Synopsis
Three backpackers head to a Slovakian city that promises to meet their hedonistic expectations, with no idea of the hell that awaits them.
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Cast
- Jay HernandezPaxton
- Derek RichardsonJosh
- Eythor GudjonssonOli
- Barbara NedeljakovaNatalya
- Jana KaderabkovaSvetlana
- Jennifer LimKana
- Jan VlasákThe Dutch Businessman
- Jana HavlickovaVala
- Keiko SeikoYuki
- Paula WildMonique
- 75
Entertainment Weekly
It's obligatory for a horror film to feature exploitative sex as an appetizer, but Roth, even as he fulfills the sleaze imperative, does something shrewder: He mocks his heroes, presenting them as cold-eyed horndog jerks who fail to see that they've wandered into an entire country of exploitation. - 75
TV Guide Magazine
It's a back-to-basics, gore-and-gristle look at the no-frills nastiness of 1970s films, in which monsters, mutants and ghosts can't hold a candle to the sheer, unadulterated evil that lurks in the hearts of men. - 75
New York Post
What kind of hellspawn might result if "Saw" bought a copy of "Let's Go: Europe" and went backpacking across Europe to have a one-night stand with Dracula? Something like Hostel. - 70
Variety
Hostel may become something of a classic among Fangoria magazine's readership, acolytes of George Romero and audiences who thought "Saw II" was for babies. - 70
The Hollywood Reporter
Eli Roth turns to modern-day Asian fright filmmakers as inspiration for his latest blood-soaked effort while demonstrating an intriguing, original voice of his own. - 60
L.A. Weekly
Although he damn near slanders an entire country - expect poor Slovakia's tourism industry to take a hit - Roth is not an unskilled ringleader of gory crisis moments, or breathless escapes. The squeamish should simply stay away, but carnage queens will appreciate some of Roth's less grisly, even amusing details. - 60
Los Angeles Times
Seems to have been tailored to its designated R "for brutal scenes of torture and violence, strong sexual content, language and drug use." - 50
The A.V. Club
Roth gets the notes right while missing the music: He studiously replicates Miike's unblinking depiction of torture, but without much reflection or wit. It's merely unpleasant and more than a little dumb.