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HOSTEL

Writer/director Eli Roth is always looking for ways to scare people; yet unlike most horror auteurs, Roth knows that real life stories, and their revelations about the darker corners of human nature, are often much more frightening than monsters and boogeymen.
With his debut feature, Cabin Fever, he turned newspaper headlines about a flesh-eating bacteria into a horrific bloodbath among a group of young vacationers.
Now, with Hostel, Roth once again draws inspiration from real events, this time with even more disturbing results.
Roth discovered the creative seed for Hostel during a late-night conversation with his friend Harry Knowles, the web-master of Aintitcoolnews.com.
"We were talking about the sickest thing you could possibly find on the internet," Roth recalls. Knowles claimed he had stumbled across something so frightening he was hesitant to confess its discovery to Roth, which only made the filmmaker more curious. Knowles eventually forwarded Roth the link to the website; and what Roth discovered disturbed him more deeply than he could have imagined: somewhere in Thailand, a business was profiting on the visceral thrill of murder. For a fee of $10,000, anyone willing could be escorted to a room, handed a loaded gun and offered another human being to kill.
The sire claimed that in Thailand the practise was perfectly legal, as the victims were participating of their own free will. They were desolate, poverty-stricken people whose families were starving to death. By way of their self-sacrifice, they would make enough money for their loved ones to survive.  "The website made it sound as if the prospective killers were benefactors, like they were doing a service for the victims by way of this bizarre life insurance scheme," says Roth.
"The concept instantly made me nauseous," remembers Roth. "But it also felt real. People are sick. There are no limits to what they will do to another person for their own personal pleasure, and that's the most horrifying thing of all. It's what always stuck with me."
Roth was so jarred by this discovery that he immediately began to work on a documentary on the subject; but he soon began to wonder about the dangers of uncovering the truth.
"If I actually found anyone connected to an organisation that profited from murder, why would they think twice about taking me out?" he reasons.
Unsure of how to proceed safely, Roth set the idea aside.
In the meantime, Roth's debut feature, Cabin Fever, was released in theaters and became Lion Gate Films' top grossing film of 2003, eventually grossing over $100 million worldwide. Roth began a flurry of meetings in Hollywood, eventually meeting with Mike Fleiss and Chris Briggs, the producers behind 'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre' remake. They wanted to make a horror film called Hostel, about young backpackers travelling through Central Europe.
"I had done a fair amount of travelling and backpacking during college, as had Chris and Mike, and we loved the possibilities for a horror film set in an environment we hadn't seen since 'An American Werewolf in London'," says Roth. "But none of us really knew what the film was about beyond the title and the setting."
The idea for Hostel sat in limbo for about two years, until one afternoon when Roth had an epiphany: why couldn't Hostel be a film about the murder-for-profit business in Thailand? Roth imagined re-setting the story in Slovakia, a location that was close enough to the usual Eurotrip routes to Paris, Amsterdam, and Spain, but also on the fringe of most travel itineraries.  He envisioned two innocent American backpackers falling into a nefarious world of organised torture and murder. And suddenly, he knew he had a story to tell.
At the time of this breakthrough, Roth was in the midst of deciding between several projects to direct as his follow-up to Cabin Fever. Unsure of which project to pursue, he approached his friend Quentin Tarantino for advice and ended up pitching his new take on Hostel. Tarantino reportedly 'went crazy.' Says Roth, 'Quentin's an animated guy, and I'd never seen him this excited about anything. He was like, 'Oh my fucking God! You have to write this! That's the scariest fucking idea I've heard for a horror movie in years! Forget everything else you have in development at studios - go write this movie NOW.'
Inspired by Tarantino's enthusiasm, Roth unplugged his phone, shut down his e-mail, locked himself in his office and begun furiously scribbling away. "I'd call Quentin every few days if I was stuck on a story point, and he'd help reassure met that I was on the right path, or help me out of a story jam," recalls Roth. "It was pretty incredible to have someone like him as a sounding board. I found myself writing nearly 20 pages a day. I couldn't stop."
