They strike out together, encouraged by reports of a fabulous beach bar nearby. A bus crash in rural Brazil literally throws together a disparate group of backpackers: buffed jock-type Alex (Josh Duhamel), who is chaperoning his sister Bea (Olivia Wilde) and her shy best friend Amy (Beau Garrett) hippyish Aussie trail veteran Pru (Melissa George) and comic relief Brit beer-and-shag monsters Finn (Desmond Askew) and Liam (Max Brown). Speaking as a confirmed non-devotee (I love horror but Hitchcock could make you shiver with a funny look and even Dario Argento never relied solely on schlock) I was interested to see what Stockwell and debut screenwriter Michael Arlen Ross, both newcomers to the genre, would bring to the party.Īnd the start is a promising slow-burn. Sometimes it seems barely a week goes by without another entry promising even bloodier and more ‘uncompromising’ violence. Since Eli Roth brought a new dimension to the classic horror scenario of young and attractive but not too clever Yanks in peril by cranking the gore factor up to 11 with the likes of Cabin Fever and Hostel, the demand for such ‘in yer face’ existential shockers has mushroomed. Not the best tourist board tagline perhaps but a reasonable summary of director John Stockwell’s well-made yet ultimately unsatisfying foray into the grindhouse genre. Brazil – land of sun, sea, samba and surgery without anaesthetic.
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