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Wolf Creek [HD] [Unrated]

HD-DVD | 2004 | Australia | 104 min. | WEINSTEIN COMPANY

Members Price:
$9.20
          Discontinued product!

Retail Price: $12.97      Members Save: $3.77 ( 29% )

Director(s): Greg McLean
Starring: Gordon Poole, Andy McPhee, Aaron Sterns, John Jarratt, Nathan Phillips, ...
 
     

Region:
Video: Enhanced Widescreen Letterbox for 16x9 TV
Audio: Dolby Digital w/ sub-woofer channel
Language: English, French
Subtitles: Spanish
Weight factor: 1 item(s)

Plot Synopsis

A dream vacation turns into a nightmare in this taut thriller from Australia. Ben (Nathan Phillips), Lizzie (Cassandra Magrath), and Kristy (Kestie Morassi) are three friends who, after a night of celebratory drinking, hit the road for a trip to Wolf Creek National Park, where they plan to spend a week hiking and surfing. The three friends are happy to be spending time together, especially after Ben makes the happy discovery that Lizzie is as infatuated with him as he is with her. However, after a long day on foot, Ben, Lizzie, and Kristy make the unpleasant discovery that their car's battery is dead, leaving them stuck in the middle of nowhere. Help arrives in the form of Mick (John Jarratt), a burly but good-natured outdoorsman who happens upon them; Mick tells them that he can fix their car, and offers to give them a ride to his place down the road. Grateful but a bit nervous around the gregarious stranger, Ben, Lizzie, and Kristy offer Mick a wealth of thanks for his help, and give him some money for his troubles before they fall asleep around the campfire. The next morning, the travelers find themselves bound, gagged, drugged, and separated from one another, and they realize Mick is not the good Samaritan they imagined. Wolf Creek was the first feature film from writer and director Greg McLean. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Editorial Reviews:

Wolf Creek isn't so much the kind of horror film that a guy would take his date to see in hopes that she would cling to his arm as it is the type of film a guy would take a girl to see in hopes of ending the relationship. In short, Wolf Creek isn't an enjoyable stalk-and-slash effort like the self-conscious Scream or I Know What You Did Last Summer films, but an effective exercise in fear more along the lines of such downbeat horror dramas as Open Water or the 2004 trapped-in-the-wilderness French frightener Calvaire. Unlike the unsympathetic yuppie blowhards of Open Water, however, the relatively carefree young adults that set out across the Australian countryside in Wolf Creek are as sympathetic as they are believable -- and when an innocent crush begins to develop into something more for two of the travelers, the honesty and gentle awkwardness of their first kiss quietly draws the viewer in before all hell breaks loose. Though impatient genre fans may complain that first-time feature director Greg McLean spends a little too much time on character development in the opening act, more forgiving viewers will likely appreciate the contrast between the youthful fun in the sun of the opening scenes and the seemingly eternal darkness suffered by the characters after falling in with a madman whose earthy, easygoing charm masks a monster whose depravity knows no bounds. The hypnotic ferocity of veteran Australian actor John Jarratt's outback psychopath has all the makings of an iconic cinematic psycho -- creepy quips and unsettling stare all accounted for -- and though one could see Jarratt's sadistic slasher getting his own frightful franchise thanks to a fairly ambiguous ending, the film's reality-based origins and good taste will likely make this a one-off deal for the capable actor. Make no mistake, the violence here is grim, and the horrific suffering that those characters endure is made even more palpable by the fact the film was loosely inspired by real-life events. While that fact alone may be enough to assure that Wolf Creek is not going to make the "must-see" lists of more sensitive viewers, when all is said and done McLean's debut feature is as lean and tightly wound as its geographically menacing title. There's not much fun to be had at Wolf Creek, but the fact that it offers one of the most visceral and unrelenting survival horror stories to hit the multiplexes in some time is difficult to deny. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide