26.10.2019

Torrent Las Colinas Tienen Ojos 1977

Torrent Las Colinas Tienen Ojos 1977 9,0/10 3400 votes

I saw this for the first time in the late 80s. Found it to b disturbing then. But when i saw the remake in 2006, i found this to b very mild.

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Jus revisited it again. The plot is about a family taking the wrong turn off the main road and finding themselves being hunted down by a cannibal family. Talking bout this original, some scenes i found to b comedic. Maybe if the remake didn't exist, this movie wud have still been disturbing. Well this movie does deserve some respect among horror fans. The dress of the mother of the cannibalistic looked as if she is some gypsy woman.

One member wearing bear skin in a desert n most of em wearing necklaces made outta some teeth. The cannibalistic clans looked more like dirty hippies n Mexican bandits rather than ferals. The scene where the kids on the radio r asked about their defence strength n the reply they get. Was really comedic. Sitting ducks. The scene wher the old ex cop is roasted alive n his eyeballs r shown.

This movie lacked the tension, atmosphere n suspense. It lacked the brutality. Remember Texas chainsaw massacre being brutal, atmospheric n tensed without blood n gore. Agree the remake by Aja is hands down much superior than this original but Craven shud b applauded for making this n Last house. Except for Berryman, the cannibalistic male members looked more like Mexican bandits who hasn't taken bath for months. Avoid the 1984 sequel like plague.

The sequel contains unnecessary tremendous footage from the first part.

Running time89 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget$350,000 - $700,000Box office$25 millionThe Hills Have Eyes is a 1977 American written, directed, and edited by and starring,. The film follows the Carters, a suburban family targeted by a family of cannibal savages after becoming stranded in the desert.Following Craven's directorial debut, (1972), producer was interested in financing a similar project. Craven based the film's script on the legend of cannibal, which Craven viewed as illustrating how supposedly civilized people could become savage.

Other influences on the film include 's (1940) and 's (1974). The Hills Have Eyes was shot in the. The film's crew were initially unenthusiastic about the project, but this changed as they came to believe that they were making a special movie.The Hills Have Eyes earned $25 million at the box office and spawned. All subsequent films in the series were made with Craven's involvement. The Hills Have Eyes was released on in 1988 and has subsequently been released on and, while Don Peake's score for the film has been released on and vinyl.

Reviews for the film were mostly positive, with critics praising its tense narrative and humor. Some critics have interpreted the film as containing commentary on morality and American politics, and the film has become a. Contents.Plot The suburban Carter family is traveling on vacation towing a from Ohio to Los Angeles. Parents Bob and Ethel are driving, accompanied by their teenage children Bobby, Brenda, eldest daughter Lynne, Lynne's husband Doug, Lynne and Doug's baby daughter Katy, and the family's dogs, Beauty and The Beast.

In, they stop at Fred's Oasis for fuel, and Fred urges them to stay on the main road as they leave. Fred's truck suddenly explodes. Ignoring Fred's warning and dismissing him as a crazy person, the Carters skid off a desert road and crash. Bob walks back to Fred's Oasis to get help. The dogs become very panicky and start barking at the hills. Beauty then runs off into the hills.

Bobby chases after her and finds her mutilated body. Frightened, he runs, falls, and knocks himself unconscious.As night falls, Bob reaches the gas station, where he finds Fred, who has tried to hang himself. Fred tells him about his son's family of deranged cannibals who live in the hills through which the Carters have traveled. They are commanded by Papa Jupiter, whose mother, Fred's wife, died during childbirth. As a child, he killed the livestock on his father's farm and later murdered his sister. Fred attacked his son with a and left him in the hills to die.

