Tucker & Dale vs. Evil | |
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Directed by | Eli Craig |
Screenplay by |
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Story by | Eli Craig |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | David Geddes |
Edited by | Bridget Durnford |
Music by |
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Production companies | |
Distributed by | Magnet Releasing |
Release date |
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Running time | 89 minutes [2] |
Countries | |
Language | English |
Budget | $5 million [5] |
Box office | $5.2–$5.5 million [6] [5] |
Tucker & Dale vs. Evil is a 2010 black comedy horror film directed by Eli Craig and written by Craig and Morgan Jurgenson. It stars Tyler Labine, Alan Tudyk, Katrina Bowden, Brandon Jay McLaren, Jesse Moss, and Chelan Simmons. Labine and Tudyk play a pair of well-meaning hillbillies who are mistaken for killers by a group of clueless college students. The film premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and received a limited release in the United States.
The film begins with a reporter and cameraman being murdered before going back in time to the preceding events. Three days ago, a group of college kids - Allison, Chad, Chloe, Chuck, Jason, Naomi, Todd, Mitch and Mike - are camping in West Virginia. While at a gas station, they encounter Tucker and Dale, two well-meaning hillbillies who have just bought the vacation home of their dreams: a run-down lakefront cabin deep in the woods. On Tucker's advice, Dale tries to talk to Allison, but because of his inferiority complex and appearance, he only scares her and her friends. On the way to the cabin that Tucker has recently bought, they are pulled over by Sheriff Gurr, who warns them of the dangers of the area.
Tucker and Dale arrive at their decrepit cabin and begin repairing it. Nearby in the woods, Chad tells a story about the "Memorial Day Massacre", a hillbilly attack which took place 20 years ago. The college kids go skinny-dipping where Tucker and Dale are fishing, and Allison, startled, hits her head. Tucker and Dale save her from drowning, but her friends mistake them abducting her. When Allison wakes up in Tucker and Dale's cabin the next day, she is initially scared but gradually befriends them. The other college kids arrive at the cabin to save Allison from her "psychopathic captors", and Chuck runs away to get the police. While Dale and Allison are inside the cabin, hornets attack Tucker as he accidentally cuts a hive, causing him to frantically wave his chainsaw around, which the college kids misinterpret as hostility. They scatter through the woods, where Mitch accidentally impales himself on a broken tree, killing himself. After finding Mitch's body, Chad persuades the others that they are in a battle for survival.
Allison's friends follow Tucker and Dale back to their cabin and see Allison helping out with the construction of an outhouse, but they assume she is digging her own grave. The college kids attack, but Todd accidentally impales himself on his own spear when attacking Dale, and Mike falls into a wood chipper while lunging for Tucker, who bent down to pick some more wood. Allison is accidentally knocked unconscious by Dale's shovel during the attack, and he takes her inside. The other kids assume the hillbillies killed the two when they see Tucker trying to save Mike from the wood chipper. Tucker and Dale think the college kids are a part of a suicide pact, and that contacting the police will make them murder suspects. Chuck arrives back with Sheriff Gurr, who expresses doubt over Tucker and Dale's suicide-pact theory. Gurr goes inside the cabin and accidentally kills himself with a loose beam, then Chuck dies trying to threaten the hillbillies with the gun, only to shoot himself. Chad reappears and attempts to shoot Tucker and Dale, but only manages to capture Tucker, who was retrieving Dale's pet Jangers, whom he ties upside down to a tree. Chad then tortures Tucker and cuts off two of his fingers, sending them with a message to Dale, in an attempt to draw him out.
Dale leaves to rescue Tucker while Chad and Naomi return to the cabin to save Allison. When Allison tries to explain the situation, they accuse her of having Stockholm syndrome. Tucker and Dale return, and Allison attempts to lead a calm discussion. Chad says his grandmother told him that his father was killed in the Memorial Day Massacre, and his mother was the lone survivor. Jason and Chloe break in to retrieve Allison, and a fire breaks out. Tucker, Dale, and Allison escape; Naomi, Chloe, and Jason die, and Chad, who is now insane and scarred, vows revenge. After crashing their truck, an injured Tucker tells Dale that Chad has taken Allison to an old sawmill. At the sawmill, Chad ties Allison to a log and sets it to convey into the saw. Dale arrives and rescues Allison, and the two barricade themselves inside an upstairs office where they discover news clippings revealing Chad's father to be one of the hillbillies responsible for the massacre 20 years ago, and not one of the victims. Chad becomes enraged, but Dale throws a box of chamomile tea at Chad, giving him an asthma attack. Chad convulses and falls out of a window to his apparent death.
