Spacefem.com

Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Art, music, projects, crafty things, or whatever you're working on

Moderators: DWH, edit the sad parts, Neko

Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby edit the sad parts » Wed Mar 30, 11:20 2011

If you saw the double-feature Grindhouse, a few years ago, you probably noticed the amusing fake trailer for the movie, Hobo with a Shotgun. It was recently made into a full-length feature, by a mostly Canadian cast and crew in Nova Scotia. It is a typical grindhouse(or exploitation) film,itself with quite a bit of gore, bizarre violence and boobs. I would not recommend it for the feint of heart...or those that wouldn't be able to watch a movie in which a school bus full of children is roasted alive with a flame-thrower, to the upbeat sounds of disco inferno.

The film is about a hobo in a terribly dangerous and corrupt city, who just can't take it anymore. He wants to get off of the streets, but struggles to save up enough money to buy himself a lawnmower so he can start his own business. In a moment of total frustration he buys a shotgun instead and decides to take down the corruption himself, vigilante-style.

The acting in it is fairly cheesy, which lends itself to the genre, with the exception of the Hobo. He delivers a very real and believable performance of a street person throughout the majority of the movie, all of the silly quotes and shot-gunning, aside. I did find myself feeling pretty sorry for the character, and even a little sad at times. However the rest of the film is true to its nature, and is very entertaining if you want to see a movie for vegetative purposes, as well as laughs. I know these kinds of movies are definitely not for everyone. I, however, really enjoyed it and it was nice to see a uniquely Canadian movie, as well. It is not common to hear Nova Scotian accents on the big screen. The soundtrack is quite good and the film also has cameos from George Strom and Ricky(from the trailer park boys).

I give Hobo with a Shotgun :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower: / :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower: :flamethrower:
What was once before you - an exciting, mysterious future - is now behind you. Lived; understood; disappointing. You realize you are not special. You have struggled into existence, and are now slipping silently out of it. This is everyone's experience. Every single one. The specifics hardly matter. Everyone's everyone.
User avatar
edit the sad parts
philophobia
philophobia
 
Posts: 8677
Joined: Tue Apr 6, 21:53 2004
Location: weirdly close

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby cwbyrvr » Wed Mar 30, 22:00 2011

I love that they're slowly turning the Grindhouse trailers into real movies. I still need to see Machete, though. And now this I guess.
spacefem wrote:incidently, hearing "i love you" doesn't count if you're naked. it's just too easy to love a naked person.

RD wrote:My armpits are the only area of my body that almost always stays clean-shaven, because if I let it go I feel like a 15-year-old boy trying to grow a beard. In my armpits.
User avatar
cwbyrvr
Phil
Phil
 
Posts: 6176
Joined: Mon Nov 3, 13:32 2003
Location: A Box of Fermented Grape Juice.

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby helium » Wed Mar 30, 22:32 2011

Machete was soo bad, but in a good way. In a "bad acting, over-the-top violence and random sex scenes" kind of way. I really want to see Hobo With a Shotgun now!

He wants to get off of the streets, but struggles to save up enough money to buy himself a lawnmower so he can start his own business. In a moment of total frustration he buys a shotgun instead and decides to take down the corruption himself, vigilante-style.

To be honest, I can see this having the potential to make me cry. >.>
and you can't tell me what my spirit
tells me isn't true


:spork: :bomb: BMMhuhwha?
"No, I can't see, fuck-mook! I have no eyes!"
User avatar
helium
I solve my problems with violence
I solve my problems with violence
 
Posts: 6495
Joined: Sat Mar 15, 15:11 2003
Location: MidWorld

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby Rainbow Dolphins » Fri Apr 1, 19:28 2011

Machete was AWESOME. That is pretty much all I have to contribute; this movie sounds like it's worth a look, too.
"Hi-diddle-dee-dee, god damn, the pirate's life for me." -the Mountain Goats
:chainsaw:!
User avatar
Rainbow Dolphins
freakish chainsaw girl
freakish chainsaw girl
 
Posts: 9136
Joined: Mon Nov 4, 1:48 2002
Location: In your closet. Armed.

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby marstewart » Tue Apr 17, 2:35 2012

Machete was amazingly beautiful wherein its seems to be educational.
A laugh is a terrible weapon than using weapons like knife, sword, stun gun sale etc.

Try to laugh : )
marstewart
UFO
UFO
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Tue Apr 17, 2:28 2012
Location: 1452 W WALTON ST 1, Illinois - 60642 Chicago

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby ladyhawk » Tue Apr 17, 5:14 2012

I watched this movie a few months ago, thinking that I'd really enjoy it, but it was actually too violent for me. Most of the violence was cheesy, so I didn't mind, but roasting kids on a schoolbus/a homeless woman and her baby in a dumpster was a bit much for me. Aside from those scenes, I quite enjoyed it, though.
Fuck being nice. I'd rather be honest.
User avatar
ladyhawk
established
established
 
Posts: 537
Joined: Wed Feb 16, 13:47 2011
Location: Anywhere Mastercard is accepted.

