IMDb RATING
4.1/10
19K
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An inheritance leads a young man and his friends to an abandoned resort inhabited by two sketchy caretakers and a clan of mutant cannibals.An inheritance leads a young man and his friends to an abandoned resort inhabited by two sketchy caretakers and a clan of mutant cannibals.An inheritance leads a young man and his friends to an abandoned resort inhabited by two sketchy caretakers and a clan of mutant cannibals.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Roxanne Carrion
- Jillian
- (as Roxanne Pallett)
Danko Jordanov
- Saw Tooth
- (as Danko Yordanov)
Talitha Luke-Eardley
- Daria
- (as Talitha Eardley)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I know the Wrong Turn franchise is not for everyone, blood, gore and minimal story telling but it's easy watching horror.
Please believe me I was looking forward to seeing no.6 but sadly it let me down.
I was expecting dodgy acting, very little story telling and mostly lots of squealing laughs from 'Three fingers' the ugly blonde, along with plenty of bloody deaths.
Yes the acting was dodgy, but too much story and not enough bloody deaths.
It left me feeling nothing but bored. Sorry
Please believe me I was looking forward to seeing no.6 but sadly it let me down.
I was expecting dodgy acting, very little story telling and mostly lots of squealing laughs from 'Three fingers' the ugly blonde, along with plenty of bloody deaths.
Yes the acting was dodgy, but too much story and not enough bloody deaths.
It left me feeling nothing but bored. Sorry
"I want to meet these people and find out what I'm all about." Danny (Iloot) has just found out that that he has inherited a mysterious resort in West Virginia. Him and his friends decide to take the trip to see what he has. When they arrive they meet Jackson and Sally (Katz) who claim to be his relatives. What starts out as an exciting new adventure take a deadly turn when family secrets are revealed. So...what can I say about Wrong Turn 6? If you have seen the others then you will know what to expect from this. There is a lot of gore and cannibalism. So if that is your thing then you will love this. When most horror franchises get into the 5th and 6th movies they turn more comedic. This one hasn't done that yet, I'm not sure if that's a good or a bad thing. What I do know is that this is a series that didn't need one sequel let alone 5. Overall, if you have seen the others then you might at well watch this one. I give this a C-.
I always had a peculiar fondness for the "Wrong Turn" franchise. It's certainly not the greatest horror series out there, but at least the installments all guarantee unpretentious and straightforward splatter-entertainment. After a new sequel every two year since 2007, the series seems to have halted since 2014, but I'll cheerfully keep watching more sequels when they come, even if they make another twenty-six of them! Part 6 makes one horrible mistake, however, namely that the new director Valeri Milev and writer Frank H. Woodward tried to tell an ambitious story with depth and character background. Bad idea; - the reasons why parts 2, 3 and 4 were so entertaining are that the plots are simple and the gore is utterly disgusting. Here, they come up with a far-fetched and completely implausible story about an introvert and half-depressed New Yorker inheriting a humongous hotel/spa resort in Hobb Springs, West-Virginia. Danny heads over there, together with a large group of his friends, and finds that the two caretakers are trying to show that he's part of a secluded (read: inbred) mountain family clan. Meanwhile, the trio of deranged mutant hillbillies from the previous films joyously slaughter Danny's friends and half of the nearby town. It's best not to contemplate too much about the "plot". Exactly how did a West-Virginian hillbilly-baby end up in New York? How can two incestuous freaks possibly run a giant hotel? Why isn't anybody investigating the dozens of missing person cases? Part 6 contains loads of gratuitous sex, usually immediately followed by revolting killings. The biker girl at the beginning is the prettiest actress of the bunch, especially naked, but she's only a random casualty whose face gets sawn in half with barbed wire. The special effects are okay, albeit often too extreme and sickening just for the sake of being sickening. I'm not complaining about that, though, since that is exactly why people like me are watching series like "Wrong Turn".
The fact that Wrong Turn became a franchise in the first place is baffling, not that I'm complaining. The original was essentially The Texas Chainsaw Massacre meets The Hills Have Eyes, and it was great for what it was, but hardly original enough to warrant the franchise treatment. Then it got an action-packed, direct-to-video sequel featuring Henry Rollins kicking all sorts of inbred cannibal ass, and it was awesome. Then the sequels kept coming and coming; Wrong Turn 4 has some merit in its own trashy sort of way, but 3 and 5 are among the worst "films" ever made. So going into Wrong Turn 6: Last Resort, you know not to expect top shelf cinema. But at the very least, you hope for some camp value, gratuitous nudity, and brutal kills.
