

The Hills Have Eyes
Based on Wes Craven's 1977 suspenseful cult classic, The Hills Have Eyes is the story of a family road trip that goes terrifyingly awry when the travelers become stranded in a government atomic zone. Miles from nowhere, the Carter family soon realizes the seemingly uninhabited wasteland is actually the breeding ground of a blood-thirsty mutant family...and they are the prey.
Director(s)
Dexter Locke
Michael Gregory
Jon-Luke Lourens
Shamiel Soni
Bertrand Gagey
Alexandre Aja
Cheryl Leigh
Franklin A. Vallette
Grégory Levasseur
Olivier Agostini
Rachid Doha
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Cast & crew

Billy Drago
Papa Jupiter

Robert Joy
Lizard

Ted Levine
Big Bob

Greg Nicotero
Cyst

Michael Bailey Smith
Pluto

Desmond Askew
Big Brain
Jon-Luke Lourens
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Kathleen Quinlan
Ethel

Vinessa Shaw
Lynn

Aaron Stanford
Doug

Emilie de Ravin
Brenda

Dan Byrd
Bobby

Tom Bower
Gas Station Attendant

Ezra Buzzington
Goggle

Laura Ortiz
Ruby
Maxime Giffard
First Victim
Maisie Camilleri Preziosi
Baby Catherine
Ivana Turchetto
Big Mama
Judith Jane Vallette
Small Deformed Child
Adam Perrell
Small Deformed Child
Dexter Locke
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Michael Gregory
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Shamiel Soni
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Bertrand Gagey
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Alexandre Aja
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Cheryl Leigh
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Franklin A. Vallette
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Grégory Levasseur
-
Olivier Agostini
-
Rachid Doha
-
Details
Reviews
Gimly
One of the best horror remakes to come out in this most recent trend. Rather than ignoring its source material, or taking the other extreme of drearily rehashing it scene for scene, Aja and Levasseur's _The Hills Have Eyes_ simply expands and improves upon the original. _Final rating:★★★★ - Very strong appeal. A personal favourite._
CinemaSerf
Aside from some pretty significant plausibility issues, this is actually quite a decent shock horror. A family stop off at gas station where the elderly attendant tells them of a dirt track shortcut across the desert that will save them a few hours. Towing their caravan, off they go, but when a puncture causes them to lose control and crash into a big rock, they begin to realise that they are not the only folks nearby - and I use the term "folks" loosely. What now follows sees our travellers terrorised by some hideously mutated people who had been left there ever since the US Government carried out nuclear tests. Reduced to just 3, "Big Bob" (Ted Levine) and his faithful hound have to track down his kidnapped baby grandchild - a perilous journey indeed. Now quite why they decided to take the shortcut is just one of a few dodgy decision taken by the "Carter" family that made me wonder, and rendered the plot increasingly silly as we progress to an ending that seems to drag on a bit too long. That said, there are plenty of jump moments and Alexandre Aja manages to keep the annoyingly screaming hysteria to a minimum. Once it eventually gets going, it becomes decently paced and the photography is tightly cut to maximise the impact of some pretty gruesome scenarios (and prosthetics!). Though not as gritty as the 1977 original, I think it's still just as good.
