Night of the Demon (1980 film)

Last updated
Night of the Demon
NightoftheDemonVHS.jpg
1983 VHS artwork by VCII, Inc.
Directed byJames C. Wasson [1]
Screenplay byMike Williams [1]
Story byJim L. Ball
Produced byJim L. Ball [1]
Starring
  • Michael Cutt
  • Joy Allen
  • Robert Collings
  • Jodi Lazarus
  • Richard Fields
  • Michael Lang
  • Melanie Graham
CinematographyJohn Quick
Edited byJoy Rencher's Editorial Service
Music byStuart Hardy
Dennis McCarthy
Production
company
Aldan Company
Release date
  • 1983 (1983)(U.S.)
Running time
92 minutes [lower-alpha 1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$70,000 [3]

Night of the Demon is a 1980 [lower-alpha 2] American horror film directed by James C. Wasson, written by Jim L. Ball and Mike Williams, and starring Michael Cutt, Joy Allen, Robert Collings, Jodi Lazarus, Richard Fields, Michael Lang, and Melanie Graham. The film centers on an anthropologist who, along with a group of his pupils, embarks on an expedition to prove the existence of Bigfoot in a rural region of Northern California, only to be stalked and systematically slaughtered by the creature.

Contents

Completed in 1979, the film was first released on VHS in the United States in 1983. Due to its graphic violence, the film was deemed a "video nasty" by the British Board of Film Classification, and underwent heavy censorship in the United Kingdom. It later received a DVD release from Code Red in 2011, sourced from a tape master. In November 2021, Severin Films issued the film for the first time on Blu-ray, featuring a 2K scan from the original film elements, which were previously alleged to be lost.[ citation needed ]

Plot

Bill Nugent, an anthropology professor, is approached by Carla Thomas, a young woman whose father was murdered in the woods in Northern California. She suspects that his death was caused by a Bigfoot who, according to legend, resides in the woods in the region. Despite a number of disappearances and brutal murdersincluding the death of a young couple, the manual emasculation of a biker, and the butchering of two Girl Scouts police have deemed the theory of a Bigfoot being responsible a hoax. Carla requests to accompany Bill along with four of his studentsRoy, Pete, Gary, and Lindaon an expedition aiming to prove Bigfoot's existence.

They embark by boat along a river, and first camp on the property of an elderly man, Lou Carlson, who has claimed to witness the Bigfoot. Lou allows them to stay but is evasive when they attempt to speak to him. When one of the students, Roy, bribes Lou with alcohol, Lou suggests they seek out Wanda, a recluse who resides deep in the woods, and supposedly holds more information about the Bigfoot. Meanwhile, a hunter camping nearby is attacked and impaled by the Bigfoot on a jagged branch.

The next day, Nugent and his five companions visit the nearby town, where they glean from locals more information about Wanda: She is the daughter of a deranged preacher, Emmet McGinty, whose followers were rumored to engage in inbreeding, cannibalism, and human sacrifice. Emmet has since committed suicide. After learning of this, the group returns to the woods. That night, after the five have fallen asleep, they are awoken by the sound of chanting. Bill and Roy follow the sound, and stumble upon a Satanic sexual ritual involving Wanda around an effigy of Bigfoot; among the practitioners is a local sheriff. Bill interrupts the ritual by firing a gun, causing the cultists to scatter.

In the morning, Bill and the others find their boat missing, and large footprints left on the shore. After making plaster casts of the footprints, they push onward. That night, the Bigfoot attacks Linda and Gary while the two have sex, but they survive. The group eventually reach Wanda's cabin, bribing her with candy, but she has a nervous breakdown when the Bigfoot is mentioned. That night, Pete is attacked by the Bigfoot, who causes him to shoot himself with his rifle. The others attempt to locate Pete, but find he has disappeared.

