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The Hills Have Eyes 2

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The Hills Have Eyes 2
Teaser poster
Directed byMartin Weisz
Written byWes Craven
Jonathan Craven
Produced byWes Craven
Johnathan Debin
Peter Locke
StarringJessica Stroup
Michael McMillian
Daniella Alonso
Lee Thompson Young
Distributed byFox Atomic
Release dates
March 23, 2007 (Theater)
July 17, 2007 (DVD)
Running time
90 min.
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$15,000,000[1]

The Hills Have Eyes 2 is the 2007 American adventure horror feature film sequel to the 2006 remake of the 1977 horror film The Hills Have Eyes. The film follows several heroic, but troubled, U.S. National Guardsmen as they fight for survival against the mutant people living in a military base in New Mexico. The Hills Have Eyes 2 was directed by German film director Martin Weisz and written by father and son team Wes and Jonathan Craven. A graphic novel titled The Hills Have Eyes: The Beginning was published by Fox Atomic Comics to accompany the release of the film; it was released July 19, 2007.

Plot

The film opens with a brutal scene of a restrained woman giving birth who is then killed by a mutant (Papa Hades). There follows a synopsis of the previous movie, explaining that electronic surveillance was ordered installed in the New Mexico military base. The scientists are then shown working on the electronic surveillance installation and encountering problems with rats chewing the insulation on their power cables. Some 'false' readings are seen before the system fails. The antagonists are introduced at this point and the scientists and their colonel are depicted meeting various untimely and gruesome ends.

Next the film cuts to an apparent military operation in Kandahar, Afghanistan in which the troops are depicted as not being cohesive as a group and show individual weaknesses. The operation ends when a 'civilian' woman approaches the group and reveals multiple grenades under her garment, at this point the operation is revealed to be a training exercise for rookie troops on US soil. The sergeant lambastes the troops for their failure then tells them they are going on a mission to bring supplies to scientists working on a surveillance system in a top secret area. By this time many of the troops have their individual characters established, namely that Napoleon is actually anti-war and that Crank is particularly gung-ho, but violent.

On arriving at the secret base there is no sign of the scientists. A garbled radio message is received followed by a mirror signal from atop a hill. The sergeant orders a search and rescue mission leaving behind Napoleon as punishment for questioning this order and Amber to monitor the radio. Napoleon and Amber discover a man, one of the missing scientists, trying to escape from the chemical latrine who then dies after warning them of danger. Immediately they discover their transport vehicle in flames and their rifles missing. Amber starts up the hill towards the others but is attacked by one of the mutants. Mickey is returning down the hill after injuring his ankle and shoots the mutant from long range, who then disappears down a hole. Mickey gets a bit closer to Amber before a hand appears from underground and drags him gruesomely down the hole. Napoleon and Amber retrieve his weapon and set off to join the others, who by now have scaled a cliff and set up a rope.

Just as Amber and Napoleon join the main group, they come under attack from another mutant and Spitter accidentally shoots the sergeant dead. They decide to turn back, and Spitter volunteers to carry the sergeant's body down the rope abseil, since he feels responsible for his death. On the way down they fall, and it is revealed the rope has been cut. Having no other way down, the group attempts to find a way down on foot. They find a dead scientist and meet the mortally wounded colonel, who explains briefly their enemy, including the fact that the mutants keep the female victims alive in order to breed new mutants (in reference to the opening scene), and the fact that they can only get down through the mines, before committing suicide with a pistol.

A trap is laid with the two female soldiers, which succeeds in luring out one of the mutants, who is shot dead. In a brief moment of victory, however, Missy is abducted by another mutant who is camouflaged against the rocks. The group give chase into the mines, but Stump won't follow and decides to climb alone down the cliff and bring help. The others continue, under the leadership of Delmar, onwards and downwards through corrugated iron tunnels and mine shafts. Napoleon and Amber become separated after falling through a hidden shaft.

The captive Missy is carried to a room with makeshift furniture and is assaulted by the chameleon mutant. She fends it off by biting off part of his elongated tongue. At this point the large and menacing Papa Hades enters the room, and the chameleon flees in fear. Missy is subjected to brutal physical assault and rape at the hands of Hades.

Meanwhile, the fleeing chameleon meets and attacks Napoleon and Amber, who manage to kill him using a large rock. A blind mutant armed with one of the missing rifles detects the dead chameleon and Amber and Napoleon retreat down a shaft into the lair of an apparently passive mutant, possibly the product of a mating with a non-mutated female. The remaining National Guard troops (Delmar and Crank) approach and Delmar is shot by the blind mutant who is then killed by Crank who empties his magazine. Delmar claims it's only a shoulder wound and caries on. Napoleon appears and shows them the secret passage and the passive mutant, who wants them to follow him and they do. They pass through a macabre room where the previous victims bodies and possessions appear to have been stockpiled. A frying pan is seen containing severed fingers. Severed legs hang from meat hooks. Amber finds the mutilated body of Mickey. Delmar breaks down spitting blood and dies from wounds that are revealed to be more than superficial. They carry his body onwards. The passive mutant leads them out to blast door section at the edge of the mines however Amber insists that they go back for Missy. As Amber persuades Napoleon to accompany her, Crank finds a stash of dynamite, however on removing it he triggers the detonation switch and a large explosion ensues, killing him and alerting Papa Hades.

