Tourist Trap Movie Download
Tourist Trap YTS
Tourist Trap YTS Movie Download HD Links
Tanya Roberts as Becky
Shailar Coby as Davey
Jocelyn Jones as Molly
Tourist Trap 1979 720p.BluRay
692.19 MB
1280*720
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles
23.976 fps
1 hr 30 min
Seeds ….
Tourist Trap 1979 1080p.BluRay
1.23 GB
1920*1080
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles
23.976 fps
1 hr 30 min
Seeds 8.
Tourist Trap review
9 / 10
A marvelously odd & eerie 70’s drive-in horror favorite
One of the oddest, most strikingly eerie and creepy horror films to come out of the 70’s, “Tourist Trap” even by the loose, free-wheeling, convention-defying “anything goes” standards of its time rates as a real weirdie. Yet, it’s the picture’s very strangeness — a masterfully mounted uncanny atmosphere of pervasively off-kilter supernatural dread which from the get-go registers as powerfully spooky and becomes more increasingly opaque and frightening as the film progresses, offering up ample shocks amid a few scattered moments of surreally lovely dream-like elegance and ending on a bitterly ironic, crushingly nihilistic note with a haunting final image that’s hard to shake — which makes it such a unique and singularly unnerving experience.
Five teenagers traveling through the desolate California desert by car get hopelessly lost. They stumble across “Slausen’s Lost Oasis,” a seedy, rundown roadside dive that’s one part gas station, three parts crummy wax museum, and all parts ratty and foreboding. The joint’s lonely, seemingly friendless and harmless owner Slausen (juicily overplayed with infectiously hammy brio by Chuck Conners) turns out to be a deranged psychic killer with lethal telekinetic powers. Slausen brings his freaky assortment of uncomfortably human-like mannequins to life and picks off the kids one by one so he can add them to his ever-growing collection of victims.
Director David (“Puppermaster,” “The Arrival”) Schmoeller adeptly wrings every last ounce of tension he can squeeze from the pleasingly ambiguous and open-ended script he co-wrote with J. Larry Carroll. (Said script’s stubborn refusal to provide some rational excuse for all the bizarre stuff which transpires throughout the movie, often wrongly criticized as one of the film’s principal weaknesses, is actually the movie’s key strength, giving the picture the scary, anything-and-everything-can-happen, common-logic-be-damned quality of a true nightmare come horrifically to life which never would have been achieved if there was some kind of credible explanation offered for what’s happening.) Pino Donaggio’s beautifully chilling, understated score, Nicholas von Sternberg’s shadowy cinematography, and Robert A. Burns’ grubby, cramped production design add immensely to the film’s profoundly unsettling mood. Excellent performances are another significant plus, with the pretty, perky Jocelyn Jones (Ellie-Jo Turner in “The Great Texas Dynamite Chase”) particularly fine and personable as the most resilient and sympathetic of the endangered teens. Even Tanya Roberts fares well as a luckless lass who has a knife levitated into her head. Offbeat and unusual, “Tourist Trap” is well worth visiting.Read More