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Hatchet III

2013

Action / Comedy / Horror / Thriller

21
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten57%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled39%
IMDb Rating5.6109546

sequelslashergorehorrorswamp

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Danielle Harris Photo
Danielle Harris as Marybeth
Sean Whalen Photo
Sean Whalen as Randy
Sid Haig Photo
Sid Haig as Abbott MacMullen
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
691.71 MB
1280*534
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S 1 / 1
1.3 GB
1920*800
English 2.0
R
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S 0 / 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by StevePulaski7 / 10

Green reconnects with his footing

When a horror franchise takes a turn for the worst, it scarcely ever catches itself and rebounds back to quality entertainment for its sequels. This reason is precisely why I'm so stunned that I'm awarding Hatchet III three stars. I'm reminded of its predecessor, a dull and gory affair that emphasized on the monotony of the horror genre, and showed that even if you bill yourself as a favorable homage to the films of the eighties that you'll need to work on not having familiarity breed contempt.

Hatchet III, however, is simply fun as we revisit (and hopefully for the final time) the swamps of New Orleans where Victor Crowley (Kane Hodder) lives. Crowley is a deformed killer who exists to haunt the swamps in search of his father's remains. We begin immediately where Hatchet II left off (just like with that film, respectively),where Marybeth (Marybeth Dunston) escapes the swamplands only to be arrested at the police station for coming in bloodied and with a weapon after fighting off Crowley. However, Crowley is still alive in the woods, and accompanied by an investigative journalist who is blacklisted for believing in the man and a police officer, Marybeth and the rest of the police force venture out to the swamps to take out Crowley once and for all.

Hatchet II was a little redundant and smothering with its endless obsession with gore and violence, and its dizzying plot developments that lacked pacing and suspense. Hatchet III is the closest thing to slowburn horror in the slasher genre I've seen recently, giving the film enough time to build up adequate suspense before the arrival of the long-awaited madman. It's fair to say the "catch the killer" plot with an abundance of police officers and methods of blunt force is overdone and repetitive, but I find this to be is more competent approach to a sequel rather than an approach that truly does bring a hatchet-job to a solid idea.

The film was directed by BJ McDonnell and was penned and financed by the franchise's creator, Adam Green, whose film Frozen I named one of the best horror films of the year in 2010. Green, whatever way you want to slice it (pun intended),he has an incorruptible love for the genre and he's showing it in a way that isn't disrespectful or quietly smarmy. He's making rawer, gorier horror films, that kindly drift away from the overcompensating and redundant confines of the paranormal and exorcism plots that plague theaters every year. Whether or not people get his work, as well, doesn't seem to faze him either. He's just seems to be happy his work is getting around and his love for the horror genre is being expressed accordingly.

The Hatchet franchise has been something of a roller-coaster, but never a burden. All the films run at a concise eighty minutes, give or take, and they all feature enough gore and inanity to satisfy on some level.With the third installment, Green has reconnected with his footing, which is a great mix of gratuitous gore and stable plotting; and, not to mention, terrific performances by the likes of Derek Mears and Sid Haig (who gives probably the best performance since Rob Zombie's The Devil's Rejects).

Starring: Danielle Harris, Kane Hodder, Zach Galligan, Caroline Williams, Derek Mears, and Sid Haig. Directed by: BJ McDonnell.

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca5 / 10

Middling sequel

The best thing I can say about HATCHET III is that it's a slight improvement over its predecessor, HATCHET II. The first film is still the best, of course, and the only one I'd consider watching again; the problem with these sequels is that they simply retread the original plotting with a few twists to try to bring originality to it, but it doesn't work.

Mary Beth thinks she's managed to kill vicious bayou murderer Victor Crowley for good, only for him to return from the grave once again seeking vengeance. She ends up being accused of the previous movie's murders and gets thrown in jail where she must join forces with a reporter to get to the heart of the matter, so to speak. Meanwhile, the sheriff organises a posse to go into the bayou and take down the killer for good...

HATCHET III is another excuse for gory effects and the film is chock-full of gooey death scenes which take extreme to a new level. The level of splatter is incredibly over the top, but I didn't like how Kane Hodder looks like a generic mutant villain now and the kills are hardly anything to get excited about, if I'm honest; there's an air of familiarity over the whole production which saps enjoyment of it. This time around Adam Green lets a camera operator buddy of his handle the directing and the result is less than impressive. Still, we do get an impressive cast headlined by the likable Zach Galligan (GREMLINS) and featuring Derek Mears (THE AGGRESSION SCALE),Caroline Williams (THE Texas CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2),a returning Parry Shen, and a cameoing Sid Haig.

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle5 / 10

stay with Danielle Harris

A blood-covered Marybeth Dunston (Danielle Harris) walks out of the Louisiana bayou, carrying a severed head and a shotgun, into a police station and is quickly arrested. The police finds the bloody massacre scene. Victor Crowley (Kane Hodder) comes back to life and starts murdering again. Amanda Fowler (Caroline Williams) sneaks into jail with a plan to kill Victor once and for all. Sheriff Fowler (Zach Galligan) takes the SWAT team into the swamp only to be attacked.

Having never seen the Hatchet franchise, this starts quite well. It doesn't hurt to have Danielle Harris who gets hosed down prison-style. She's a good smart-mouthed lead. There is plenty of bloody gore but the characters are nothing more than cannon fodder. It's still fun but they should have kept Danielle with them. Splitting the characters into two groups does not help. I simply don't care about the Sheriff and his people. There is a bit of fun with Sid Haig. This movie is a bit of a gorefest but it could have been more.

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