Wrong Turn 6 tries something unique to the franchise, though: a psychological angle. It's a story about a guy who inherits a large mansion from an unknown relative, and the mansion turns out to be the home and breeding grounds for the grotesque inbred cannibals we've come to know and love. The psychological aspect comes into play with the mansion's caretakers, distant relatives to the protagonist, and how they gradually lure him away from the reality that he once knew, represented by his oblivious group of friends, and eventually seduce him into their demented family culture. It's quite disturbing actually, and there are plenty of wince-inducing scenes here. The problem is the writing, directing, and acting - the bare necessities for a good film.
The dialogue is horrendous; sadly, not in a so-bad-it's-funny sort of way. Things aren't much better acting-wise. It's not like great actors could have done much with a script like this, but these people are so unconvincing in their performances that the dialogue-driven scenes become downright aggravating to sit through. The sole exception is Sadie Katz as the caretaker Sally, who gives an unsettlingly sensual conviction to her character. She's by far the most alluring part of the film and deserves props for adding some credibility to the otherwise irredeemably bland cast. In regards to the directing, it can feel like you're watching a soft-core porn in one scene and then a graphic, torture-porn ridden snuff film in another. This may be due to the writing, but there's not even an attempt at building suspense. It just transitions from scene to scene with no regard to consistency in tone, pacing, or atmosphere; until finally, the movie ends.
Again, there are admittedly great ideas buried under the disastrous execution. The plot is a nice change of pace for the series, the deaths are gruesome, and the ending is no doubt unnerving. Sadly, Wrong Turn 6 is bereft of production value, and the subject matter is too bleak to be enjoyed in a campy, fun way. It's a dreary exercise in gratuity; from the glorious nudity to the grisly gore, it's all shock and no awe. If you've seen the previous five installments, you might as well watch this one - it's a hell of a lot better than 5. But don't go in hoping for a return to the schlocky entertainment value of 2 or the genuine terror of the original because you sure as hell won't find either in Wrong Turn 6.
Wrong Turn 6 tries something unique to the franchise, though: a psychological angle. It's a story about a guy who inherits a large mansion from an unknown relative, and the mansion turns out to be the home and breeding grounds for the grotesque inbred cannibals we've come to know and love. The psychological aspect comes into play with the mansion's caretakers, distant relatives to the protagonist, and how they gradually lure him away from the reality that he once knew, represented by his oblivious group of friends, and eventually seduce him into their demented family culture. It's quite disturbing actually, and there are plenty of wince-inducing scenes here. The problem is the writing, directing, and acting - the bare necessities for a good film.
The dialogue is horrendous; sadly, not in a so-bad-it's-funny sort of way. Things aren't much better acting-wise. It's not like great actors could have done much with a script like this, but these people are so unconvincing in their performances that the dialogue-driven scenes become downright aggravating to sit through. The sole exception is Sadie Katz as the caretaker Sally, who gives an unsettlingly sensual conviction to her character. She's by far the most alluring part of the film and deserves props for adding some credibility to the otherwise irredeemably bland cast. In regards to the directing, it can feel like you're watching a soft-core porn in one scene and then a graphic, torture-porn ridden snuff film in another. This may be due to the writing, but there's not even an attempt at building suspense. It just transitions from scene to scene with no regard to consistency in tone, pacing, or atmosphere; until finally, the movie ends.
Again, there are admittedly great ideas buried under the disastrous execution. The plot is a nice change of pace for the series, the deaths are gruesome, and the ending is no doubt unnerving. Sadly, Wrong Turn 6 is bereft of production value, and the subject matter is too bleak to be enjoyed in a campy, fun way. It's a dreary exercise in gratuity; from the glorious nudity to the grisly gore, it's all shock and no awe. If you've seen the previous five installments, you might as well watch this one - it's a hell of a lot better than 5. But don't go in hoping for a return to the schlocky entertainment value of 2 or the genuine terror of the original because you sure as hell won't find either in Wrong Turn 6.
I feel like this really had potential. It certainly stands out in terms of differences from the other Wrong Turn films I've seen (the first two). Instead, it just feels half baked. The horror doesn't really come into play until very late and it all seems to go by very fast, and many of its progressions and developments just aren't very interesting. The acting is decent, with Sadie Katx being the MVP for her scenes in the climax. She totally understands campiness and delivers some truly hilarious, entertaining work. Definitely easily the best thing about it. Overall, not nearly as good as the first two, not sure in comparison to the others.
Did you know
- TriviaIn October 2014, a court case was filed in Ireland over the unauthorized use of a photo of a woman who went missing in County Wexford. The resulting court ordered injunction filed in November 2014 resulted in distributor 20th Century Fox to recall all DVD and Blu-ray releases of the film and pull all online streaming sources.
- GoofsIn the beginning of the film Vic says Hobb Springs was established in 1926, but a few seconds after a sign says the hotel was established in 1902.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Wrong Turn 6: Last Resort - All the Kills in Them Hills (2014)
- SoundtracksEvil Trip
Written & Performed by Adrian Boluarte Chong
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,200,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 31m(91 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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