


The ill Paxton ends up locked in the pantry. Josh is anxious to leave, but Paxton convinces him to stay one more night with Natalya and Svetlana. Elsewhere, Óli has been decapitated, while Yuki is being tortured. The two are approached by a Japanese woman named Kana, who shows them a photo of Óli and her friend Yuki, who is also missing. Paxton and Josh have sex with Natalya and Svetlana, while Óli leaves with the desk girl, Vala. Josh apologizes for his reaction on the train. The Dutch Businessman intervenes to defend him. Josh has a run in with a gang of local criminal kids. The women invite them to a spa, and later to a disco.

Arriving in Slovakia, they find that their roommates in the hostel are two women, Natalya and Svetlana. The three board a train to Slovakia, where they encounter a Dutch Businessman, who touches Josh's leg. He convinces them that, instead of going to Barcelona, they should visit a hostel in Slovakia filled with beautiful women. Unable to get back into their hostel because of a curfew, they accept the offer of a man named Alexei to stay at his apartment. In the Netherlands, they visit an Amsterdam nightclub, followed by a brothel. Initially distracted by the good time they're having, the two Americans quickly find themselves trapped in an increasingly sinister situation that they will discover is as wide and as deep as the darkest, sickest recess of human nature itself - if they survive.College students Paxton and Josh travel across Europe with their Icelandic friend Óli. The two friends arrive and soon easily pair off with exotic beauties Natalya and Svetlana. Paxton and Josh are eventually lured by a fellow traveler to what's described as a nirvana for American backpackers - a particular hostel in an out-of-the-way Slovakian town stocked with Eastern European women as desperate as they are gorgeous. "Hostel" tells the story of two adventurous American college buddies Paxton and Josh who backpack through Europe eager to make quintessentially hazy travel memories with new friend Oli, an Icelander they've met along the way. Relentlessly graphic and deeply disturbing, the film is sure to shock even the most hard core genre fans. More grisly than Roth's feature bow, "Hostel" is a mixture of many of the most terrifying things about human nature and the world at large, culled from many impossible-but-true stories of human trafficking, international organized crime, and sex tourism. Internationally renowned filmmaker Quentin Tarantino presents Eli Roth's "Hostel," the follow-up to the writer-director's hit debut, 2002's "Cabin Fever".
