There are many reasons people go backpacking in Brazil: breathtaking beaches, vibrant culture, cheap booze. Then there’s Turistas—a cinematic travel brochure that basically says, “Come for the scenery, stay for the black-market organ harvesting.” Directed by John Stockwell and released as Paradise Lost in the UK, this movie somehow manages to make a sun-soaked holiday look about as appealing as food poisoning from an airport sandwich.
It’s horror, yes. But not the fun kind. Not the “boo, monster under the bed” kind. This is the kind of horror where the biggest scare is realizing you just wasted 89 minutes of your life watching Josh Duhamel cry about his kidneys.
The Premise: Don’t Drink the Jungle Cocktails
We open with a group of wide-eyed backpackers whose collective IQ couldn’t outwit a coconut. Alex (Josh Duhamel), his sister Bea (Olivia Wilde, before she was busy directing Harry Styles), and their friend Amy (Beau Garrett) are traveling through Brazil when their bus crashes. Instead of thinking, “Hmm, maybe we should go home,” they stumble into a beach party where locals serve them drugged drinks. The next morning, they wake up robbed and stranded—proof that nothing good ever follows the phrase “free tequila shots.”
From there, things unravel fast. They meet Kiko (Agles Steib), the token friendly local, who takes them to his uncle’s cabin in the woods. Cabin in the woods. Horror movie. Red flag. And just in case you weren’t already screaming don’t go in there, the drawer full of stolen passports should’ve sealed the deal. But no. These tourists have the survival instincts of wet socks.
The Villain: Captain Kidney Snatcher
Enter Zamora (Miguel Lunardi), the mad doctor running the whole underground organ-harvesting gig. He’s got henchmen with rifles, a helicopter, and a moral crusade about making rich foreigners “give back” to Brazil. Noble? Maybe. Logical? About as logical as flossing with barbed wire.
His villain speech boils down to: “You exploit our country, so now I’m going to rip out your pancreas and donate it.” Which sounds less like horror and more like an aggressive GoFundMe campaign.
The Deaths: Don’t Worry, They’re All Replaceable
The gore is front and center—this is a movie obsessed with organs like a med school dropout with a grudge. Amy, poor Amy, wakes up strapped to a table where her liver and lungs are yanked out one by one, like a Black Friday sale at the butcher’s counter. Finn (Desmond Askew) gets shot in the head. Liam (Max Brown) gets captured and harvested. Kiko, the lovable sidekick, gets killed in the cave like a disposable NPC in a video game.
It’s brutal, sure, but not in a scary way. It’s more of a “please stop showing me surgery porn” way. Instead of shrieking, you’re sitting there wondering if your insurance covers organ theft.
The Survivors: Because Plot Says So
By the end, only Alex, Bea, and Pru (Melissa George) crawl out of the carnage alive. They survive caves, arrows, gunmen, and Zamora himself, who eventually gets his brains blown out by his own henchman. And what’s the moral of this bloody Brazilian postcard? Apparently: “Don’t take the bus.” No, seriously—the final scene has Alex warning other tourists in the airport: “Take the plane instead.”
So forget your Lonely Planet guide. Just remember: planes are safe, buses are kidney death traps, and you’ll probably lose your passport anyway.
The Cast: Lost and Found
Josh Duhamel tries his best to be the action hero, but he spends most of the movie looking like he’s about to call his agent to renegotiate his contract. Melissa George, bless her, plays the “final girl” role with all the charisma of a damp beach towel. Olivia Wilde has the good sense to die early in her career trajectory here. Beau Garrett gets her insides rearranged like a salad bar special.
The real standout? Agles Steib as Kiko. He’s charming, sympathetic, and tragically doomed—which makes him about ten times more interesting than the gaggle of Westerners he tries to save. But don’t get too attached. This movie treats locals like disposable tour guides in a video game—useful for the tutorial, dead by the boss fight.
The Cinematography: Brazil Deserved Better
The film was shot entirely in Brazil, which means the lush jungle and beaches are genuinely gorgeous. Unfortunately, the movie treats these locations like cheap wallpaper for organ-murder porn. It’s like buying front-row tickets to Rio Carnival and then staring at your phone the whole time.
The camera loves sweaty close-ups, frantic running shots, and lingering surgery scenes. But the beauty of Brazil? Wasted. If you’re going to terrify tourists, at least let us enjoy the scenery while our kidneys are being auctioned off.
The Horror: Hostel Lite, With Less Substance
Let’s be clear: Turistas is basically Hostel with less charm and more sunscreen. It tries to ride the wave of 2000s “torture porn” horror but forgets to include the one thing that makes it watchable: tension. Hostel made you feel trapped, manipulated, and claustrophobic. Turistas makes you feel annoyed, sunburned, and vaguely motion-sick.
The organ-harvesting angle could’ve been clever, tapping into real fears about black-market surgeries. Instead, it’s handled with the subtlety of a chainsaw. There’s no mystery, no dread—just endless waiting until the next unlucky backpacker gets carved up like a Thanksgiving turkey.
The Message: Don’t Be White Abroad
At its core, Turistas is less a horror movie and more a morality play for privileged Westerners: don’t be a dumb tourist. Don’t drink suspicious cocktails. Don’t trust friendly locals with caves. Don’t backpack without a clue. And above all, don’t assume Brazil is just a cheap vacation spot—it’s apparently a live-action organ donor signup sheet.
It’s condescending, xenophobic, and lazy. Instead of engaging with Brazil’s culture, history, or beauty, the film reduces the country to “murder, jungle, death.” Somewhere, an actual Brazilian rolled their eyes so hard they sprained something.
Final Verdict: The Real Horror Is the Screenplay
Turistas (2006) is a movie that thinks it’s warning us about the dangers of organ trafficking, but the real danger is sitting through it. The scares are cheap, the characters are dumb, and the only thing terrifying is how many clichés you can stuff into 89 minutes.
If you want a horror vacation, skip Turistas and just watch Jaws. At least the shark had dignity. This film? It’s a mosquito bite in cinematic form: itchy, irritating, and impossible to justify.
Verdict: 1 out of 5 kidneys. And even that’s generous. If you ever find yourself on a bus in Brazil, don’t worry about organ thieves—worry about someone making you watch this movie again.