However, Jupiter survived and had children with a depraved, alcoholic prostitute known as Mama. Together, they had three sons – Mars, Pluto and Mercury – and an abused daughter, Ruby. They survive by cannibalizing travelers and stealing supplies. Papa Jupiter suddenly crashes through a window, kills Fred with a tire iron and takes Bob prisoner, and him.Brenda finds Bobby, who is shaken up about Beauty and the two return to the trailer. Bobby does not mention Beauty's death because he doesn't want to frighten the rest of the family. Unbeknownst to Bobby, Pluto enters the trailer.

He then locks Bobby out, so Bobby asks Doug for his keys. Before Bobby enters the trailer, Pluto tells Papa Jupiter via a to set Bob on fire and an explosion is heard in the distance. Ethel, Lynne, Doug, and Bobby rush out to save Bob while Brenda stays in the trailer with the baby. As they extinguish the fire, Pluto and Mars ransack the camper and Mars rapes Brenda.

The Carters eventually extinguish the fire, but Bob dies shortly afterwards. When Ethel and Lynne return to the trailer, Lynne is attacked by Mars, and Ethel hits him with a broom.

After Mars shoots Ethel and Lynne, he attempts to shoot Brenda as well but has run out of bullets. Pluto abducts the baby and the brothers flee, intending for the family to eat the baby. Hearing their screams, Doug and Bobby rush in the camper only to find Lynne dead and Ethel mortally wounded.Mars and Pluto return to their home, a cave, and The Beast pushes Mercury off a hilltop to his death. Ruby is then chained outside the cave with Mama tormenting her, and is forced to eat Beauty as punishment for sympathizing with the Carters. The next morning, shortly after Ethel dies, Doug sets out to find his baby while Papa Jupiter and Pluto set out to kill the remaining family members.

Beast tears Pluto's throat out, and Papa Jupiter is killed by a trap set by Brenda and Bobby using their mother's corpse. Doug sees Ruby knock out Mama and escape into the hills with Katy.Doug catches up with Ruby and the baby, but Mars follows them. Mars initially manages to tackle and knife-struggle with Doug, but Ruby interferes by putting a rattlesnake on Mars' neck, enabling Doug to overpower him. Doug then repeatedly stabs Mars, even after killing, while Ruby weeps over her brother's body and the screen fades to red.Cast. The Hills Have Eyes is based on the legend of.Wes Craven desired to make a non-horror film, following his directorial debut, (1972), because he saw the horror genre as constraining. However, he could not find producers interested in financing a project that did not feature bloody violence. Craven's friend, producer Peter Locke, was interested in financing a horror, and Craven decided to write the project due to his monetary issues.

Craven considered collaborating with on a horror based on ', but Locke wanted the film to be more in the vein of The Last House on the Left. In writing the project for Locke, Craven decided he 'wanted something more sophisticated than Last House on the Left.' He added that he 'didn't want to feel uncomfortable again about making a statement about human depravity.' Searching for a story to film, Craven began looking up 'terrible things' at the. While going through the library's forensics department, Craven learned of the legend of - the alleged head of a 48-person Scottish clan responsible for the murder and cannibalization of more than one thousand people.

What interested Craven in the legend was how, after Bean's clan was arrested, they were tortured, burned and hung. Craven saw this treatment of the Bean clan by supposedly civilized people as paralleling the clan's own savagery. Craven decided to base the film on the legend. Another major inspiration for the project was 's (1974), one of Craven's favorite films. 's Zachary Paul says that both films center on a group of vacationers who are 'stranded in the wide open nowhere and must protect themselves against a tightly knit family of cannibals' and feature an archetypal 'gas station of doom'. Like The Last House on the Left before it, the film drew influence from the work of European directors such as and.Other inspirations for The Hills Have Eyes were Craven's neighbors and family, on whom the Carters where modeled, the director's nightmares, and 's (1940). The original script was titled Blood Relations: The Sun Wars and was set in during 1984, several years in the future.

As Locke's girlfriend, often performed in during this period, Locke saw a lot of desert landscapes as the film was being written, and suggested that Craven set the film in the desert. Due to budgetary constraints, the film was written to have few roles and be set in few locations.

