The Comic Book Bin
Movie Reviews (502) Articles


TopShelf Month

Darkhorse Month

Women's Month


 
Movies : Movie Reviews
Last Updated: Oct 20, 2009 - 7:25:21 AM




Hatchet at the Fantasia Film Festival
By Al Kratina
Jul 13, 2007 - 23:26:30 PM

Email this Article
 Printer Friendly Page
 Mobile Friendly Page

Add to Del.icio.us     Add To Reddit
Add To Digg     Add To Stumbleupon
Add To Technorati Favorites     Add To Ask


hatchet01.gif
Hatchet

2006 USA

Director: Adam Green

Writer: Adam Green

Cast: Kane Hodder, Robert Englund, Joel Moore, Tamara Feldman, Mercedes Mcnab

Producers: Scott Altomare, Sarah Elbert, Cory Neal

Distributor: Anchor Bay

Web: www.hatchetmovie.com

Running Time: 93 minutes

Genre: Horror

Rating: Not yet rated

 

The killer retard is back. Incidentally, the use of that word is not meant to be derogatory, it’s merely descriptive of the attitude that films like Deliverance, Friday the 13th and now Hatchet have towards the mentally handicapped. To more sensitive viewers, those born with mental or physical deformities are to be pitied, protected, and coddled with euphemisms and special treatment. To the victims of Hatchet, they’re the Incredible Hulk with a cleft palate and bad case of bloodlust. And though it’s been a while since the big screen has been blessed with a lumbering behemoth drooling half-syllables while releasing under-developed sexual urges onto a college co-ed with a hammer, Hatchet’s whole-hearted embrace of the ‘old school horror’ label has brought this particular form of the horror movie “other” back with a vengeance.  


hatchet003.gif
Of course, by accepting and marketing itself around that phrase, Hatchet is clearly admitting that it breaks no new ground. It does, however, break a few heads, most notably that of one of the Cosby kids. While there are absolutely no surprises in Hatchet in regards to plot, it’s one of the most capably made, goriest, and overall most satisfying slasher films made in years. Joel Moore stars as Ben, a young man who’s seeking to forget the demise of his seven-year relationship by wandering out into the middle of a swamp with a few random victims and the monster from Humongous. Once meeting local retarded killer Victory Crowley, aka Hatchet Face, what follows is an extremely funny, solidly scripted, and incredibly bloody 93 minutes. The slasher genre has its own conventions and touchstones, plot, intelligence and logic not being any of them, but the film rises to the occasion with strong performances and great dialogue. Director Adam Green is clearly such a fan of the genre he’s giddy at the prospect of pleasing fans half as much as he’s pleased himself with his film, and judging from the rousing reception Hatchet received at its Canadian premiere at the Fantasia film festival, he’s succeeded in pleasing the retard in all of us.

 

Rating: 7 on 10

alkratina@comicbookbin.com

 



Related Articles:
Accuracy of Death at Fantasia 2008
Idiots and Angels at Fantasia 2008
The Sparrow / Peur(s) du noir at Fantasia 2008
Let The Right One In/What We Do Is Secret at Fantasia 2008
Negative Happy Chainsaw Edge at Fantasia 2008
Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer at Fantasia 2008
Le Grand Chef at Fantasia 2008
Disciples of the 36th Chamber at Fantasia 2008
[REC] at Fantasia 2008
Genius Party at Fantasia 2008



Comment Script Join the discussion:

Add a Comment

Comments


© Copyright 2002-2009, Coolstreak Cartoons Inc. - All rights Reserved. All other texts, images, characters and trademarks are copyright their respective owners. Use of material in this document(including reproduction, modification, distribution, electronic transmission or republication) without prior written permission is strictly prohibited.

Top of Page

Paranormal Activity
The buzz is real. This delivers scary.
It Might Get Loud
A great roc doc that focuses on three of the greatest rock guitarists of all time, their creative processes, their music, and, of course, their guitars.
Tyler Perry's I Can Do Bad All by Myself
Or she can do worse with a married man.
Pandorum
A taunt, intelligent, sci-fi thriller that doesn’t disappoint.
Jennifer's Body
For all of Megan Fox’s hotness, Diablo Cody’s sophomore effort is just that, sophomoric. But is that such a bad thing?
Inglourious Basterds
Poppin' caps in Hitler.
Rob Zombie's Halloween: A Look Back
Before we dive into Rob Zombies' Halloween II, a look back at his first take on a horror movie classic.
Ponyo - It's for Big Kids Too
After being Sosuke's goldfish for a few hours, Ponyo decides that she wants to become a human and escape the magic ship of her father where she lives with her sisters
Yoe Joe! G.I. Joes' Rise of Cobra
As a comic book movie G.I. Joe is the worst of the year
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
I honestly don't care.
The Ugly Truth
A chick flick for women who feel compelled to drag their men to films as payback for going to blockbusters earlier
Bruno
An enjoyable film, if you go into it without expecting much.
Public Enemies
“Die like you live: all of the sudden.”
Disney/Pixar's Up
Love the one you're with - an elderly man finally has the adventure he's always craved, but shares it with an unexpected partner.
Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs
Fun for the kids with some Melville, Dante, and existential clean humor thrown in for the adults.