Saturday, July 16, 2011

Hobo With a Shotgun – review

Hobo with a Shotgun Flashes of demented brilliance ... Rutger Hauer.Hobo With A ShotgunProduction year: 2011Country: Rest of the worldCert (UK): 18Runtime: 86 minsDirectors: Jason EisenerCast: Brian Downey, Gregory Smith, Molly Dunsworth, Nick Bateman, Rutger HauerMore on this film

There are some for whom the buzz and grind of the hand forced into the mower's rotor blades, the scream of pain, the shotgun blast, the splat of brains hitting the wall and the yelp of vengeful triumph are all sweet, sweet music. I'm not among them, though I've got to admit there are flashes of demented brilliance in this hardcore crassploitation splatter pic. It is unrelentingly concerned at all times to be as offensive as possible and gives Rodriguez's Machete and Tarantino's Death Proof a serious run for their money. Perhaps only Rutger Hauer could have brought the correct nuance to the role of a righteous hobo who shows up in some lawless, post-apocalyptic urban hellhole in Canada, to find the loathsome roost ruled by the sadistic Drake family – a raddled old tyrant with dyed black hair and two psycho-bully sons who dress like rejects from an 80s pop video. A prostitute with a heart of gold and a surprisingly nice flat takes granddaughterly pity on the hobo and gives him a chaste bed for the night – so when the bad guys get violent with her, the hobo gets a shotgun and metes out vengeance, making Insp Harry Callahan look like Relatively Clean Harry.


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