Bill decides to hypnotize Wanda the next day, causing her to recall her abusive childhood: As a teenager, Wanda was brutally raped by the Bigfoot, an event Emmet had witnessed in horror. Convinced the beast was a demon, Emmet unsuccessfully attempted to induce an abortion by forcing Wanda to drink poison. Wanda eventually gave birth to the mutant half-human child, but Emmet killed it moments after its birth. In retaliation, Wanda burned her father alive in his barn, staging it to look like a suicide.

Hoping to find evidence of Wanda's Bigfoot child, Bill explores a cemetery nearby, where he digs up the skeletal remains of the infant Bigfoot. The Bigfoot appears in the cemetery, and absconds with its dead spawn as Bill and the others barricade themselves in Wanda's cabin. Hours later, the Bigfoot hangs Pete's mutilated body on the porch before breaking into the home. Ignoring a dissonantly calm Wanda, the Bigfoot strangles Carla to death as the others shut themselves in the kitchen. The Bigfoot breaks into the kitchen, where he disembowels Gary. Roy attempts to stop him, but the Bigfoot smashes his head through the window and cuts his throat on the glass, before impaling Linda with a pitchfork. Finally, the Bigfoot burns Bill's face on the hot stove, leaving him for dead.

Sometime later, Bill lies helplessly in a hospital bed, having been found unconscious in the woods, his face horribly burned. When detectives inquire about Carla and the four students, all of whom are missing, Bill recounts his version of events to them. Both the police and attending doctors receive his story with disbelief, and the hospital psychologist deems him criminally insane.

Cast

Production

Filming

By cinematographer John Quick's recollection, the film's budget was approximately $70,000. [3] Quick had worked with producer Jim L. Ball previously on a 1964 feature he had filmed while attending the University of Southern California entitled Fraternity of Horror. [7]

Principal photography took place in 1979, with the exterior sequences being largely filmed in Valencia, California, near Six Flags Magic Mountain, as well as other undeveloped areas outside Los Angeles. [8] Additional filming locations include at the Feedbin feed store in Malibu, as well as producer Jim L. Ball's private studio on La Brea Avenue, which is where the interior cabin sequences were filmed. [lower-alpha 4] The college campus featured in the beginning of the film is that of Immaculate Heart College. [lower-alpha 4]

Post-production

Following the film's completion, a small showing was held largely for cast and crew members, which led to a second screening at a local Los Angeles film festival. [10] After the film performed poorly with audiences at the festival, producer Jim L. Ball shot numerous gore-filled sequences to insert into the film, retrofitting it in a way that each of the graphic murders are told through flashback, and serve as the anthropology students' impetus to capture the bigfoot. [11] According to director James C. Wasson, he had no involvement in the filming of these scenes, and his original cut of the film was much more tame. [11] The final sequence in which the bigfoot murders the remaining students in the cabin was filmed in a makeshift studio in producer Ball's garage in Los Angeles. [12]

Release

Censorship

Due its depiction of brutal violence, Night of the Demon was listed as a "video nasty" by the British Board of Film Classification. [13] It remained banned in the United Kingdom until January 1994, when VIPCO resubmitted it to the BBFC, who agreed to pass it with an 18 certificate as long as one minute and forty-one seconds' worth of gore was deleted. [14] Almost all of the violent scenes were trimmed, but the castration of the biker and the removal of a student's intestines (for use as a flail) were removed completely.[ citation needed ]

Critical response

Devon Bertsch of Digital Retribution wrote, "When the Bigfoot is off screen, it is admittedly hard to overlook the film's many, many flaws. Indeed everything that is not the Bigfoot is highly flawed, and even the Bigfoot himself looks pretty crap. The acting, script, FX and the often incongruous score are laughable, but add to the film's wacko charm." [15] A 2½ out of 5 was given to the film by Justin Kerswell of Hysteria Lives!, who called it "undoubtedly the best of the worst of the early 80s backwoods slashers". [16] Dread Central's Chris Haberman stated, "Is this a 'so-bad-it's-good' movie? No. This is one of those rare, largely forgotten films that was taken so seriously by its creators that it is difficult to imagine a large team of people reading the script, enjoying it, coming on-board, and putting in the time and energy to bring the terrible story to life. As such, this is an 'I-must-have-a-fever' movie, because most of what you'll see may feel like a hallucination" and "The film has plenty of problems, but I think the reason its supporters still stand beside this freakshow is that the film works hard to entertain. No matter how clumsy the dialogue and effects may be, these cats were trying to be taken seriously, and the result is too angry and depraved to be considered a lazy cash-in or mocking parody piece. The filmmakers' intention to make an earnestly mean and perverted film is undeniable, and that weird essence turns even the most absurdly executed set pieces into memorable mindfuckers". [17]

