The Hills Have Sequels

Darth Elektra said:
I enjoyed the first film, But I dont like how their rushing the secont one along why not give them plenty of time to write the script?

^That's how sequels usually suck.On the first movie writers spend years making it perfect,then for a sequel they hire a writer who doesn't care about the movie and who writes one that took only three months to write.
 
GoldGoblin said:
^That's how sequels usually suck.On the first movie writers spend years making it perfect,then for a sequel they hire a writer who doesn't care about the movie and who writes one that took only three months to write.

Exactly. Hostel is doing the exact samr thing. Just take a few more monthes and give the writers plenty of time to get a good script.
 
Darth Elektra said:
Exactly. Hostel is doing the exact samr thing. Just take a few more monthes and give the writers plenty of time to get a good script.

^Exactly,they shouldn't rush the writers.
 
i hate the fact that hollywood feels the need to remake some of my favourite classic horror films...which drives me even more mad is their need to make a sequel to a remake when the original had sequels of their own.


p.s. the only recent horror remake i can actually stomach is dawn of the dead, and only if i watch it as a zombie movie, and forget that it's called 'dawn of the dead'
 
Darth Elektra said:
Exactly. Hostel is doing the exact samr thing. Just take a few more monthes and give the writers plenty of time to get a good script.

With an Eli Roth movie a good script never really factors in anyway, no matter how much time he's given.
 
It's the worst movie of the year hands down, and I'm a hardcore horror buff that loves sick, twisted genre films(I think Hills is the best of the year thus far).
 
hitmanyr2k said:
To me shock value isn't horror. Yeah, the trailer sequence was sick and twisted but not once did I feel tense during that scene...no sense of dread or anything. It did nothing for me.

To me horror is when the characters in Wrong Turn were hiding in the hillbilly house trying not to make a sound while watching their friends' bodies get mutilated. I had a sense of dread there. I was tense. To me THAT is what horror is all about.

Really? The sense of dread lost when the male 'heroes', only a few feets away in their attempts to extinguish the father, were unawares of the females who unwittingly gave their own fates to the mutants just by simply walking into the trailer and not even the screams nor the 'thumps' could rouse the heroes from the REAL action...?

Not the sense of dread where you know the blonde sister is terrified for her life in much more claustrophic surroundings, knowing her family was just around the corner and couldn't do anything about it...? The family, who ironically, comprised of the females at first...?

And more ironically, whom dealt with death in their own, brave, insightful way...?

Of course - not to mention the baby.

And you just have to think to yourself: this wouldn't have happened if the boy hadn't left the door open.

It was a more cohesive unit: the blonde sister lives, but has to live with, in additional to the prospect of rape, having witnessed the villainous rampage of the trailer and of her own family: Aaron Stanford's character and the kid living with the knowledge that their wives and mothers and lack of hindsight left the aforementioned dead.

I didn't like Wrong Turn. It was just a group of teenagers whom you knew was going to be picked off. It was predictable, and I really hated it, because of the Hollywood hand. The only reason I see the comparison made is the 'mutant' factor, because honestly there are better bases for comparison.
 
Love this sick flick, can't wait for sequel...
 

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