Genre: Thriller
Director: Dave Meyers
Cast: Sean Bean, Sophia Bush & Zachary
Knighton
RunTime: 1 hr 23 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: NC-16 (Violence)
Official Website: http://www.thehitchermovie.net/
Opening Day: 29 March 2007
Synopsis:
This remake of the classic Rutger Hauer horror flick finds
two college students taking a perilous trip through the desert
after they pick up a mysterious hitchhiker. Grace Andrews
and Jim Halsey are a collegiate couple who are tormented by
the mysterious hitchhiker John Ryder, a.k.a. The Hitcher.
The young couple hit the road in a 1970 Oldsmobile 442, en
route to spring break. But their pleasure trip soon turns
into a waking nightmare. The initial encounters with Ryder
are increasingly off-putting for Grace and Jim, and they bravely
fight back when he ambushes them. But they are truly blindsided
when he implicates them in a horrific slaying and continues
to shadow them. The open road becomes a suspenseful, action-packed
battleground of blood and metal as, in trying to elude not
only Ryder but also New Mexico State Police Lieutenant Esteridge's
officers, Grace and Jim must fight for their lives and face
their fears head-on.
Movie Review:
Dave Meyers’s first studio budget film, “The Hitcher”
curiously enough seems to want to draw more inspiration from
Steven Spielberg’s masterclass in suspense, “Duel”
than it does from its predecessor in 1986’s “The
Hitcher”, which starred a creepy Rutger Hauer as the
titular mass murderer. Unfortunately, this fails to hit the
mark in all respects that it might actually just proof how
mind-boggling putrid the genre has become.
I
find myself forced early on to categorically state how abhorrently
unnecessary and redundant this new envisioning truly is. A
familiar gripe that I affirm is how down in the dumps the
genre has become when it cannibalises its own inspirations
lock, stock and barrel with no aspirations other than to draw
in cineplexers with too much time and too much money to spend
on dreck.
I’m
also forced to concede that as someone who appreciated the
1986 original, it beggars the mind to even think that anyone
would find its remake welcome or even be indifferent to it.
From the announcement of this remake back when “The
Amityville Horror” remake hit the top of the box office,
I started to blame Michael Bay as much as anyone with his
Platinum Dunes production company that has built a shaky reputation
on disfiguring originals as well as having a slate of upcoming
remakes, including Hitchcock’s “The Birds”
unfortunately referenced in this film as well. I wonder how
thrilled Bay would be when a music video hack is commissioned
a decade down the line to remake one of the movies from his
inventory of derivative schlock.
The
original had quite a number of undercurrents that had become
apparent through the years as it sifted through the cult followings
that followed its then refreshing and audacious preoccupation
with intense predatory malevolence and gruesome set pieces.
The 2007 manifestation is clearly uninspired. Replacing Hauer’s
glacial, calculating stare of with Sean Bean’s maniacal
glare, the remake consciously substitutes menacing suspense
for yet another run-of-the-mill slasher. Like its recent NC-16
brethren, these movies are pure artifice, nothing more.
Sophia
Bush goes down the road of many teenage starlets and trades
in her sex object status for damsel in distress slasher flicks
as her television series winds down to a close. Her companion
in idiocy is Zachary Knighton, straight out of an Abercrombie
and Fitch catalogue and dull as a board. It’s just one
of those films where collegiate characters seem stupider than
they should be, when you gag yourself from irately shouting
out for them to look behind and try to keep your eyes from
rolling right out of your sockets from the inanity going on
in front of you. Of course, this is just one of the scripts
“techniques” to keep true tension out of the film,
choosing instead to use the predictability of unpredictable
scare tactics to keep attention right on the screen at all
times.
I
can’t think of much ways the remake could have expanded
on the original, or even service itself as a contemporary
outtake on the original premise. But I do know when a remake
manages to be just not superfluous but actually offensive
to the original, it then has truly become part of a depressed
industry and another sad indictment of the modern thriller
genre.
Movie Rating:
(Just depressing in so many ways)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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