Film scholar Scott Von Doviak wrote of the film's representation of violence: "It's a repugnant piece of work all around, yet Night of the Demon earns its place in motion picture history simply by getting more out of the phrase 'horribly mutilated' than any other movie ever made." [18]

Rob Hunter of Film School Rejects wrote that the film "is played completely straight, but Night of the Demon is gloriously bonkers." [19]

Home media

The film was released on VHS in the United States in 1983 by the Los Angeles-based home video company VCII, Inc., [20] who reissued it in 1986. [21] Gemstone Entertainment released another VHS edition in 1987. [22] Vipco released the film on VHS in the United Kingdom on September 13, 1993, [23] though, according to the British Board of Film Classification, cuts were made to the film for this release. [24]

It was later released for the first time on DVD by Black Horse on November 1, 2004, and by Vidtape on November 30 that same year. [25] Code Red released the film as a part of its Maria's "B" Movie Mayhem series on October 11, 2011. [25] It was last released by Mr Fat-W Video on June 21, 2016. [25]

On November 26, 2021, Severin Films released the film for the first time on Blu-ray, launching it as part of their annual Black Friday online sale. [26] Additionally, Severin released a new novelization of the film by Brad Carter, as well as various limited memorabilia, including keychains, figurines, and a small number of bigfoot masks replicated from the mask used in the film. [27]

Notes

  1. Some VHS releases (such as the 1983 and 1986 VCII, Inc. releases) indicate a 97-minute running time on the box artwork, while the 1987 VHS release by Gemstone Entertainment lists a 95-minute running time; however, the 2011 DVD release by Code Red—which is presented as the "uncut version"—runs approximately 92 minutes. [2]
  2. The film is most often classified as a 1980 production, [4] [5] [6] though it contains a copyright date of 1979 in its end credits. [2]
  3. The 1983 VCII, Inc. VHS release lists a Michael Lang on the front cover under the list of "starring" actors, and he is also credited on the Internet Movie Database; however, because the film does not have an end credits sequence, his role is undetermined.
  4. 1 2 In the documentary short Eye of the Demon: An Interview with John Quick on the 2021 Severin Films Blu-ray, portions of the original screenplay and shooting schedule are shown at the approximately 8 minute-mark, which name several shooting locations and their exact addresses. [9]

Related Research Articles

<i>A Goofy Movie</i> 1995 US animated film by Kevin Lima

A Goofy Movie is a 1995 American animated musical comedy-adventure film produced by Disney MovieToons and Walt Disney Television Animation. Directed by Kevin Lima, the film is based on The Disney Afternoon television series Goof Troop created by Robert Taylor and Michael Peraza Jr., and serves as a standalone follow-up to the show. It features the voices of Bill Farmer, Jason Marsden, Jim Cummings, Kellie Martin, Rob Paulsen, Pauly Shore, Jenna von Oÿ, and Wallace Shawn. Taking place three years after the events of Goof Troop, the film follows Goofy and his son, Max, who is now in high school, and revolves around the father-son relationship between the two as Goofy embarks on a misguided mission to bond with his son by taking him on a cross-country fishing trip around the United States. This movie explores the themes of adolescent angst and crude humor that are more diverse over Goof Troop.

A slasher film is a subgenre of horror films involving a killer stalking and murdering a group of people, usually by use of bladed or sharp tools. Although the term "slasher" may occasionally be used informally as a generic term for any horror film involving murder, film analysts cite an established set of characteristics which set slasher films apart from other horror subgenres, such as monster movies, splatter films, supernatural and psychological horror films.

