Late Night with the Devil | |
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Directed by | Colin Cairnes Cameron Cairnes |
Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Matthew Temple |
Edited by |
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Music by | |
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Distributed by |
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Running time | 95 minutes [2] |
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Language | English |
Box office | $15.5 million [3] [4] |
Late Night with the Devil is a 2023 supernatural horror film written, directed, and edited by Colin and Cameron Cairnes. It stars David Dastmalchian, Laura Gordon, Ian Bliss, Fayssal Bazzi, Ingrid Torelli, Rhys Auteri, Georgina Haig, and Josh Quong Tart. Incorporating elements of "found footage" and documentary filmmaking, the film follows the events of a late-night talk show episode aired on the night of Halloween 1977, during which the host attempts to boost ratings by inviting an allegedly possessed girl onto the show.
An international co-production of Australia, the United States, and the United Arab Emirates, [5] Late Night with the Devil had its world premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival (SXSW) on 10 March 2023. It was released theatrically in the United States on 22 March 2024 by IFC Films and in Australia on 11 April. The film grossed $15 million and received positive reviews from critics. [6] [7]
The film's prologue is framed as a documentary investigating an unexplained event that occurred on the night of Halloween 1977, during the live broadcast of a sixth-season episode of the successful variety late-night talk show Night Owls with Jack Delroy, which competes for ratings with The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson .
Through his celebrity connections, Night Owls host Jack Delroy, who is based in New York City, makes regular visits to "The Grove," an elite California camp for wealthy and powerful men. After his wife Madeleine dies of cancer, Night Owls halts its production. Jack ultimately returns and, in order to boost the show's low ratings, does a special occult-themed episode on Halloween. Special guests for the episode include self-proclaimed psychic and medium Christou, skeptic and former magician Carmichael Haig, parapsychologist author Dr June Ross-Mitchell, and June's latest subject, 13-year-old Lilly D'Abo who is purportedly possessed by a demonic spirit.
During the broadcast, Christou experiences a premonition about someone named "Minnie", which Jack reveals was his private nickname for Madeleine. Christou becomes sick, projectile vomits a black liquid, and is rushed to the hospital. In the next segment, June introduces Lilly, the sole survivor of a mass suicide by a Satanic church and its leader Szandor D'Abo that worshipped Abraxas. Jack convinces her to conjure the demon inside her, whom Lilly dubs "Mr. Wriggles". During a commercial break, the crew informs Jack that Christou has died from hemorrhaging in the ambulance.
During June's conjuring, Lilly becomes possessed and levitates in her chair. The demon notes having previously met Jack "under the tall trees", revealing that Jack and June are romantically involved and suggesting that Jack wanted his wife "out of the way". Lilly's possession then subsides and the show continues.
Carmichael challenges June by subjecting Jack's sidekick Gus McConnell to a hypnotism demonstration, which causes nearly everyone in the studio to see worms pouring out of him. When the production team rewinds the footage, it proves that the demonstration was merely a joint hallucination experienced by nearly everyone in the studio; however, the supernatural phenomena that occurred during June's conjuring is unaltered in the recorded playback. Jack is horrified when he notices Madeleine's ghost standing behind him in the footage, but Carmichael accuses him of orchestrating the events. Lilly becomes possessed again; her head splits open and begins to glow like lava. She brutally kills Gus, June, and Carmichael, and Jack is suddenly transported to a nightmarish version of the show.
He relives moments in the show's past before it is revealed that he indeed had a connection to the demon possessing Lilly: he encountered it during a ceremony at The Grove, where he made a pact with the Devil by sacrificing the soul of his wife in exchange for fame and the TV success of Night Owls. Thus, he was indirectly responsible for Madeleine's cancer. Madeleine's ghost begs Jack to put her out of her misery, as the cancer is causing pain. Using the ritual Athame dagger from Lilly's former Satanic cult, he then stabs her to death; and the scene suddenly shifts to the now-empty studio. A horrified Jack realizes he has stabbed and killed Lilly on live television. He stands over the bodies of his dead guests as police sirens approach in the distance.
