The Last House in the Woods ( Il Bosco fuori ) ( Italian Chainsaw ) [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.2 Import - Italy ]
 
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The Last House in the Woods ( Il Bosco fuori ) ( Italian Chainsaw ) [ NON-USA FORMAT, PAL, Reg.2 Import - Italy ]

Daniela Virgilio , Daniele Grassetti , Gabriele Albanesi  |  Unrated |  DVD
2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)


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Italy released, PAL/Region 2 DVD: it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player. You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada: LANGUAGES: Italian ( Dolby Digital 2.0 ), English ( Subtitles ), WIDESCREEN (1.85:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Cast/Crew Interview(s), Commentary, Interactive Menu, Scene Access, Short Film, Trailer(s), SYNOPSIS: A pair of youngsters seeking a little privacy in the woods get more than they bargained for when they are assaulted by a trio of thugs and rescued by a most unusual couple in director Gabrielle Albanesi's gruesome tribute to the drive-in shockers of yesteryear. All Aurora (Daniela Virgilio) and Rino (Daniele Grassetti) wanted was to find a secluded place where they could make love in nature, but the appearance of three sadistic bullies (David Pietroni, Garemia Longobardo, and Cristiano Callegaro) soon sends a romantic evening alone careening into violence. In the ensuing struggle, Rino is beaten mercilessly and the three intruders prepare to rape Aurora. Mercifully, at the last possible moment, the couple is rescued by tough talking Clara (Santa De Santis) and pistol-packing Antonio (Rino Diana). After chasing the attackers away, Clara and Antonio offer to take Rino and Aurora to their remote cabin in order to recover - an offer which the frightened youngsters appreciatively accept... ...The Last House in the Woods ( Il Bosco fuori ) ( Italian Chainsaw )

 

Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (5)
3 star:
 (4)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (9)
 
 
 
 
 
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2.3 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars The Last House in the Woods, August 11, 2010
This review is from: The Last House in the Woods (DVD)
Two teens run into trouble off the side of the road, but the young punks that are harassing them are the least of their worries... Their would-be rescuers take them back to a house of horrors in the woods, where they are beaten and tortured by a demented family of freaks! As the familiar title indicates, LAST HOUSE is a complete throwback to the Exploitation films of the early 70's, and it is jam-packed with all of the abusive sexuality and excessive gore that the genre is known for. Many of the characters and scenes draw heavily from influences like THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, THE HILLS HAVE EYES, and (obviously) THE LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT, but when it comes time to distinguish itself from the others, it never manages to find meaning or create its own unique voice. This, combined with the weak performances and amateur direction, makes THE LAST HOUSE IN THE WOODS nothing more than a cheap imitation. It would not even be worth mentioning if it were not for the gruesome make-up and gore FX provided by Italian designer Sergio Stivaletti (DEMONS, CEMETERY MAN).

-Carl Manes
I Like Horror Movies
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Echoing The Eurohorror Boom..., October 29, 2008
This review is from: The Last House in the Woods (DVD)
If you want to get me excited, drop the name Sergio Stivaletti into a conversation. I know his special effects are not always perfect, but he believes in getting his hands VERY dirty and his physical effects always satisfy my lust for Eurohorror thrills. So, I was shocked to see the recent Ghost House Underground DVD, The Last House In The Woods, includes his name as not only effects man but also as a producer.
I needed to see it...just as soon as someone returned the sole copy at the rental shop. I lucked out and grabbed this up, and I can say that it certainly does warrant a rent from any Italian horror fanatic. A classic? No. A splatterfest? At times... A throwback to the glory years? A bit.


Il Bosco fuori (The Forest Outside) starts off in classic euroTRASH fashion as a family gets trapped on a lonely road, only to end up getting smashed (literally) and pummelled to death. Dad and mum go down in front of their son...but what happens to the little boy that sees the Giallo Killer?
It ain't pretty...

After the engaging start, things meander as we meet our protaganists, Aurora and Rino. She is pretty and likes to draw with crayons while Rino gives her the what for. Sure. Rino however...well, he comes off as a fairly pathetic loser that can't get his head around the inevitable break up. The pair go off on a lonely road to talk and have more senseless, and off screen, sex.

Of course, while crayon gal and Mr. Please Take Me Back are chatting we meet three idjits that tripped over a few decades and fell out of Demons. They are just looking for some action and find our emotionally conflicted friends. They try to rape the girl, but are stopped as a passing motorist threatens to kill them. The motorists seem so nice...they offer to help the pair out. Rino got a beating and needs a little rest.


A shame that their house is way out in the woods. And their son is wearing the kid dentures from Phenomena!! Oh, and the pair are ooky...really ooky. AND...they keep some deformed dudes with chainsaws on the property.