<i>Harry and the Hendersons</i> 1987 film by William Dear

Harry and the Hendersons is a 1987 American fantasy comedy film directed and produced by William Dear and starring John Lithgow, Melinda Dillon, Don Ameche, David Suchet, Margaret Langrick, Joshua Rudoy, Lainie Kazan, and Kevin Peter Hall. Steven Spielberg served as its uncredited executive producer, while Rick Baker provided the makeup and the creature designs for Harry. The film tells the story of a Seattle family's encounter with the cryptozoological creature Bigfoot, partially inspired by the numerous claims of sightings in the Pacific Northwest, California, and other parts of both the United States and Canada over three centuries. In conjunction with the film's setting, shooting took place at several locations in the Cascade Range of Washington state near Interstate 90 and the town of Index near US 2, as well as Seattle's Wallingford, Ballard and Beacon Hill neighborhoods and other locations in or around Seattle.

<i>Humongous</i> (1982 film) 1982 Canadian film

Humongous is a 1982 Canadian slasher film directed by Paul Lynch, and starring Janet Julian, John Wildman, and David Wallace. The story centers on a group of young adults who become stranded on a deserted island, where they are stalked and murdered by a monstrous assailant.

<i>Happy Birthday to Me</i> (film) 1981 slasher film by J. Lee Thompson

Happy Birthday to Me is a 1981 slasher film directed by J. Lee Thompson and starring Melissa Sue Anderson and Glenn Ford. Its plot revolves around six brutal murders occurring around a popular high school senior's birthday.

<i>The Blood on Satans Claw</i> 1971 film

The Blood on Satan's Claw is a 1971 British supernatural period folk horror film directed by Piers Haggard and starring Patrick Wymark, Linda Hayden, and Barry Andrews. Set in early 18th-century England, it follows the residents of a rural village whose youth fall under the influence of a demonic presence after a local farmer unearths a mysterious deformed skull buried in a field.

<i>The Prey</i> (1983 film) 1983 American film

The Prey is a 1983 American slasher film directed by Edwin Brown, and starring Debbie Thureson, Steve Bond, Lori Lethin, and Jackie Coogan. It follows a group of campers in the Rocky Mountains who are stalked and murdered by a disfigured assailant.

<i>The Mutilator</i> 1984 American slasher film by Buddy Cooper

The Mutilator is a 1984 American slasher film written, directed and produced by Buddy Cooper, and co-directed by John S. Douglass. The plot follows a group of college students who travel to an island property during fall break and are stalked and murdered by one of the students' fathers.

<i>Girls Nite Out</i> (1982 film) 1982 film directed by Robert Deubel

Girls Nite Out is a 1982 American slasher film written and produced by Anthony N. Gurvis, directed by Robert Deubel, and starring Julia Montgomery, Suzanne Barnes, Rutanya Alda, and Hal Holbrook. The film focuses on a group of female college students who are targeted by a killer in a bear mascot costume during an all-night scavenger hunt on their campus.

<i>Dont Go in the House</i> 1980 American horror film directed by Joseph Ellison

Don't Go in the House is a 1980 American slasher film written and directed by Joseph Ellison, written by Ellen Hammill and Joe Masefield, and starring Dan Grimaldi. Its plot follows a disturbed man who, after suffering an abusive childhood in which his mother punished him with burning, becomes a pyromaniac and serial killer who kidnaps and burns alive any women who resemble her.

<i>Axe</i> (film) 1977 American horror film written and directed by Frederick R. Friedel

Axe is a 1974 American independent horror film written and directed by Frederick R. Friedel and starring Leslie Lee. Its plot follows a trio of criminals who lodge at a rural farmhouse where a teenage girl resides with her disabled grandfather. After one of the men attempts to rape her, she enacts revenge.