The police and a news crew arrive late at the cabin and broadcast a news report stating that the deaths appear to be the result of a suicide pact and a deranged killer, who is revealed to be Chad, has survived the fall. The reporter and cameraman are the same two from the film's opening scene. Tucker watches the report on the news while convalescing in the hospital. Dale enters and they discuss Tucker's recovery. Tucker asks Dale whether he managed to invite Allison on a date and is happy to hear the two of them are going bowling. Later that night at the bowling alley, Dale encourages a fellow hillbilly to talk to some girls and to "just be himself". As Dale and Allison confess their feelings for each other and kiss, the other hillbilly accidentally knocks out a girl in the background, starting a new misunderstanding.
The film's director, Eli Craig, and his wife Sasha have brief roles at the beginning and the end of the film as a cameraman and reporter respectively.
The production began in June 2009 with the casting of the actors. Principal photography started one month later in Calgary, Alberta. [7] In October 2009, post production ensued in British Columbia, and the first images were released as part of the American Film Market . [8]
The film premiered on 22 January 2010 at Sundance Film Festival [9] and was on 12 March 2010 part of the SXSW Film Festival. [10] The film was distributed by Magnolia and received a limited theatrical release in the US on 30 September 2011. [11] On its opening weekend, the film grossed $52,843 from 30 theaters. It grossed $223,838 in the US. It grossed between $5 and $5.3 million outside the US. [6] [5]
Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 85% of 116 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 6.9/10. The critical consensus states: "Like the best horror/comedies, Tucker & Dale vs. Evil mines its central crazy joke for some incredible scares, laughs, and—believe it or not—heart". [12] The film also has a score of 65 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 23 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [13]
Todd Gilchrist of Shock Till You Drop wrote: "Eli Craig's feature debut celebrates genre conventions while turning the traditional view of horror film heroes and villains upside down." [14] Roger Ebert also gave the film a positive review, writing: "Students of the Little Movie Glossary may find it funny how carefully Tucker and Dale works its way through upended cliches". [15] Noel Murray of The A.V. Club rated it C+ and called it "surprisingly clever" but "too slick and too cute". [16] Dennis Harvey of Variety wrote that the film "offers good-natured, confidently executed splatstick whose frequent hilarity suffers only from peaking too early." [17]
Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
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Leo Award [18] | Best Cinematography in a Feature Length Drama | David Geddes | Nominated |
Best Feature Length Drama | Rosanne Milliken and Crawford Hawkins | Nominated | |
Best Overall Sound in a Feature Length Drama | Paul A. Sharpe, Graeme Hughes and Iain Pattison | Nominated | |
Best Sound Editing | James Fonnyadt | Nominated | |
Best Sound Editing in a Feature Length Drama | Dario DiSanto, Brian Campbell, James Fonnyadt, Jay Cheetham, Kirby Jinnah and Kris Casavant | Nominated | |
Best Stunt Coordination in a Feature Length Drama | Jodi Stecyk | Nominated | |
Best Supporting Performance by a Male in a Feature Length Drama | Jesse Moss | Nominated | |
Sitges Film Festival | Best Film [19] | Eli Craig | Won |
SXSW Film Festival | Audience Award [20] | Won | |
Fantasia Festival | Jury Prize; Best First Feature [21] | Won | |
Ampia Awards | AMPIA Award; Best Feature Film | Won | |
Fangoria Chainsaw Awards | Best Actor | Tyler Labine | Nominated |
Best Supporting Actress | Katrina Bowden | Nominated | |
Best Limited-Release/Direct-to-Video Film | Won | ||
Best Screenplay | Eli Craig, Morgan Jurgenson | Won | |
In an interview with Choice Cuts, director Eli Craig expressed thoughts on a sequel titled Tucker and Dale Go To Yale and described it as " Good Will Hunting meets Texas Chainsaw Massacre ". In that same interview, Craig also liked Alan Tudyk's idea of doing a sequel that was similar to From Dusk till Dawn . [22]
At HorrorHound Weekend 2014, cast members Tyler Labine and Alan Tudyk confirmed that a sequel is in development. [23] [24] [25] In 2016, the two revealed that they are still actively developing the project despite other commitments. When asked of the status of the sequel at Boston Comic Con 2017, Alan Tudyk responded that a script had been written but was disappointing and unlikely to be moving forward. [26]
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