Originally, the film was to end with the surviving members of the family reuniting at the trailer site, signifying that they could move on with their lives. Craven ultimately opted for an ending where Doug stabs Mars as a disgusted Ruby watches, as he liked the role reversal that this ending created. Craven also wanted the two families in the story to be the 'mirror images of each other,' believing that this would allow him to 'explore different sides of the human personality.' Casting Michael Berryman, who has twenty-six different birth defects, won the role of Pluto.

He was elated to be cast in a horror film due to his love of (1944) and other black-and-white films. The character of Ruby needed to be played by an actress who was a fast runner, so all of the actresses who auditioned for the part were required to race each other. Janus Blythe won the part partially because she outran all of the other auditioning actresses. Locke wanted to make a in the film, and was given the role of Mercury, who appears briefly in the film. Locke was credited for the role under the name 'Arthur King.' , who played in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, was offered a part in the film and rejected it so that he could move to and focus on his literary career.

He later came to regret not appearing in the film. The film was shot in.Principal photography for The Hills Have Eyes began in October 1976. The film was shot in in the using on cameras that were borrowed from a Californian. The film cost between $350,000 and $700,000, around thrice the budget of The Last House on the Left.

The film's actors were paid, and the film's crew were non-union. Locke was on the film's set every day of its shoot, making sure that Craven was being productive.The shoot was unpleasant for the actors, due to daytime temperatures of over 120 degrees Fahrenheit (49 degrees Celsius) which dropped to around 30 degrees (-1 degrees Celsius) during the night, as well as the fact that they played physically taxing roles twelve to fourteen hours a day, six days a week. As Berryman lacks sweat glands, the heat was particularly hazardous to his health, and he had to be attended to after the filming of the film's action scenes.

Many cast members did their own makeup due to budgetary constraints. Wallace later joked that the dogs that appeared in the film were treated better than its human cast members. Most of the film's crew were veterans of, and were initially unenthusiastic about The Hills Have Eyes.

This changed weeks into production due to Craven's zeal for the project, and because the crew came to believe that the film was 'something special.' , the production designer of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, also served as the production designer for the film. He re-used many of the props from The Texas Chain Saw Massacre to decorate the cannibal clan's lair, including animal hides and bones. The sequence where Dee Wallace's character confronts a was not part of the film's script; it was added to the film after the filmmakers discovered the spider on a road. The tarantula was not harmed during the filming of the sequence.

During the sequence where the cannibals eat Big Bob, a stood in for human flesh. This was a relief for the hungry actors. At one point, Craven considered having the character Papa Jupiter eat baby Katy, an idea which most of the cast disliked.

Berryman refused to do the scene, and Craven allowed Katy to survive. The carcass of the Carter's family dog, Beauty, was an actual dog carcass that the filmmakers purchased; Craven has refused to explain how exactly the filmmakers obtained the carcass. Post-production The film was initially given an by the due to its graphic violence.

Due to this, significant material was removed from Fred's death scene, the sequence where Mars and Pluto attack the trailer, and the last confrontation with Papa Jupiter. Out of one hundred possible titles for the film, The Hills Have Eyes was chosen. It tested well with audiences, though Craven did not like it. Prints of the film were made. Music The film's soundtrack was written and performed by Don Peake.

The extensive score containing a total of 41 cues was released in 2009 on by Hitchcock Media Records. In 2014 it was re-released on and by One Way Static Records. The vinyl edition contains extensive liner notes by Don Peake and the film's cast and crew. Release Marketing Locke told the that he expected the film's marketing campaign to cost twice or thrice the film's budget.

Advertisements for The Hills Have Eyes claimed that a copy of the film had been added to the permanent collection of the; in actuality, the copy of the film had been added to the museum's 'study' collection rather than its more prestigious permanent collection. One of the museum's curators told the Los Angeles Times that he would prefer that the film's advertisements not mention the museum. Box office The film premiered on July 22, 1977, in, where it earned $2 million by October 1977, the same month the film gained a wider release. The Hills Have Eyes ultimately earned $25 million, and was a greater box office success than The Last House on the Left. Craven noted that the film managed to break box office records at some of the individual theaters that it opened in.

