![]() It is also his most well known and financially successful directoral effort. "Hostel" is the second feature-length film from writer and director Eli Roth, who has been known as a "horror master" in some circles, though we just assumed he started this namesake. Their sexual fantasies come true when they meet a pair of pretty girls at the hostel there, but when their friend Oli and others begin disappear without warning, their wonderful fantasy starts to quickly become their worst nightmare. They receive a tip from a random guy that there is a hostel in a small Slovakian town that has beautiful women that are easy to bed. read the interview with Quentin Tarantino and Eli Roth here.Paxton (Jay Hernandez) and Josh (Derek Richardson) are two American friends who have been backpacking across Europe with and Icelandic guy named Oli (Eythor Gudjonsson), who they met on their trip. Or maybe I don't understand art of fiction? Who knows. Outraged and deeply saddened people can ALSO execute amazing ideas. Until.well, let's not get scarry with what happened on 9/11. But it's OK, because he's gonna sit and laugh in his director's chair counting his greenback dollars FAR FAR AWAY from all those people in Slovakia. What director Eli doesn't know, he also will have MILLIONS of outraged and saddened people in the country he defamed by his ignorance. In his own words director Eli Roth described how amazing it was for him to have 94 pieces of paper and ideas one year and the next year to premiere the finished HOSTEL movie in the famous Mann's Chinese Theater in LA (by the way, none of Tarantino's movies ever premiered there). WHAT, not so proud now? C'mon, let's make some money on it, let's just scare people a little bit! It will be fun, I promise. Better yet, let's air this new commercial all around the globe.and then wonder why so many people dislike Americans! Uh-haaa moment? ![]() OK, let's call the proud moms and dads who sent their sons (and daughters) to fight for FREEDOM around the globe in the name of United States and have their sons wearing let's say a swastika in a new commercial to recruit some new soldiers. Maybe we give you such a warm welcome with all Slovak girls too. I am almost SURE Slovakia will have more tourists JUST FLOCKING after this movie. Portraying a post-communist country that is making good German Volkswagens in Bratislava ( ) as a third-world country with cold-blooded kids robbing on the streets for chewing gums or cigarettes in ruined houses. So what I mean by nationalistic feelings? Using the Slovakian national symbol of a double-cross (Christian symbol) on uniforms of fake Czech police officers using Bratislava, Slovakia as a point of reference and then actually making the movie in the Czech Republic and calling it good. Not so much to take pleasure in chopping someone's fingers or threatining a hand-cuffed helpless human being with a running chainsaw. So far so good until.Well, my nationalistic feelings came through a bit. ![]() Nothing worse then criticizing a movie by someone who never even seen it!!! I went to see the movie so I have a ground to stand in order to talk about it. OK, so you say - "Well, didn't you just support the movie by seeing it?" Today, we have movie directors portraying more and more cruelty on humans just for fun, big dollars and more buzz around in Hollywood (and yes, also that nice slap on the back from your horror-mentor Tarantino). Violence as a form of entertainment, what a great idea! Romans entertained themselves with gladiators fighting for their lives. And then having even more people all around the globe paying a little extra just to see more violence because obviously we don't have enough of it. When I think of my worst fear, I see so-called artists and movie studios spending a ton of money on production and marketing something so disgusting as the movie HOSTEL. Yet another sign of American movie-makers ignorance of the countries they film at.
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