The Last House on the Left: First Preview
Masters of horror Wes Craven and Sean Cunningham revisit their landmark film that launched Craven’s directing career in 1972 and influenced decades of horror films to follow. Bringing one of the most notorious thrillers of all time to a new generation, they produce the story that explores how far two ordinary people will go to exact revenge on the sociopaths who harmed their child.
The night she arrives at the remote Collingwood lakehouse, Mari (Sara Paxton) and her friend are kidnapped by a prison escapee and his crew. Terrified and left for dead, Mari’s only hope is to make it back to parents John and Emma (Tony Goldwyn and Monica Potter). Unfortunately, her attackers unknowingly seek shelter at the one place she could be safe. And when her family learns the horrifying story, they will make three strangers curse the day they came to The Last House on the Left.
The original "The Last House on the Left" itself was heavily inspired by "Jungfrukällan", a movie with a very similar plot-line but not as graphic as depicted in Craven's film. In 2005, "Chaos" was released but due to rights issues it was not labeled as a remake of either Craven's film or "Jungfrukällan", but instead self-labeled itself as an original. "Chaos" was a failure both critically and financially, thus prompting Craven to produce a remake of his original movie, which in part was also due to the success of the 2006 "The Hills Have Eyes" remake.
The night she arrives at the remote Collingwood lakehouse, Mari (Sara Paxton) and her friend are kidnapped by a prison escapee and his crew. Terrified and left for dead, Mari’s only hope is to make it back to parents John and Emma (Tony Goldwyn and Monica Potter). Unfortunately, her attackers unknowingly seek shelter at the one place she could be safe. And when her family learns the horrifying story, they will make three strangers curse the day they came to The Last House on the Left.
The original "The Last House on the Left" itself was heavily inspired by "Jungfrukällan", a movie with a very similar plot-line but not as graphic as depicted in Craven's film. In 2005, "Chaos" was released but due to rights issues it was not labeled as a remake of either Craven's film or "Jungfrukällan", but instead self-labeled itself as an original. "Chaos" was a failure both critically and financially, thus prompting Craven to produce a remake of his original movie, which in part was also due to the success of the 2006 "The Hills Have Eyes" remake.
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