Three weeks after his conversation with Tarantino, Roth showed a completed draft to Boaz Yakin and Scott Spiegel, Roth's partners in their horror production company, Raw Nerve. "Boaz and Scott were incredibly enthusiastic about the project, and they contributed great ideas to the story," Roth says, "After months of looking for our next project together, we knew we had finally found it."
Roth then showed a revised script to Tarantino. Tarantino was such a fan of Roth's draft he decided to make Hostel his next "Quentin Tarantino Presents" project and immediately joined the production as an Executive Producer. Says Tarantino, "Eli's really found a way to push the envelope. No one's ever seen anything like this."
Producers Mike Fleiss and Chris Briggs subsequently contributed their own ideas to Roth's script, resulting in a production-ready draft that was even more frightening than before. Galvanized by the script's dynamic development, the producers raced right into production. A month later, production offices were set up in Prague.
For the lead roles of college buddies Paxton and Josh, Roth cast American actors Jay Hernandez, known for his work in Friday Night Lights, Ladder 49 and Torque, and Derek Richardson (Dumb and Dumberer). Having written a script that allowed for foreign actors to speak imperfect English, Roth was able to cast the remaining roles within the Czech Republic (with the exception of Eythor Gudjonsson, an Icelandic actor Roth met while promoting Cabin Fever). Among the noted Czech cast is Jan Vlasák, one of the top Shakespearean actors in the country, and Barbara Nedeljáková, who won the starring role of Natalya, the stunning femme fatale.
The Czech actors were thrilled to play parts that were more than the usual walk-on bits offered by American productions. "Most American movies that shoot in Prague cast out of the U.S. or England, and the Czech actors only get small parts and they are usually re-dubbed," says Barbara Nedljáková. "But with Hostel, we weren't trying to double for America. We could play Europeans and be ourselves. We all felt very lucky."
Wanting Hostel to look and feel authentically European, Roth hired Milan Chadima, a Czech D.P. who had recently shot 2
nd unit for Terry Gilliam on The Brothers Grimm. Says Tarantino, "I urged Roth to hire a European D.P. because they see things differently than Americans. They have a naturally more poetic sensibility."
Roth and Chadima collaborated with production designer Franco Carbone, who had worked with Roth on Cabin Fever, to create a fun, bright atmosphere that slowly evolves into a bleak and nightmarish universe where the only color is blood.  The team carefully shose a color and texture palate for every scene, deriving their aesthetic from the macabre photographs of Joel Peter Witkin and the dark short films of the London-based Brothers Quay (Street of Crocodiles).
In order to enhance the story's visual authenticity, the production shot entirely on location. During the course of the forty-day shoot, the production moved locations 30 times, from the exotic 16
th century village Czesky Krumlov, which doubles as the film's Slovakian village, to the basement of a closed down mental hospital built in 1915.
Throughout the production process, Roth knew that Hostel would be a marked departure from Cabin Fever. "I didn't want to make another horror-comedy," reports the director. "I wanted Hostel to be a pure horror film - one that starts out fun, but gets darder and darker and never looks back or winks at the audience."
If classic 1970
s American horror was the inspiration for Cabin Fever, then Roth credits Asian and South Korean horror filmmaking as the inspiration for Hostel. Yet Roth was relatively ignorant of young Asian masters like Hideo Nakata, Park Chan-Wook, and Takashi Miike until he attended world film festivals during the promotion of Cabin Fever. "I was exposed to a whole new world of Asian cinema I never knew existed. I was stunned," says the director. "Their horror films are so much more creative, disturbing, and effective than anything I have seen coming out of America. I started watching as many Asian and South Korean films I could get my hands on."
Roth cites films like Miike's Audition, Park's Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance, and older films like Sluizer's The Vanishing and Hardy's The Wicker Man as important touchstones in the development of Hostel. Particularly fond of Miike, Roth even wrote a part in Hostel for the cult Japanese director, and was honored when Miike flew to Prague from Japan to play the role.
Relentlessly graphic and deeply disturbing, Hostel should confirm Roth as an exciting director poised at the cutting edge of modern horror filmmaking. Like his Asian counterparts, he deliberately stretches genre boundaries in an effort to locate authentic, raw terror. "Directors like Miike and Park have been pushing the envelope of cinema for years," says Roth. "And that's always been my goal from the beginning. I think Hostel will surprise even hard core genre fans."