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby deanimal » Tue Apr 17, 12:42 2012

I am still waiting for them to make DON'T.
helium wrote:I went outside and suddenly there was no more gravity and my vagina could fly.
Sonic# wrote:Then the singularity happens. Then we meet God and fly into the sun. Then we save the whales.
User avatar
deanimal
Feed Me, Seymour!
Feed Me, Seymour!
 
Posts: 2869
Joined: Sat Jan 4, 21:30 2003
Location: texASS

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby Storage and Disposal » Tue Apr 17, 12:51 2012

deanimal wrote:I am still waiting for them to make DON'T.

Too bad they probably wouldn't have Will Arnett doing a voice over like he did for the trailer. That was half of the fun to me.
Dr. Mung-Mung wrote:He weeps for he has but one small tongue with which to taste an entire world.
User avatar
Storage and Disposal
You address omnipotence, tread carefully
You address omnipotence, tread carefully
 
Posts: 5278
Joined: Tue Jul 27, 5:31 2004

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby sagermo » Tue Apr 17, 20:32 2012

I also loved Machete, especially because of Robert De Niro's hilarious Texan character. I'd love to see a full length "Thanksgiving", but only if they kept that ridiculously low voiced man as the narrator. I'll probably watch "Hobo" soon.
:sheep: :dance: :rainbow: :dance: :sheep:
User avatar
sagermo
established
established
 
Posts: 39
Joined: Tue Mar 13, 18:59 2012
Location: Up your nose, with a rubber hose

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby monkeypoop » Wed Apr 18, 17:25 2012

I love me some ridiculous violent movies, but I really did not enjoy Hobo With a Shotgun at all. I can't put my finger on exactly why, but the violence in it wasn't the fun kind of violence that I enjoy in movies. It was more like the kind of violence that makes you feel bad. I would actually not recommend it to anyone, but sometimes you have to see and judge for yourself.
User avatar
monkeypoop
I have a nose.
I have a nose.
 
Posts: 1296
Joined: Thu Mar 25, 17:28 2004
Location: Your closet!

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby Aum » Tue Apr 24, 0:09 2012

Tarantino has already worn my patience for modern B movie knock-offs too thin. I respect a good throwback to the past but when your movie consists of a de facto cut and paste job from a slew of the greats, and in repeated features, it gets tired. It's how this faux genre exploits women that first drew my attention to what a big cliche it is, and then my attention was drawn to the violence.

If you're going to do what B movies did decades ago, can you at least insert some kind of angle that clues you into its satire, instead of merely recycling the exact same sexist garbage from that era? And that goes both for the men AND women portrayed in the movies. It's the same problem I have with all these modern movies about comic book heroes. Same tropes, same sexist trash, same privileged lead roles - they haven't changed anything. What's the point in remaking it if you're not improving upon it?

I know Tarantino had nothing to do with Hobo with a Shotgun, but it's still his shtick that they are copying and I won't be seeing it.
The artist's job is not to succumb to despair, but to find an antidote to the emptiness of existence. -W.A.
User avatar
Aum
Into The Unknown
Into The Unknown
 
Posts: 2595
Joined: Tue Nov 13, 23:35 2007
Location: Ƹ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒ

Re: Review: Hobo with a Shotgun

Postby deanimal » Tue Apr 24, 11:39 2012

Aum wrote:Tarantino has already worn my patience for modern B movie knock-offs too thin. I respect a good throwback to the past but when your movie consists of a de facto cut and paste job from a slew of the greats, and in repeated features, it gets tired. It's how this faux genre exploits women that first drew my attention to what a big cliche it is, and then my attention was drawn to the violence.

If you're going to do what B movies did decades ago, can you at least insert some kind of angle that clues you into its satire, instead of merely recycling the exact same sexist garbage from that era? And that goes both for the men AND women portrayed in the movies. It's the same problem I have with all these modern movies about comic book heroes. Same tropes, same sexist trash, same privileged lead roles - they haven't changed anything. What's the point in remaking it if you're not improving upon it?

I know Tarantino had nothing to do with Hobo with a Shotgun, but it's still his shtick that they are copying and I won't be seeing it.


Thank you for saying exactly how I feel but could not put to words. Mainly with comic book movies. Like, maybe I would like them if they at least played around with how things are portrayed, but they never do.
helium wrote:I went outside and suddenly there was no more gravity and my vagina could fly.
Sonic# wrote:Then the singularity happens. Then we meet God and fly into the sun. Then we save the whales.
User avatar
deanimal
Feed Me, Seymour!
Feed Me, Seymour!
 
Posts: 2869
Joined: Sat Jan 4, 21:30 2003
Location: texASS


Return to Creativity

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests