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What if everything you love was taken from you in the blink of an eye? "The Host" is the next epic love story from the creator of the "Twilight Saga," worldwide bestselling author, Stephenie Meyer. When an unseen enemy threatens mankind by taking over their bodies and erasing their memories, Melanie Stryder (Saoirse Ronan) will risk everything to protect the people she cares most about - Jared (Max Irons), Ian (Jake Abel), her brother Jamie (Chandler Canterbury) and her Uncle Jeb (William Hurt) , proving that love can conquer all in a dangerous new world. (official distributor synopsis)

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kaylin 

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English Okay, the creators came up with a pretty interesting idea. Melanie and her alien, Wanda, eventually become friends and are able to function in one body. However, Melanie loves one person, and Wanda, based on her understanding of love, falls in love with someone else. It could be quite entertaining, or at least an asylum, because this is a love square that has the shape of a triangle, but all of this is obviously very sterile, and we can't expect the creators to surprise us with anything. No good jokes, no naughtiness, and no proper psychology. In the end, it's just a simple variation of "Twilight," where the girl doesn't choose between a werewolf and a vampire, but between two, pardon my language, idiots. Stephanie Meyer is actually repeating herself, and where she had the werewolf Jacob find love in Bella's daughter - which is a bit creepy, let's be honest, especially when everyone nods approvingly, as if it's the right thing to do - in this case, it's resolved a little more simply. But I won't spoil the ending for you. More: http://www.filmovy-denik.cz/2013/07/hostitel-2013-25.html ()

J*A*S*M 

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English A star for “Radioactive” in the end credits. But other than that, I want to ask the cunt that wrote this to next time rape a different genre than one I like. To make sci-fi for people who don’t like sci-fi makes no sense. Let the intellectually tween audience and readers have their tween romances, as long as they remain in the field of tween romance. To see in horror, or science fiction, a story driven mainly by the heroine’s decision between two hunks is very annoying. But the saddest thing is that here and there you can see glimpses of a sci-fi motif that deserves to be properly developed. Alas, the mind of Stephenie Meyer is not enough for it. And Andrew Niccol is longer a filmmaker I want to follow. To lend himself for this crap, ew! ()

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POMO 

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English If you don’t switch your brain off, you’re going to suffer. I’d like to have seen Andrew Niccol’s face when he was reading Stephenie Meyer’s opus and I want to know what pills he was on when he adapted it into a screenplay. In terms of content, The Host is perfectly flat and has the production values of an average TV pilot (cardboard cave interiors, “futuristic” cars painted silver). In terms of logic and message, it involves the completely botched up sci-fi subject matter of “body snatchers”, unnecessarily diluted with a Twilight-esque motif of deciding between two boys. The audience laughed at scenes that were meant to be serious or deep (e.g. the ending). William Hurt reprised the mentor/father role he played in The Village. Diane Kruger looks good in white and was the only thing in the movie that I more or less enjoyed (but only visually). The second star in my rating is just for her. I understand the success of Twilight, I even liked the first instalment, but this is really dumb. You’ll do better to watch Michael Bay’s The Island – it has a message, it is likeable and has good actors, it’s fast-paced, visually polished and offers top-notch action. The Host has NOTHING. ()

Filmmaniak 

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English It's definitely not science fiction. The introduction has good pace, but the absence of a story deadens the film after twenty minutes, and for the rest of the film a few characters talk boringly to each other in an underground shelter in the desert. The dialogues are banal or even comically naive, there is almost no tension or action (there is only one action scene lasting 20 seconds). The technological aspects do not work because they are not explained in any way during the course of the film. In addition, the creators failed to draw tension, fatefulness or stronger emotions from the scenes. Because of this, the result amount to stupid, superficial, unreliable storytelling empty of content that passes you by without a chance to make a positive impact. ()

D.Moore Boo!

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English What a mess, and I have no prejudice whatsoever about the author of the novel, as I have read nothing by her and have not seen a single Twilight. On the other hand, I thought that The Host might surprise me. But man, that hurt. I like Saoirse Ronan (those unlit eyes!), Diane Kruger and William Hurt, and I know that Andrew Niccol can make (very) good films... But what the hell was all this? Nothing is properly explained, why this and that happened, how it was possible to do that, and the tortured love (double) affair bothered me like nothing I've seen in a long time. I didn't see any (let's say gimmicky) scenes that would have diverted my attention elsewhere, and I had to do a lot to make it to the end. That hasn't happened to me in a long time. Yuck. ()

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