The Hills Have Eyes (2006 film)
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| The Hills Have Eyes | |
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The Official U.S. Film Poster |
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| Directed by | Alexandre Aja |
| Produced by | Wes Craven Peter Locke Marianne Maddalena Cody Zwieg |
| Written by | 1977 Screenplay: Wes Craven 2006 Screenplay: Alexandre Aja Grégory Levasseur |
| Starring | Aaron Stanford Emilie de Ravin Ted Levine Dan Byrd |
| Music by | tomandandy |
| Distributed by | Fox Searchlight Pictures |
| Release date(s) | |
| Running time | 107 min. |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $15 Million |
| Followed by | The Hills Have Eyes 2 |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
The Hills Have Eyes is a 2006 remake of Wes Craven's 1977 film of the same name, about a family who becomes the target of a group of mutants after their car breaks down in the desert. The film was released in the U.S. and UK theaters on March 10, 2006. It earned $15,500,000 in its opening weekend in the U.S., where it was originally rated NC-17 for strong gruesome violence, but was later edited down to an R-rating. An unrated DVD version was released on June 20, 2006. A sequel, The Hills Have Eyes 2, was released in theaters March 23, 2007.
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Men in NBC suits with geiger counters are combing the desert where the government conducted nuclear tests. They are attacked by a large man wielding a pickaxe, killed, chained to the back of a pickup truck, and dragged off.
Along a dirt road is a fuel station run by an elderly man who is sorting through a duffle bag filled with mounds of jewelery and wallets, and a severed human ear. But he is interrupted by the arrival of customers. Driving in an SUV towing a trailer, Ethel Carter (Kathleen Quinlan) and her husband Bob Carter (Ted Levine), a retired police detective, are traveling to San Diego, California on their wedding anniversary from Cleveland, Ohio. Also present is their daughter Brenda (Emilie de Ravin), son Bobby (Dan Byrd), eldest daughter Lynn (Vinessa Shaw), her husband Doug (Aaron Stanford), their daughter Catherine (Maisie Camilleri Preziosi), and the family dogs, Beauty and Beast. The attendant tells Bob of a shortcut through the hills.
After driving a few miles along the shortcut, the SUV's tires are punctured, causing the car to crash. Bob walks back to the gas station for a tow truck, and Doug walks the opposite way to get help. Meanwhile, the family is being watched by someone through a pair of binoculars. Beauty runs off into the hills and Bobby chases after her. He eventually finds her gutted corpse, and while running away, slips and falls, and is knocked unconscious.
Bob finally makes it to the station and finds the hysterical gas station attendant, who commits suicide. Papa Jupiter (Billy Drago), the leader of the mutated family, attacks Bob, and drags him into a mine tunnel with the help of his mutated family members, Lizard (Robert Joy) and Pluto (Michael Bailey Smith).
Bobby awakes, and returns to the trailer. He is told that Beast has gone missing as well. Doug returns and informs the others about an enormous crater filled with cars and other belongings that he found. Doug tells Bobby that they will search for Bob if he does not return by midnight. The group then try to sleep. The mutant, Pluto, sneaks into the trailer, and ogles Brenda, muffling her screams when she awakens as well as attempting to rape her. Outside the trailer, Bobby wakes up Lynn and Doug, telling them about the people in the hills, and of Beauty's death. Suddenly, an explosion in the distance draws their attention.
The family discovers Bob has been tied to a tree and set on fire. Doug runs into the trailer to fetch a fire extinguisher. Lizard then enters the trailer and rapes Brenda while Pluto investigates baby Catherine in her bed.
The fire is put out and Doug unties Bob. Lynn returns to the trailer and is greeted by Lizard, holding baby Catherine and a gun. After hitting him with a frying pan Lizard disarms her. Pointing the gun at Catherine, he forces open Lynn's blouse then fondles and suckles her breasts. Ethel enters and Lizard shoots her in the stomach. Lynn takes a screwdriver and stabs Lizard, who shoots her in the head. Pluto and Lizard flee the trailer.
Doug and Bobby return to the trailer, and realize that Catherine has been taken. Goggle (Ezra Buzzington), the mutant who killed Beauty, watches the trailer through binoculars, but he is attacked and killed by Beast, who later leads Doug through a tunnel that contains the graves of miners. Once out of the tunnel, Doug finds an abandoned nuclear testing village and enters the house where Catherine is kept, but is knocked unconscious. After encountering another family member, Big Brain, he is attacked by Pluto, and after a fierce struggle, Doug kills him.
Doug then surprises the mutant Cyst outside the house and kills him, taking his shotgun. Big Brain tells Lizard to kill Catherine, but is killed by Beast. Lizard takes a cleaver and prepares to kill Catherine, but Ruby takes Catherine and flees, with Lizard in pursuit.