Now, we could go on with the plot, but once you get to the chainsaws I'm both sold and happy.
Director Gabriele Albanesi has his heart in the right place and his blood bib firmly secured so that Stivaletti gets to work plenty of his particular magic. The gore flows as chainsaw dismemberments, gunshots and stiff beatings are passed around. And this is all good, just the Stivaletti contributions make the film worth watching. However, and perhaps this is a throwback to a large portion of 80's eurohorror, the pacing is way off. It is really slow (instead of suspenseful) for a good stretch. But all is forgiven by the end of the 88 minutes.


Made with very little funds, you can obviously see everyone putting an extra effort in to making it a worthwhile film. It is weird that most reviews of this film I've stumbled across relate this to a Giallo. It is in no way like a giallo. This is straight up Eurotrash, more a hybrid Texas Chainsaw Massacre by way of Andrea Bianchi would be more suitable. Maybe that sounds like a backhanded compliment, but that is high praise from me. So, I can't complain.

Well, I can complain about one thing. I can't believe this was released, but THE TORTURER, directed by Lamberto Bava and even gorier than this film, is just sitting on a shelf (and Russian dvd). Somebody point Tapert and Ghost House that way please!

I did learn a lesson about the place of music in Italian horror. I can overlook many many small problems with a movie. I can overlook many big ones, such as the dubbing on the film. But MUSIC is a key ingredient. Dario Argento's horror films would not have been as good without Goblin in my mind. No way, no how, would a classical horror score helped Suspiria become the eurohorror classic it is. Even in the often maligned 80s I can name several composers that I will happily buy up on CD. Carlo Maria Cordio, Al Festa (yes, Fatal Frames guy) and Stefano Mainetti are always in my musical playlists. So, can Filippo Barbieri and Federico Bruno pull this part of the equation off?
Sort of. I loved this score-I want it on CD. Fantastic in some parts and eerie in others-it is almost a trance version of a deranged 80s horror soundtrack. However, it fails the film. The movie isn't spooky...ever. It is over the top and when you place this music beside the visuals it detracts from the intensity of the images. A shame, because the two elements stand apart very well-but don't come together for me.

So...go rent it. Enjoy seeing Sergio Stivaletti bring the pain as he usually does and take it as a tribute to an era that has perhaps gone by. I don't think I'll be going back for more, but as a one shot viewing, this is an entertaining chainsaw throwdown.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars It is not the house or the forest that is going to get you, it is that chainsaw, October 28, 2008
This review is from: The Last House in the Woods (DVD)
When I got "The Last House in the Woods" in the mail it turned out the description on the sleeve was not for this Ghost House Underground movie but for a different one, namely "Room 205." Since that one is about a college student moving into a haunted door room and this one has parents driving with their young boy out in the country, it was easy to tell this was not that movie. After watching "The Last House in the Woods" I was wishing this had been the other movie, because despite my limited knowledge of the laws of probability I have to believe it is way better than this one, which currently has the distinction of being the worse of the six GHU films I have checked out on DVD so far this month.

Rino (Daniele Grassetti) has broken up with Aurora (Daniela Virgilio), but as he tries to get back on her good side the unlucky couple are attacked by a trio of thugs. The good news is that the parents with their son come along, rescue the couple, and take them back to their house. But since this is clearly the last house in the woods, this is really bad news. Ultimately, what I am remind of are some of the exploitation films from the 1960s I have seen, like "Wizard Of Gore," in that "The Last House in the Woods" is trying to provide a similar level of blood and gore. The problem is that we are almost a half-century past that approach, so I have to wonder what is the point? If you have never seen a good old fashioned exploitation film with buckets of blood, then this one will get you back up to speed. But at least exploitation films were always trying to come up with some distractions, no matter how weird or inane, to justify all the blood and gore. This one just has a single-minded "kill, baby, kill" mentality that is so rudimentary it is ultimately boring.

Written and directed by Gabriele Albanesi, this film's original title in Italian is "Il Bosco fuori," which translates as "The Forest Outside" and makes no sense as the title of this particular horror film since almost all of the horror takes place in, well the last house in the woods and not outside in the forest. The PAL version of this movie actually calls it "Italian Chainsaw" and that is ultimately as good a two word encapsulation of this 2006 film as you can have, and as soon as that is said I have to assume that everybody has seen better chainsaw movies, whether we are talking an original or a remake. Yes, it is probably absurd to accuse a chainsaw movie of being inelegant, but even bad artistic pretensions are better than none.

In terms of DVD extras, the cupboard is not completely sparse here. Albanesi provides a commentary track along with his short film "L'Armadio" ("The Closet"), where how the little kid acts after the "punch line" is revealed does not jive with his actions prior to that point. You also have a backstage featurette and the trailer (the trailers for all of the other seven Ghost House Underground films are at the start of the DVD, and it is more interesting to go back and look at them after you have seen the movies to judge how well (or not) they set up these films (at which point you will learn that what they thought would be the hook for this one was something other than "chainsaw").
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its godawful. the cheapness is unparallelled. 0 Jan 31, 2009
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