Production on Late Night with the Devil was announced on 13 February 2022, with the Emirati studio Image Nation and the American genre label Spooky Pictures attached. Describing their decision to base Late Night with the Devil on a late-night talk show, writer-director duo Cameron and Colin Cairnes stated: "In the '70s and '80s, there was something slightly dangerous about late-night TV. Talk shows in particular were a window into some strange adult world. We thought combining that charged, live-to-air atmosphere with the supernatural could make for a uniquely frightening film experience." [10]
The Cairnes brothers offered the role of Jack Delroy to David Dastmalchian after reading an article Dastmalchian wrote for the magazine Fangoria about regional TV horror hosts. Dastmalchian accepted the part after being sent a lookbook designed to resemble a 1970s TV Guide , along with the film's script. [11] Dastmalchian's casting was announced on 24 June 2022. [12]
Ian Bliss who played Carmichael Haig in the movie was originally set to play another character, but days prior to filming he was told to read for Haig as the actor who was set to play Haig withdrew from filming. [13]
Late Night with the Devil was shot in Melbourne, Australia. [14] The film utilizes practical special effects, including puppetry, along with digital visual effects. [11]
Late Night with the Devil had its world premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival (SXSW) on 10 March 2023 in Austin, Texas, where it played as part of the festival's "Midnighters" section. [6] [14] [15] That same month, horror author Stephen King was provided with an advance screener of the film and tweeted, "It's absolutely brilliant. I couldn't take my eyes off it. Your results may vary, as they say, but I urge you to watch it when you can." [16] [17] The film screened at the Sydney Film Festival from June 9–15 of 2023. [17]
In October 2023, IFC Films and Shudder acquired the distribution rights for North America, United Kingdom and Ireland. [18]
The film was released on limited glow-in-the-dark VHS on October 28, 2024. [19]
Late Night with the Devil grossed $10 million in the United States and Canada, and $5.5 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $15.5 million. [3] [4]
The film opened on 22 March 2024 in 1,034 theaters in the United States and Canada, and earned $2.8 million in its opening weekend, the best debut for an IFC Films release; additionally, media outlets noted that the total included an estimated $666,666 gross on its third day. [20] [21] Expanding to 1,442 theaters the following weekend, the film made $2.2 million, finishing in seventh. [22]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , 97% of 224 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.8/10.The website's consensus reads: "Delightfully dark, Late Night with the Devil proves possession horror isn't played out – and serves as an outstanding showcase for David Dastmalchian." [23] Metacritic , which uses a weighted average , assigned the film a score of 72 out of 100, based on 22 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. [24]
Variety 's Dennis Harvey commended the film's production design and technical aspects, as well as that of the cast, and wrote that the film's "mix of vintage Me Decade showbiz cheese and Exorcist -y demonic doings is distinctive, not to mention deftly handled by the [Cairnes] brothers as both writers and directors." [6] Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com praised the film as inventive and its use of the found footage format as clever, and highlighted Dastmalchian's "phenomenally committed performance [...] really holding the film together as he finds the right tone between smarmy and likable that dominated so much '70s culture." [25]
Meagan Navarro of Bloody Disgusting gave the film a score of three-and-a-half out of five, criticizing the film's pacing as rapid but writing that "the ingenuity, the painstaking period recreation, a riveting performance by Dastmalchian, and a showstopper of a finale make for one Halloween event you won't want to miss." [26] Trace Sauveur of The Austin Chronicle also praised Dastmalchian's performance and called the film "totally gimmicky, but the sincere commitment to the conceit is what really makes this work." Sauveur adds that, despite finding the film's conclusion lacking, "Late Night with the Devil is able to mine plenty of effective and fun ideas out of its premise, and it works as a potent examination of the price of success." [27]
Mark Kermode of Kermode and Mayo's Take called it "really enjoyable", adding that he thought it was influenced by the 1992 British mockumentary supernatural horror TV film Ghostwatch . [28]
Wendy Ide of The Observer gave the film a score of four out of five stars, praising its satire and comedic elements, calling it "[s]mart, cynical and at times devilishly funny, the film delivers a crackle of disruptive static to the demonic possession genre." [29]
John Lui of The Straits Times gave the film 4 stars in which he describes the film as "Comedy, horror and homage come together in style in this hugely enjoyable work". [30] For Entertainment Weekly , Allaire Nuss wrote that Late Night with the Devil, which she described as being presented in a mockumentary and analog horror format, was "the first great scary movie of 2024" and that she "adored every second of it". [31]
In the week leading up to the film's release, some reviewers pointed out the use of AI-generated art in a montage, which was not present in the version screened at SXSW, and called for a boycott of the film. In response to the controversy, directors Cameron and Colin Cairnes said: "In conjunction with our amazing graphics and production design team, all of whom worked tirelessly to give this film the 70s aesthetic we had always imagined, we experimented with AI for three still images which we edited further and ultimately appear as very brief interstitials in the film." Star David Dastmalchian said: "So I think [Cameron and Colin] said it really well, and I stand by what they said and I completely stand by this movie as a thoroughly original piece of work that so many many hours went into this incredible artistic craftsmanship to be set in this world. So it's a good conversation to have. It's an important conversation. We've got to have it." [36] [37]
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