At the trailer, Ethel's body is stolen, and Bobby finds Papa Jupiter eating Ethel's heart. Jupiter chases Bobby to the trailer, where Brenda releases gas from the propane tanks as Bobby runs inside, attaching a strip of matches to the sliding door behind him. Bobby binds Papa Jupiter's hand to the window. After he and Brenda escape, Jupiter opens the sliding door, which strikes the matches and ignites the gas inside the trailer, causing it to explode.
In the hills, Ruby is about to return Catherine to Doug when Lizard attacks. Doug shoots Lizard in the chest. Ruby gives Catherine back to Doug, who does not notice Lizard stand up, having survived. Ruby throws herself at Lizard, plunging them over a cliff.
Bobby and Brenda walk through the ruins of their trailer and find Papa Jupiter still alive, though impaled. Brenda kills Papa Jupiter with a pickaxe to the head. Brenda then spots Doug with Catherine and Beast, and the five are reunited. As they celebrate their victory, a pair of anonymous binoculars watches from the hills.
- Aaron Stanford as Doug Bukowski: Husband and pacifist who works in telecommunications.
- Emilie de Ravin as Brenda Carter: Sister-in-law to Doug, and youngest sibling of the Carters.
- Dan Byrd as Bobby Carter: Older brother of Brenda, and second eldest sibling of the Carters.
- Vinessa Shaw as Lynn Carter Bukowski: Doug's wife, mother of their child Catherine and eldest sibling of the Carters.
- Kathleen Quinlan as Ethel Carter: Matriarch of the Carter family and mother to Brenda, Bobby and Lynn.
- Ted Levine as Big Bob Carter: Patriarch of the Carter family, husband to Ethel and their children as well as a former detective.
- Maisie Camilleri Preziosi as Baby Catherine: Baby daughter of Doug and Lynn.
- Tom Bower as Gas Station Attendant / Jeb Jr. [1]: Gas station attendant who lures the family into the hills.
- Billy Drago as Papa Jupiter: Leader of the mutant clan in the hills.
- Robert Joy as Lizard: the most vicious of the mutant family.
- Desmond Askew as Big Brain: A mutant who seems to be one of the leaders of the clan.
- Ezra Buzzington as Goggle: A mutant using a pair of binoculars to locate travellers in the hills.
- Michael Bailey Smith as Pluto: A vicious mutant family member.
- Laura Ortiz as Ruby: A younger mutant who does not seem inclined to harm any of the non-mutants.
- Gregory Nicotero as Cyst: A mutant who is a vigilant guard of the nuclear testing village.
- Ivana Turchetto as Big Mama: A bald mutant, and is apparently responsible for watching over the younger mutants.
Wes Craven, director and writer of the original The Hills Have Eyes, began the idea of remaking the film when he saw the success of other horror remakes such as The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and The Amityville Horror. The search then began for filmmakers to helm the project. Marianne Maddalena, Craven's long time producing partner, came across Alexandre Aja and his art director/collaborator Grégory Levasseur who had previously made the French slasher film Haute Tension. After showing the film to Craven and the rest of the production crew, they were impressed with the pair. Craven comments that they "demonstrated a multi-faceted understanding of what is profoundly terrifying." and "After viewing the film and then meeting the film makers, I knew I wanted to work with them."[2] Aja and Levasseur then began to re-write the story in what is the pair's first American production.
After writing finished, the casting process began with the selection of Ted Levine as the character Big Bob. Levine was also a fan of the film Haute Tension. Afterwards, Kathleen Quinlan was cast as Ethel in her first role starring in a horror film. Next, Aaron Stanford was cast as Doug Bukowski who "undergoes the most radical transformation of anyone in the Carter family"[2] Stanford even asked not to see any of the mutants in make-up before his character's battle in the testing village so that way, he'd be truly frightened. When casting Lynn, Doug's wife, Aja wanted to cast Vinessa Shaw whom he had wanted to work with since seeing her in Stanley Kubrick's 1999 film Eyes Wide Shut. Shaw was hesitant to play the role, but after watching Haute Tension, she agreed explaining, "there was such an odd combination of beauty and terror, it felt almost like an art film. So, after meeting with Alex and Greg, I decided to do it."[2] For the role of Brenda, the filmmakers sought a young actress who had relatively little exposure and found it in Emilie de Ravin who was beginning her rise in the television series Lost. After de Raven, Dan Byrd was cast as Bobby. Byrd had previous genre experience starring in Salem's Lot.
Aja then had the six actors arrive in the filming location of Morocco early to bond together.
