A dismal reminder of just how starved Hollywood studios are for good ideas.
The Last House on the Left (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:28
Fresh:11
Rotten:17
Average Rating:4.4/10
Consensus: Excessive and gory, this remake lacks the intellectual punch of the 1972 original.
Australian Theatrical Release:
Oct 15, 2009 Wide
US Box Office: $32,721,635
Synopsis: Based on Wes Craven's landmark 1972 exploitation flick of the same name, LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT is a brutal movie that exposes the darkest recesses of human depravity. The simple plot follows four... Based on Wes Craven's landmark 1972 exploitation flick of the same name, LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT is a brutal movie that exposes the darkest recesses of human depravity. The simple plot follows four criminals on the lam who encounter a pair of nubile female teens in a small mountain town. After murdering one and brutally raping the other and leaving her for dead, the cons seek refuge at a nearby summer house. The twist is that it's the very home inhabited by the parents of one of the victims. Upon learning that their house guests raped and tortured their 17-year-old daughter, the couple exact a revenge that arguably exceeds the excesses of the sociopathic gang. When originally released in 1972, LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT was a shock to the system. Never before had a film shown such images of human wickedness. Grainy and low budget, the original film played like a maniacal cackle from the seedy underbelly of an America nursing a brutal post-Aquarian hangover. Things play out a little differently, though, in 2009. For starters, the movie actually looks quite beautiful, and the story’s idyllic mountain setting is milked for all it's worth. The performances are noteworthy as well, with Garret Dillahunt more than convincing as Krug, the gang's swaggering leader; and Monica Potter and Tony Goldwyn portraying the distressed parents with an effective mix of panic, courage, and blind instinct. In an age marked by both increasingly ghastly films and a public discourse that actually debates the merits of institutional torture, a film like LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT really shouldn’t shock anyone. But in both the original and the remake, there’s a latent nihilism that permeates the world. The idea of a sense of lawlessness that cannot be understood or prevented, but only reacted against, is truly disquieting and makes this story unique in the annals of horror. [More]
Starring: Tony Goldwyn, Monica Potter, Sara Paxton, Garret Dillahunt
Starring: Tony Goldwyn, Monica Potter, Sara Paxton, Garret Dillahunt, Martha MacIsaac, Riki Lindhome
Director: Dennis Iliadis
Director: Dennis Iliadis
Screenwriter: Carl Ellsworth
Producer: Wes Craven, Marianne Maddalena, Sean Cunningham
Composer: John Murphy
Studio: Rogue Pictures
Reviews for The Last House on the Left
The narrative structure is ingenious and sexual assault is at least shown as having dramatic and human consequences of some sort, if only in the context of revenge. Wasn't the original movie enough?
A thought-provoking ordeal is repackaged as a middling shocker which leaves you feeling good about revenge.
In the end, like virtually every other remake that has been released recently, it's polished and predictable.
A shockingly mundane disappointment taken on its own and a deeply misguided refraction of the original.
I suspect the movie's sound designers deserve some kind of an award: thanks to them, the damage one can inflict with small appliances and a giant grudge is all too clear.
Not only is it plodding and completely predictable, the carnage is rendered slowly and quasi-reverentially, making the whole brutal experience come off like torture porn.
I'm giving it a 2.5 in the silly star rating system and throwing up my hands.
Latest News for The Last House on the Left
August 17, 2009:
RT on DVD: From Hannah Montana's Hoedown to Last House on the Left
This week, get your Miley Cyrus fix with Hannah Montana's feature-length trip to the big screen (Hannah Montana The Movie), or do a complete 180-degree turn with the latest... More...
June 12, 2009:
Five Favourite Films with Wes Craven
No director in recent history has made their particular genre as much their own as Wes Craven. The legendary helmer virtually redefined the horror movies with the likes of The... More...
March 12, 2009:
Critics Consensus: Race to Witch Mountain Doesn't Cast A Spell
This week at the movies, we've got a supernatural quest (Race to Witch Mountain, starring Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson and AnnaSophia Robb), a vengeance thriller (Last House on... More...
March 12, 2009:
Last House On The Left teases wickedly with a Macmansion torture chamber boasting homicide by candlelight, fried felons, vigilante harmed humans, and bare breasted ballsy babes in the wild. ![]()
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