The film's gross was impeded by the financial success of the film (1977). Locke characterized the film as neither a huge hit nor a, and was pleased with the amount of money it generated. Critical reception Contemporary reception The staff of called The Hills Have Eyes 'a satisfying piece of,' adding 'Gratifying aspects of the film are Craven's businesslike plotting and pacy cutting, and a script which takes more trouble over the stock characters than it needs. There are plenty of laughs, in the dialog and in the story's disarming twists.'

In his review of Craven's later film (1982), of the criticized the film for being too 'decadent' for his taste. Tim Pulleine of stated that the film's story 'had promise' but was 'never fused into an effective narrative pattern, let alone an allegorical one.' Tim Whitehead of deemed the film's 'predictable' plot an excuse for 'scenes of ghastly carnage in the horror vein of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,' opining that Craven 'maintains the tension throughout and occasionally manages to relieve the horror with elements of the ridiculous.'

The reviewer stated that they 'simply found themself looking away from the endless stabbings, gougings and burnings.' Retrospective reception On, the film holds an approval rating of 67% based on 24 reviews, with a rating of 6.1/10.On, which assigns a normalized rating to reviews, the film has a weighted average score of 64 out of 100, based on 4 critics, indicating 'Generally favorable reviews'.The film was included in the book, where Steven Jay Schneider said it 'warrants consideration as one of the richest and most perfectly realized films of Craven's career'. Listed the film as one of the thirteen greatest horror films of the 1970s while has cited The Hills Have Eyes as a classic feature. The film was nominated for. Gave it a three out of four stars rating, saying that it is 'exhilarating' to watch the Carters become more savage.' S wrote that the film is more imaginative than horror films made by major studios.

For the, Walter Addiego said that The Hills Have Eyes is the scariest movie he has ever seen, describing it and The Last House on the Left (1972) as 'a turning point in horror.Suddenly, earlier horror — like the Universal classics (, etc.) and — seemed like weak tea.' Comparing The Hills Have Eyes to The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, Zachary Paul of Bloody Disgusting found the former superior and praised its 'overwhelming' tension.' S Eric Henderson called the film 'effective' and praised its cast, particularly Robert Houston, whose performance is 'more complex than your average male lead in a horror film.' However, Henderson also deemed the film inferior to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and criticized the sequence where the Carters create booby traps for feeling like cartoons about.

's Jon Condit opined that The Hills Have Eyes is not one of Craven's best films. In, gave the film a three out of five star rating, saying 'Decades on The Hills Have Eyes no longer seems quite as breathlessly swift as it did.' A critic for dismissed the film as middling. Accolades At the 1977, The Hills Have Eyes won the Critic's Award.

Home media The Hills Have Eyes was released on in July 1988. It was released for the first time on by on September 23, 2003 as a two-disc special edition. On September 29 that same year, it was released. Anchor Bay would release the film again in 2006. The film made its Blu-ray debut on September 6, 2011 by, who also released the film on DVD that same day. In 2013, Anchor Bay released the film on Blu-ray as a ' with (1985) and on DVD as part of a four disc set which also includes Re-Animator, (1992), and (2003). The film had its Canadian release on both DVD and Blu-ray by on January 10, 2013.

The film was later released on Blu-ray by Arrow Video on October 11, 2016 and again on January 30, 2018. Analysis Genre In, characterizes The Hills Have Eyes as a. Steven Jay Schneider classifies the film as a hybrid horror film, 'siege film'. Christopher Sharrett of sees the film as more akin to an. Moral themes According to Steven Jay Schneider in, the sequence where Big Bob is crucified symbolizes 'utter repudiation of'. Schneider also views everyone in the film as guilty in some way. Slant Magazine 's Ed Gonzales characterized the film as 'morally inconsequential,' commenting that with the film's ending 'Craven seemingly believes he's saying something about our instinctual need to kill for pleasure, but this philosophy doesn't hold water considering the context of Doug's situation.It's a cut-and-dry case of life-or-death self-defense.'