When casting for the mutants, associate producer Cody Zwieg explained, "we needed to find actors who could not only perform the stunt work, handle the extensive makeup and perform in that makeup, but who truly could embody the fierce, primal nature of the mutants’ way of life."[2] To play the role of Pluto, Aja looked to Michael Bailey Smith who had been in A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child and is the only actor to play Freddy Krueger apart from Robert Englund. For Lizard, the filmmakers cast Robert Joy who had made previous genre films such as Amityville 3-D and George A. Romero's Land of the Dead. Ezra Buzzington, impressed with the filmmakers, agreed to play the role of Goggle and even watched a documentary about human cultures engaging in cannibalism. To play the mutant leader, Billy Drago was cast. Drago had previously had a role in Brian De Palma's The Untouchables and other horror features. The most difficult mutant to cast was Ruby, who was a "touch of sweetness to the madness of the mutants."[2] Laura Ortiz was ultimately cast, making her film debut.
Director Alexandre Aja and art director Grégory Levasseur chose not to film in the original's filming location of Victorville, CA and instead scouted many locations for filming including Namibia, South Africa, New Mexico, and Mexico. The two settled on Ouarzazate in Morocco, which was also known as "the gateway to the Sahara Desert."[2]
The movie is set in New Mexico, and strongly implies that a large number of above ground nuclear tests were performed in that state. In fact, the only nuclear detonation in New Mexico was the Trinity test, the first test of a nuclear weapon. The United States performed most of its above ground nuclear tests at the Nevada Test Site.
Prior to filming, Aja and Levasseur had already conceived an idea for the mutants' appearance. "We based all our descriptions and directions on real documents, pictures and footage that we found on the effects of nuclear fallout in Chernobyl and Hiroshima," explains Aja. The Hills Have Eyes utilized the K.N.B. EFX Group Inc. who had done previous work on films such as The Chronicles of Narnia (for which an Academy Award was nominated) and Sin City.
K.N.B. spent over six months designing the mutants, first using 3D designer tools, such as ZBrush, allowing them to use a computer to generate their sculptures. After prosthetics were made, they could be fitted to the actors before filming. Robert Joy, who plays the mutant Lizard explains, "Every day, these amazing artists took more than three hours to transform me into something that could only be found in a nightmare."[2]
K.N.B. artist Gregory Nicotero was also made a cameo as Cyst, the mutant with the halo head-gear.
Jamison Goei and his team, who had done previous work on Hellraiser: Hellseeker and Halloween: Resurrection, had done over 130 visual effects for the film. A large part of that was digitally constructing the testing village, which in actuality was only one built street with others digitally added. The team also warped the mutant's faces slightly, which is shown mostly in the character of Ruby.
Papa Jupiter displays no deformities. However shown in "The Making Of", Papa Jupiter appears to have a large parasitic twin attached to his upper left torso. The young children of the film had their deformities added by CGI with the exception of Ruby who had a combination of CGI and makeup.
The Hills Have Eyes was a commercial success, playing in total 2,521 theaters and taking in opening Weekend $15,708,512.[3] The film took in $41,778,863 in the United States Box Office[4] and $57,808,032 worldwide.[3] Critical reception was mixed with an average critic rating of 50% on Rotten Tomatoes.[5]
The Washington Post writer reviewed the film claiming, "this remake of the alleged 1977 Wes Craven classic has one very disturbing quality: It's too damned good."[6] Others however have gone on to call the film along with the ranks of other recently released horror films as "gore-porn" and claiming that the film is "Using considerable creative intelligence and millions of dollars with no purpose other than profit by inspiring bloodlust [...]"[7] Roger Ebert went on to cite that the film should have focused more on the characters rather than the violence, saying "The Hills Have Eyes finds an intriguing setting in "typical" fake towns built by the government [...] But its mutants are simply engines of destruction. There is a misshapen creature who coordinates attacks with a walkie-talkie; I would have liked to know more about him, but no luck."[8]
- ^ Name revealed in The Hills Have Eyes: The Beginning
- ^ a b c d e f g The Hills Have Eyes Production PDF. 20th Century Fox. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
- ^ a b The Hills Have Eyes. boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
- ^ The Hills Have Eyes (2006). movieweb.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
- ^ The Hills Have Eyes. Rotton Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
- ^ 'The Hills Have Eyes': Can You Watch, Too?. The Washington Post. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
- ^ Movie review: 'The Hills Have Eyes'. Startribube.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
- ^ The Hills Have Eyes (R). rogerebert.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-22.
- Official Website
- The Hills Have Eyes at the Internet Movie Database
- The Hills Have Eyes (2006 film) at Yahoo! Movies
- Interview with director Alexandre Aja at www.sci-fi-online.com
- The Hills Have Eyes at Rotten Tomatoes
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| Original Films | The Hills Have Eyes (1977) • The Hills Have Eyes Part II • The Hills Have Eyes III aka Mind Ripper |
| Remakes | The Hills Have Eyes (2006) • The Hills Have Eyes 2 |
| Graphic Novel | The Hills Have Eyes: The Beginning |
| Characters | The Carters • Hades • General Ryan |
| The Hill People | Jupiters Clan • Mutants |
| Locations | Yuma Flats |