{2jtab: Movie Review}

The Perfect Host

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4 stars

Suffer the Sadomasochistic!  Murder the Merrymakers!  Court the Claustrophobic!  Your perfect host for the evening’s anguish has arrived!

Turning the tables on a fugitive-turned-party crasher is done deliciously in writer/director Nick Tomnay’s The Perfect Host.  It’s a slick little demented thriller that is as chilling as it is darkly comical.  Actor David Hyde Pierce seems to be enjoying the chance to cut loose and combine an eerie take on his “Frasier” persona and mix it with two pinches of maniacal nuttiness.  Perverse and psychologically charismatic, The Perfect Host – while inexplicably not a hit with critics – is a clever stroll down Hitchcock Lane with a glorious amount of twists and turns.

A desperate thief, John Taylor (Clayne Crawford), seeks refuge from the gathering swarm of police and news reports inside a wealthy socialite’s home in Los Angeles.  He’s wounded and out of breath from running.  Pretending to be the friend of a mutual acquaintance (information he gleamed from a postcard in the mailbox), John is able to earn a bit of trust from Warwick Wilson (David Hyde Pierce) in the few hours that remain before Warwick’s dinner party.  Warwick, being the nice guy that he is, lets him inside to use the phone.  John lies through his teeth and, lead on by Warwick’s answers and insistence to stay, is able to relax a bit…until he hears the news report about his bank robbery and, more importantly, about who turned him in.

Suddenly, the gig is up and he and Warwick’s fast friendship dissolves into a hostage situation with John threatening to kill Warwick.  Warwick fears for his life…and his wooden floors that John is bloodying with his bandaged foot, yet he can’t keep from smiling.  And, when John passes out from Warwick’s tinted wine, the dinner party begins…

…and Warwick has a feast of friends.

Bizarrely entertaining, The Perfect Host is a fairly self-contained game of cat-and-mouse that, while never as surprising as it ought to be, is too jam-packed with good performances from its two leads to go ignored.  The movie does flesh itself out with a back-story involving John and his girlfriend, Simone (Megahn Perry), and some nice moments between Warwick and his conga-line lovin’ friends.  And, when the gloves come off, Warwick has a deliciously dark and demented picture book that he likes to show his guests.

Writer/director Tomnay has updated his original script (and original short film) to include a more dynamic and disturbing ending.  The duplicitous nature of the film and its actors adds to the delirium felt by the audience.  At times, this is a wonderfully tense nail-biter that relieves its tension with a bit of dark-natured comedy before returning to its noose.  Toward the end of the movie – when we are no longer facing familiar territories – the film falters a bit in rolling out its next canvas, but it quickly recovers and delivers a memorable ending.

While some of The Perfect Host can be predicted from its trailer alone, it’s the journey that is the most surprising aspect.  Never once can you look away or keep the smile from pursing your lips.  Its dark humored chocolate bars and blood red candy-coated craziness are simply too delicious to resist.

{2jtab: Film Details}

The Perfect HostMPAA Rating: R for language, some violent content and brief sexual material.
Director
: Nick Tomnay
Writer
: Nick Tomnay
Cast: David Hyde Pierce; Clayne Crawford; Nathaniel Parker; Helen Reddy; Joseph Will
Genre
: Crime | Drama Thriller
Tagline:
Dinner Partys Are A Dying Art.
Memorable Movie Quote: "One, two, three, CONGA!"
Distributor:
Magnolia Pictures
Release Date:
July 1, 2011 (limited)
DVD/Blu-ray Release Date:
August 30, 2011

Synopsis: Warwick Wilson is the consummate host. He carefully prepares for a dinner party, the table impeccably set and the duck perfectly timed for 8:30 p.m. John Taylor is a career criminal. He's just robbed a bank and needs to get off the streets. He finds himself on Warwick's doorstep posing as a friend of a friend, new to Los Angeles, who's been mugged and lost his luggage. As the wine flows and the evening progresses, we become deeply intertwined in the lives of these two men and discover just how deceiving appearances can be. With outstanding performances by David Hyde Pierce and Clayne Crawford, cowriter/director Nick Tomnay takes us on a suspense-filled ride where nothing is as it seems. The Perfect Host is a slippery psychological thriller that exposes true human nature and reveals just how far we're willing to go to satisfy our needs.

{2jtab: Blu-ray Review}

The Perfect Host

Component Grades
Movie

Blu-ray Disc
4 stars

3 stars



Blu-ray Experience
3.5 Stars

Blu-ray

Blu-ray Details:

Available on Blu-ray - August 30, 2011
Screen Formats: 1.78:1
Subtitles
: English (SDH) and French
Audio: English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Discs: 50GB Blu-ray Disc; Single disc (1 BD); BD-Live; Blu-ray 3D

Shot with the RED one camera, The Perfect Host’s attention to detail is ripe and consistently flattering to its 1080p transfer.  Curiously, there is some softness to the picture and, toward the end, noticeable banding effects.  In fact, an underwhelming flatness to the look of the film become more noticeable as the story develops.  Colors are stylistically muted and not overly warm.  While it is the score that uses the surround channels the most, there is nothing disagreeable to report about its DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack.  Levels are strong throughout, but never overcompensating or dominating in any way.

Supplements:

Commentary:

  • None

Special Features:

Anyone hoping for the original short film, The Host, to be included in this release can forget about it.  There aren’t a lot of supplementals.  Sure, you get an interview with the writer/director of the film and, yes, he covers a lot of ground over the making and re-making of the feature film but when the only other featurette is an HDNet inside look there’s a bit of disappointment felt by its owner.  While the release is a bit of a letdown from Magnolia (who usually do stellar jobs on their blu-ray releases), the movie comes highly recommended.

  • Making of The Perfect Host (10 min)
  • HDNet: A Look at The Perfect Host (5 min)
  • Trailer

{2jtab: Trailer}

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