The story centres around four friends: Scott (Brian
Hallisay), Carter (Kip Pardue), Justin (John Hensley, a.k.a. Matt from Nip/Tuck) and Mike (Skyler Stone, who
looks a lot like Alan Tudyk). The four are on Scott's stag do in Vegas and
everything's going fine until Mike disappears. So basically it's Hostel meets The Hangover. After half an hour of the four of them gambling,
drinking and travelling to a club in a deserted backwater, Mike is kidnapped.
Thank god because he's the annoying one. Well, they're all annoying really but
Mike's the really annoying, obnoxious
one. Groom-to-be Scott is the bland one, best man Carter is the douchebag and Justin
is the "sympathetic" one, although that's played up so much and he's
such a buzz kill that he just comes across as patronising. They even give him a
walking stick to try and make him even more sympathetic for goodness sake!
Anyway, Mike is kidnapped and taken to a room and strapped
to a chair to be played with. Then the film deals its Joker - instead of him
being tortured in private, he's put on display and tortured in front of other
customers who proceed to bet on things like what weapon the torturer will use
and how he will beg for his life. It's an interesting take on things but it
doesn't really work. Turning the killing into a spectator sport drains the scenes
of any tension. Watching onlookers cheer and enjoy drinks served by
scantily-clad (and I mean really
scantily-clad) women makes it less like peering through the window as a
sadistic killer toys with his victim and more like watching some extreme
reality show. Secondly, above all else, the Hostel
films are best known for their realistic and extremely bloody torture scenes. Unfortunately,
the budget is so low for this film that there's hardly any blood whatsoever.
Someone has their face cut off but there's less blood than when Sean and
Christian give someone breast implants on Nip/Tuck.
Other death scenes include: choking on cockroaches (what is this, I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here?)
and being shot with a crossbow. Yeah, seriously. It's as lame as it sounds. Combine
these two factors and the end result is that the film sucks. The death scenes
aren't gory enough to be enjoyable when an annoying character dies and they're
not dramatic enough to make you care when a less annoying character dies.
The stupidest moment comes late on in the film. As one
character is about to be tortured, management decides to release the victim
from his bonds. This begs the question: just how do the viewing customers feel
about this? The member has paid handsomely for the privilege of this person
being kidnapped so they can torture and kill them and now, despite their membership
and their money (this person is a top-tier customer), the club decides to give
their victim a sporting chance. Bizarrely, rather than being worried and
disturbed by this, concerned that they too could be betrayed for the pleasure
of other watching customers, the live audience laps it up. Had I been there,
knowing that the club can turn on its paying members just as quickly as it can
unsuspecting members of the public, I'd have made my excuses and left!
Seriously, how do they expect to sustain this business model when they quite
willingly use their own members for sport?!?
Logical inconsistencies, the lack of tension, annoying
characters, silly deaths and the general lack of blood and gore aside, this is
really just a low-budget thriller. And not a very good one at that. It's not
all bad, though. There are a couple of good moments, including the opening
scene and Playboy playmate Cassie
Keller, who serves drinks in barely more than two pieces of ribbon, but it's
not enough to dredge it out of the stinking swamp of mediocrity. If you're
looking for torture porn, you'll be disappointed. If you're wondering what
happened to Beth after the events of the previous film, you'll be disappointed.
If you're looking for a competent thriller, you'll be disappointed. Honestly, I
can't see who this appeals to other than completists who want to see all the Hostel films. Even then, you'll still be disappointed.
Not awful but with nothing to recommend it and nothing
outstanding about it, Hostel: Part III
is a pretty pointless film.
3 out of 10.