Hell and Back (film)

Hell and Back is a 2015 American stop motion adult animated fantasy comedy film directed by Tom Gianas and Ross Shuman and written by Gianas, Hugh Sterbakov and Zeb Wells. It stars the voices of Nick Swardson, Mila Kunis, Bob Odenkirk, T.J. Miller, Rob Riggle, Susan Sarandon and Danny McBride.[2] The film was released October 2, 2015, by Freestyle Releasing.[3]

Hell and Back
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Produced by
  • Eric Blyler
  • Alexander Bulkley
  • Corey Campodonico
Written by
Starring
Music by
  • Ryan Franks
  • Scott Nickoley
CinematographyEric Adkins
Edited byMatt Mariska
Production
company
Distributed byFreestyle Releasing
Release date
  • October 2, 2015 (2015-10-02)
Running time
84 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$157,768[1]

Plot

Idealistic carnival barker Remy (Nick Swardson) is desperate to bring in business at a rundown pier carnival alongside his childhood friends, overweight and odd carnival repairman Augie (T.J. Miller) and their insolent assistant manager Curt Myers (Rob Riggle). After Curt reveals the bank has foreclosed the carnival, a frustrated Remy heads down to the boat of a fortune-teller named Madame Zonar (Kerri Kenney-Silver) and borrows a book of spells with one page depicting the Devil crying. Remy tells his friends he a business opportunity with the crying devil page while setting the book up for display at The Gates of Hell attraction. When Curt requests a mint Remy has in his possession, Remy forces Curt to take a blood oath on the book so he can pay Remy back with a mint only for Curt to callously admit that he doesn't have a mint. While Remy and Curt argue, Augie sees strange weather before Curt is sucked into a portal within the ride. Remy and Augie take a car from the ride into the portal to rescue Curt, only to find themselves in Hell.

Remy and Augie are discovered by demons and are taken to the Devil (Bob Odenkirk) as he just came from a meeting. He encounters the duo and while speaking his intent to torture them, mentions the Greek legend Orpheus who has a reputation for bringing mortals out of Hell. He forces the duo to hide when visited by an angel named Barb (Susan Sarandon), with whom he is infatuated. When Barb mentions that she is aware of the mortals in his domain, the Devil tries to win her graces by handing them over. But he discovers that they have escaped and calls out a search for them. Remy and Augie are about to captured by the demons while they use a contraption to escape. But they are saved by a mysterious figure that disposes of a demon stowaway while revealing herself to be a female demon named Deema (Mila Kunis) who Augie becomes infatuated with. She agrees to take them to Curt if they take her to Orpheus by using the Devil's cell phone, which they snagged earlier. Meanwhile, Curt meets the Devil and hits it off with him until learning he is to be ritualistic killed for not living up to his blood oath, Curt persuading the Devil to not sacrifice him via a contract if he puts on a show to win Barb's favor with a replacement sacrifice.

Remy, Augie, and Deema locate the way to Orpheus which is guarded by Deema's mother Durmessa (Jennifer Coolidge), who warn Deema that Orpheus isn't what she expects him to be as they get pass her. They use a submarine and eventually find Orpheus (Danny McBride), revealed to be an eccentric slacker who is retired from saving mortals while having one-night stands with numerous women. Annoyed with Orpheus, revealing herself to be his daughter through his fling with Durmessa, Deema leaves with Augie following her upon being fed up with Remy's selfishness. After sharing a romantic moment while on Charon's ferry, they discover from the Devil's cellphone that Curt is being sacrificed at the crossroads and head out to save him. When Remy finds out where Curt is via Orpheus's TV, he leaves to find him and uses a Purgatory boat to catch up with his friends and reconciles with them.

As they haven't found a replacement at the time, the Devil goes back on his deal with Curt and decides to sacrifice him anyway. While the Devil retires to the bathroom after eating Curt's contract, Remy, Augie, and Deema manage to make it past the Demons guarding Curt and reunite with him. They find themselves at the mercy of the demons and the Devil who decides to sacrifice them all. Having a change of heart, Orpheus attempts to rescue them while disguised as the leader of a demon band, but is also captured. Barb, who the Devil called and showed her the mortals, comes to Hell via a stripper's pole and she becomes attracted to Orpheus because of his song when he disguised himself. A jealous Devil tries to use a bazooka cannon full of T-shirts to kill Orpheus, accidentally knocking Barb out as she was getting the group to safety. The group survives the fall, but find themselves in the lower regions of hell full of living sex-offender trees, including one tree (H. Jon Benjamin) who repeatedly raped Orpheus as a child. Seeing the tree to be truly regretful, Orpheus accepts his forgiveness if he rapes the Devil.

Remy, Augie, Curt, and Deema are caught and bounded by the trees and when Remy is eventually held down by roots, Curt, while hanging upside down from a tree, drops a mint onto Remy. Although upset at first about Curt keeping this from him, Remy is told that if he eats the mint, the blood oath will be paid. The Devil and a demon try to stop him, but Remy eats it with him and the others returning to the land of the living with Deema while the Devil is forced to watch Barb fly off with Orpheus as he is being hit on by the tree much to his distress. Finding that Remy's idea to keep the park open succeeded, the group renovated the park six months later to have attractions based on their experience in Hell along with an attraction called the "Gates of Heaven" with Orpheus and Barb in it.

The ending credits show a lost soul in Hell and a Demon who keeps misleading him (as he does this many times in the film) with the occurrences ending with the demon saying "Welcome to Hell".

Cast

Release

In May 2015, Freestyle Releasing acquired distribution rights to the film and set the film for a September 25, 2015, release.[4] However, it was pushed back to October 2, 2015.[5]

Reception

Box office

Hell and Back opened theatrically on October 2, 2015, in 411 venues, earning $104,374 in its opening weekend, ranking number 33 in the domestic box office.[6] As of October 15, the film grossed $157,768.[1]

Critical reception

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 0% based on 5 reviews, with an average rating of 2.45/10.[7] Bloody Disgusting, a subsidiary of CraveOnline, gave a negative review by criticizing the humor (particularly the drawn-out running gag regarding male rape), but praising the stop-motion animation.[8]

gollark: If people want them they can just go to the cave.
gollark: You know, with TJ09 meddling a dragon *could* become its own parent...
gollark: It looked like you'd somehow created a loop before I reread it.
gollark: I don't know if they will when they're off the releasy ratios, but whatever.
gollark: They're just piling up in alpine.

See also

References

  1. "Hell and Back (2015)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved October 5, 2015.
  2. "Susan Sarandon Headed To Hell & Back". Empire Online. July 3, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  3. Edwards, MJ (August 23, 2015). "'Hell & Back' Red Band Trailer Finally Released". Rotoscopers. Retrieved August 23, 2015.
  4. Dave McNary (May 17, 2015). "Animated Hell and Back Freestyle". Variety. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  5. "Hell and Back Red-Band Trailer". Slashfilm.com. August 19, 2015. Retrieved September 17, 2015.
  6. "Weekend Box Office Results for October 2-4, 2015". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. October 5, 2015. Retrieved October 7, 2015.
  7. "Hell and Back (2015)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 10, 2020.
  8. "[Review] 'Hell and Back' Provides an Uninspired Ride into the Underworld". Bloody Disgusting. CraveOnline. October 1, 2015. Retrieved October 7, 2015.
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