In Wes Craven: The Art of Horror, writes that the film is not saying that the Carter family are worse than their enemies, as the cannibal clan commits violent acts more horrific than anything the Carters do, but that the Carters must stoop to the level of barbarians to defeat barbarians. Muir also believes while the actions of Jupiter's family are inexcusable, they are understandable, as they are trying to survive. Political themes Craven has said that the film expresses rage against American culture and the.

Torrent Las Colinas Tienen Ojos 1977 Full

John Kenneth Muir views the Carters as representing the United States, while Schneider writes that the Carters are a bourgeois family while the film's cannibals can be understood as representing 'any number of oppressed, embattled and downtrodden minority/social/ethnic groups,' including the, and the. Muir believes that while The Hills Have Eyes has and can be interpreted as an allegory about the, this is complicated by the fact that the Carters defeat their enemies, unlike the American forces in Vietnam. Muir instead sees the film as being about the class divide in America, with the Carters symbolizing the wealthy and Papa Jupiter's family representing the poor. He supports this theory by noting that the Carters and the cannibals are both from America. Franchise Craven directed a sequel to the film, which was released in 1985.

Craven made the film to turn The Hills Have Eyes into a series, in the vein of the and series. In the late 1980s, Craven considered making a film in the series set in, but it never came to fruition. The unrelated Craven project (1995) was originally going to be a third The Hills Have Eyes movie, but it was re-written so that it never directly refers to The Hills Have Eyes or its sequel.

Mind Ripper still has the alternative title The Hills Have Eyes III. Directed a in 2006, which Craven produced. In 2007, Craven and his son wrote the sequel to the remake,. Cultural impact Legacy. Became a horror icon due to his role in the film.Multiple critics have deemed The Hills Have Eyes a, with Zachary Paul of Bloody Disgusting saying 'In the 40 years since the film was released, The Hills Have Eyes has amassed quite the large following.

It's hard to throw a rock at any decent horror convention without clocking someone involved with the film's production in the head.' Both Berryman and his character Pluto have become horror icons due to the film. Dee Wallace became known as a due to her roles in The Hills Have Eyes, (1981) and (1983).

John Kenneth Muir writes that The Hills Have Eyes 'was seen as a turning point in the horror genre' and inspired humorous, visceral horror films that were accomplished on a technical level, including (1978), (1980), and (1980). In popular culture While watching The Hills Have Eyes, director noticed a ripped poster for 's (1975) in a scene of the film. He 'took it to mean that Wes Craven.was saying ' Jaws was just pop horror. What I have here is real horror.' ' This inspired Raimi to include a ripped The Hills Have Eyes poster in his film (1981), as a humorous way of telling Craven 'No, this is the real horror, pal.' Craven reacted to this by having fall asleep while watching The Evil Dead in his film (1984). Raimi responded to that by including 's glove in a scene of (1987).

Later, Craven would have characters in his film (1996) choose to watch a VHS of Halloween (1978) instead of the VHS of The Evil Dead (1981) that they had. Then, in a first season episode of Raimi's television show, Krueger's glove can be glimpsed, while a poster for The Hills Have Eyes can be seen outside a movie theater in an episode of the show's second season.' ,' a 1996 episode of, is an homage to both The Hills Have Eyes and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.The title and lyrics of 's song ' (2015) reference Craven's film.

References. From the original on September 25, 2018. Retrieved September 25, 2018., p. 308. ^ Clint, Davis (August 31, 2015). From the original on September 23, 2018. Retrieved September 22, 2018. ^ Paul, Zachary (July 22, 2017).

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