Barbarian" in some form or other? (the movie, the comics, the books, the TV series) In that case, you might appreciate the 'tagline' on my home page! As far as what scares you, that is a very personal matter for each and every individual. I suppose that DEATH is the underlying factor in what scares most of us, but it goes much deeper than that... into HOW we die! Appearantly, some ways are more horrific than others! For instance, if you live on the beach and go swimming in the ocean after dark (or even during the day) "JAWS" might just scare the bejeezus out of you! Or if you had ever had some unpleasant experiences with the 'supernatural', then "The Exorcist" or "The Omen" or "The Amityville Horror" or "The Shining" or "The Legend Of Hell House" might scare you! Or, ... " [More]
El_AaronEl_Aaron Better than the remake!
by El_Aaron in El_Aaron Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"This was better than the remake because the villians were scarier! " [More]
El_AaronEl_Aaron Better than the remake!
by El_Aaron in El_Aaron Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"This " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re: Really Cheesy (a.k.a. Drive ...
by Dr_Gor in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"... Ah, the 'Drive-In'.... (sigh..)... Back 'in the day' there were more than a DOZEN Drive-Ins in and around Denver! Now I think there is ONLY ONE left in the entire STATE! And, FORTUNATELY, it is NOT FAR from where I live! Although I have not been in quite some time! They just don't show the 'cool' movies like they USED TO! My Dad was a HUGE movie freak and started taking me to the Drive- In when I was 5 or younger! ... Sometimes the whole family would go, and sometimes it was just me and him! There was one in town called 'The Lakeshore Drive-In' because it was next to 'Sloan's Lake' ... I almost cried when they tore that down! (more on this in a minute...)... One time, they had a 'marathon' showing of all 5 (!) "Planet Of The Apes" movies and just me and my Dad went... and we stayed till the END! And I stayed AWAKE!!! We ate pizza and he drank beer and I drank pop all night long! We got home about ... " [More]
quintquint Re: Cormac McCarthy movies
by quint in CinLit
hasn't rated it.
"A hairless John Goodman circa Barton Fink would be pretty scary. What about the guy from the original The Hills Have Eyes? Really, it should probably have been Marlon Brando. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Like an episode of Married With Children on crack, this early Wes Craven effort serves up a colorful clan of social renegades and pits them against a family of middle-class snivelers. This being a horror film from before the age of pervasive irony, of course, the audience is supposed to identify with the itinerant Carter brood rather than the territorial mutants who relentlessly stalk them through the desert. But half the fun is in watching the wholesome, Winnebago-riding Carters get picked off one by one and whine about it. Horror perennial Dee Wallace, hot off a bit part in The Stepford Wives, is the most recognizable face among the supposed good guys, and she hits every catatonic "dingoes ate my baby" mark that's required of her. Pallid golden boy Robert Houston, however, is the most irritatingly sheltered of the lot. Unfortunately, he never gets what's coming to him. Films as varied as Breakdown and The Hitcher have played up the dangers that face ordinary people when they hit the highway; in terms of production quality and psychological acuity, The Hills Have Eyes falls somewhere below those two films, but its exploitation thrills are more potent by half. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 



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Puhnner
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