watching the rest of the film from where i left off more than a year ago, it's an inevitable disappointment that soon afterwards The Hills Have Eyes declines into a Troma Team remake of Straw Dogs, and never again reaches the fever pitch of the scene that sent us (and another couple a few rows behind us) back to the lobby. it's still engaging, and fx stalwarts KNB work their usual magic on the desert colony of sun-baked mutants, each uniquely horrific. but after the tension and release of the first half, the rest of the film can't help but color pretty much within the lines, which makes it a little harder to hate, and much harder to respect. still, it's been a long time since a horror movie bothered me as badly as Aja did here, and on its own terms that makes it a roaring success.
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
alexandre aja's THE HILLS HAVE EYES (2006)
watching the rest of the film from where i left off more than a year ago, it's an inevitable disappointment that soon afterwards The Hills Have Eyes declines into a Troma Team remake of Straw Dogs, and never again reaches the fever pitch of the scene that sent us (and another couple a few rows behind us) back to the lobby. it's still engaging, and fx stalwarts KNB work their usual magic on the desert colony of sun-baked mutants, each uniquely horrific. but after the tension and release of the first half, the rest of the film can't help but color pretty much within the lines, which makes it a little harder to hate, and much harder to respect. still, it's been a long time since a horror movie bothered me as badly as Aja did here, and on its own terms that makes it a roaring success.
1 comment:
i hated it.... however, your review was beautiful
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