Amber and Napoleon manage to kill one of the final mutants who is hiding amongst some WW2 mannequins using knives and bayonets. They then find the room containing the captive Missy. After distracting Hades with a cell phone, Amber and Napoleon manage to free Missy. Hades returns and a frantic fight insues. Amber finds a single bullet and shoots Hades in the head but he continues to fight, despite brain matter exuding from his skull. Enraged, Missy beats Hades severely with a sledge hammer, leaving his testicles smashed. Eventually the soldiers prevail and leave the body of Hades with a bayoneted rifle in his mouth.

The three survivors stumble towards a light in the background and finds it as the exit of the mines. Text appears on-screen stating that none of the guardsmen were ever found, are currently listed as AWOL, and that military officials refuse to acknowledge that Sector 16 even exists. The image turns into a thermal visual and is being viewed by someone in a thermal monitor. A mutated hand slams on the monitor (which explains the disappearances of the remaining soldiers) and the film ends.

Cast

The guardspeople
The mutants
  • David Reynolds as Hansel
  • Michael Bailey Smith as Papa Hades
  • Tyrell Kemlo as Stabber
  • Gáspár Szabó as Grabber
  • Derek Mears as Chameleon
  • Jason Oettle as Letch
Others

Production

The Hills Have Eyes 2 began filming in the summer of 2006 in Ouarzazate, Morocco, where the previous movie was filmed.

Writer Wes Craven's initial inspiration for the film came to being as he was having a casual conversation with producer Peter Locke. Craven envisioned that the previous film's character, Brenda (Emilie de Ravin), traumatized by the torment of the events in The Hills Have Eyes, would join the National Guard to overcome her fears. Barely through her basic training, Brenda would receive a call from her sergeant, who explains that they are sending a team back to the New Mexico desert to rid of the remaining mutants. Her sergeant and the team need her, for she is the only one left alive who knows the mutant's location. Because of de Ravin's involvement in the television show Lost, her schedule was unable to encompass filming for the sequel. Wes Craven replaced her character, but kept with much of the original idea in terms of using National Guard soldiers in training.[2]

A one-minute teaser trailer was released on December 12, 2006. The teaser featured "Insect Eyes," a song by indie folk recording artist Devendra Banhart. In addition to that, a series of clips with an introduction by Wes Craven and a small gallery can be found on the Fox Atomic website. Also on Fox Atomic is a soundless clip of the mutant Grabber attacking Amber. Recently a full length trailer and two new clips were released to Yahoo! Movies.

Craven originally looked at Michael J. Bassett, the director of Deathwatch, to take over the directing role, but ultimately chose Martin Weisz after scheduling conflicts with Bassett.

Although the original 1977 film had a sequel, this is not a remake of that film.

Box office and reception

The Hills Have Eyes 2 received mostly negative reviews, gaining a 11% freshness rating from review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes.[3] The film grossed $37,405,247 worldwide.[4] Overall the film had made over $30 million in Dvd Sales making in total [$67,915,885]

Soundtrack

Untitled

The soundtrack was released on July 17, 2007.

Track listing -US Edition[5]
  1. The Hills Have Eyes - Loudlion
  2. My Fork In The Road (Your Knife In My Back) - Atreyu
  3. Unretrofied - The Dillinger Escape Plan
  4. Redemption - Shadows Fall
  5. Darkest Nights - As I Lay Dying
  6. Hard Rock Hallelujah - Lordi
  7. Prayers - In This Moment
  8. I Know Hollywood And You Ain't It - Walls Of Jericho
  9. Throwing Stones - The End
  10. Failure In The Flesh - Through The Eyes Of The Dead
  11. Sleeping With The Fishes, See? - The Number 12 Looks Like You
  12. Own Little World (Remorse Code Remix) - Celldweller

References

  1. ^ Goodman, Dean (2007-03-25). "Four turtles overtake "300" soldiers at box office". Thomson Reuters. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
  2. ^ Carolyn, Axelle (2007). The Hills Have Eyes 2- Military Fright. Fangoria. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  3. ^ "The Hills Have Eyes 2". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2007-06-12.
  4. ^ The Hills Have Eyes 2. BoxOfficeMojo. Accessed 2007-09-12.
  5. ^ http://www.soundtrackinfo.com/title/tracks.asp?hillshaveeyes2