About the Filmmakers: Eli Roth (Writer/Producer/Director)
Eli Roth burst onto film scene at the 2002 Toronto Film Festival, with his debut film "Cabin Fever." Produced independently on low budget, "Cabin Fever" was the highest selling film at the 2002 Toronto Film Festival, after a frenzied bidding war between seven studios. "Cabin Fever" went on to be Lion's Gate's highest grossing film (no pun intended) of 2003, opening on 2,100 screens. Roth garnered critical acclaim around the globe, with glowing reviews fom The New York Times, Rolling Stone, Empire Magazine, and Premiere Magazine. In 2004 the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror gave Eli his first Saturn Award, The Filmmakers Showcase Award, given annually to a filmmaker the believe will be a leader in genre filmmaking.
Roth's future directing projects include "Scavenger Hunt," an original teen comedy he wrote for Universal Studios, "The Box," a psychological horror film he is co-writing with Richard Kelly ("Donnie Darko"), as well as a remake of the horror film "The Bad Seed" for Warner Brothers.

About the Cast

Jay Hernandez (Paxton)
Jay Hernandez emerged onto the Hollywood scene opposite Kirsten Dunst in the 2001 film Crazy/Beautiful. Since then, Hernandez has starred in a number of films, including Disney's sleeper hit The Rookie opposite Dennis Quaid, Joseph Kahn's Torque with Ice Cube, and Ladder 49 with Joaquin Phoenix and John Travolta.
Most recently, Hernandez was seen last fall in Friday Night Lights with Billy Bob Thornton. He recently wrapped The Nomad, a historical epic set in 18
th -century Kazakhstan that debuted in Cannes and will be distributed by the Winstein Company.
Next January, Hernandez will star Hostel, directed by Eli Roth (Cabin Fever). Premiering in Toronto to rave reviews, Hernandez stars in this disturbing psychological thriller about three men backpacking through Europe who end up the victims of an underground torture ring. He is currently in production on the Untitled World Trade Center Project for director Oliver Stone, opposite Nicolas Cage and Maggie Gyllenhaal. The project is currently set to be released in the summer of 2006.
Born and raised in Montebello, California, Hernandez was discovered in a Hollywood elevator by a talent manager. Since then his career has blossomed, from his first acting role in the independent feature, Living Life. He also had a recurring role on the television series "Hang Time."
Hernandez currently resides in Los Angeles.

Eythor Gudjonsson (Oli)
Eythor Gudjonsson is an entrepreneur by nature. He is a former athlete, two times Icelandic national champion with his team in the popular European sport team handball. Eythor was the marketing manager for Walt Disney Home video in Iceland for five years and set the world record within the Disney Corporation in sales of the Lion King video in 1995. In the year 2000, Eythor was able to obtain the franchise Little Caesars' Pizza and opened the operation in Iceland which set the world record in first week sales of a new franchise beating Domino's record at that time by 25%. This record still stands. Born and raised in Iceland, Eythor lives in Reykjavik where he runs several of his own businesses, ranging from animation to real estate projects.
Gudjonsson has been in a few television and newspaper advertisements but appearing in Hostel is his debut performance as lead character in a movie.
On Oli: "I am playing a colorful and happy character named Oli who is tired of his life back home and decides to travel to the mainland Europe to have some fun: There he meets Paxton and Josh in Berlin. Oli in a way feels sorry for the lonely Americans and decides to spice up their European experience by leading them into some wild situations. I had the chance to create the character with Eli - and we tried to make him sort of a wild and happy person but mysterious at the same time. He just comes with a big bang - has fun - and then he's gone. They love him but they don't have a clue who he really is or where he comes from! "It was one of the most entertaining things I have ever done in my life and my message to the audience is: - be happy no matter what!"

Barbara Nedeljáková (Natalya)
Barbara has appeared in such films as "Doom," with The Rock, and "Shanghai Knights" with Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson. Born and raised in Slovakia, she studied acting in Prague, where she lives and works regularly in the famed Czech marionette theater. A master puppeteer, Barbara has performed in numerous marionette productions, including "Don Giovanni, "Don Quixote of La Mancha," and "The Marriage of Figaro," often performing 3-4 roles per show. "Hostel" marks her first starring film role.
On Natalya: "Natalya's not a nice girl, but I like that about her. I work in the marionette theater and Natalya manipulates men the same way, so it was an easy role for me to play. I'm attracted to darker, more complex characters. Natalya starts off very sweet, and slowly reveals how cold and evil she is inside, so every scene had a subtle change in the performance. I think that everybody has some darkness inside, and we have rules in life that tell us that we have to behave and put on a happy façade. But deep down I think everyone has something like this, so people will relate to her."

Rick Hoffman (The American Businessman)
Rick Hoffman has appeared in a variety of prestigious film and television projects inculding the Clint Eastwood thriller "Bloodwork" and the Steven Bochco series "Philly." He also co-starred opposite Kim Basinger in the New Line feature "Cellular," and in Roland Emmerich's "The Day After Tomorrow." He has appeared in multi-episode arcs of "The Bernie Mac Show" and "The Practice."
Named by Variety as one of the "10 Actors To Watch," he also starred as the unforgettable Freddie Sacker on the drama series "The $treet."
Hoffman had a recurring role as Benji Brickman on "Providence," as well as guest appearances on "The Pretender" and "Alright Already." Additional feature credits include "Conspiracy Theory," "A Better Way To Die" and "Johnny Skidmarks."
Hoffman, born in Long Island, New York, currently resides in Los Angeles.

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