<i>Dark Night of the Scarecrow</i> 1981 American made-for-television horror film

Dark Night of the Scarecrow is a 1981 American made-for-television horror film directed by veteran novelist Frank De Felitta from a script by J.D. Feigelson. Feigelson's intent had been to make an independent feature, but his script was bought by CBS for television; despite this, only minor changes were made to the original screenplay.

<i>The Night Brings Charlie</i> 1990 American film

The Night Brings Charlie is a 1990 American slasher film directed by Tom Logan, and written by Bruce Carson. A sequel, to be written and directed by Bruce Carson, was announced in 2017.

<i>Psycho Cop</i> 1989 American film

Psycho Cop is a 1989 American slasher film, released direct-to-video. It was written and directed by Wallace Potts, noted for its similarities to the previous year's Maniac Cop by William Lustig and Larry Cohen. It was followed by a 1993 sequel entitled Psycho Cop 2.

<i>Fear in the Night</i> (1972 film) 1972 British film

Fear in the Night is a 1972 British psychological horror film directed, produced, and co-written by Jimmy Sangster and produced by Hammer Film Productions. The film stars Judy Geeson as a psychologically-fragile woman who, upon relocating to a rural boarding school where her husband has taken a job, finds herself being tormented by a mysterious figure with a prosthetic arm. Peter Cushing and Joan Collins, respectively, also star as the school's mysterious headmaster and his wife.

<i>Cruel Jaws</i> 1995 film

Cruel Jaws is a 1995 Italian direct-to-video horror film directed by Bruno Mattei under the pseudonym William Snyder. The film stars Richard Dew and David Luther, and was shot in Florida, including at the Theater of the Sea marine theme park in Islamorada.

<i>The Demon</i> (1979 film) 1981 South African slasher film

The Demon is a 1981 South African slasher film starring Cameron Mitchell and Jennifer Holmes and directed by Percival Rubens. The film was released in 1981.

<i>Satans Blade</i> 1984 American slasher film directed by L. Scott Castillo Junior

Satan's Blade is a 1984 American slasher film directed by L. Scott Castillo Jr., and starring Tom Bongiorno, Stephanie Leigh Steel, and Thomas Cue. It follows two groups of people lodging at a mountain resort who are stalked by a mysterious killer potentially linked to a supernatural entity in the mountains.

<i>Rituals</i> (film) 1977 Canadian film

Rituals is a 1977 Canadian horror-thriller film directed by Peter Carter, and starring Hal Holbrook, Lawrence Dane, and Robin Gammell. It centers on a group of doctors who are stalked and murdered while on a wilderness trip in remote Northern Ontario. The film was also released under the alternate title The Creeper.

<i>Prom Night</i> (film series) Canadian horror film series

Prom Night is a Canadian slasher film franchise that comprises a total of five feature films, the first four of which are centered around events at the fictional Hamilton High School. The first film, Prom Night (1980), was a slasher film directed by Paul Lynch and produced by Peter R. Simpson, focusing on teenagers being stalked and murdered by a masked killer at their prom. The film was a box-office success, grossing nearly $15 million. The following sequel, Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II (1987), was envisioned as a standalone film, but producer Simpson and his company, Simcom, refitted it as a sequel to the original Prom Night. Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II, a supernatural-themed slasher film, introduced the character of Mary Lou Maloney, a vengeful young woman who died on her prom night in 1957; its only connection to the first film was that both films take place in the same high school.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Night of the Demon (1983)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on April 24, 2020.
  2. 1 2 Night of the Demon (DVD). Code Red. 2011 [1980].
  3. 1 2 Gregory 2021b, 8:45.
  4. Nash & Ross 1987, p. 4160.
  5. "Night of the Demon" (in Dutch). VPRO Cinema. Archived from the original on May 13, 2020.
  6. Scheuer 1990, p. 30.
  7. Gregory 2021b, 4:00.
  8. Gregory 2021c, 10:24.
  9. Gregory 2021b, 8:56.
  10. Gregory 2021a, 16:10.
  11. 1 2 Gregory 2021a, 15:40–17:00.
  12. Gregory 2021c, 10:30–11:22.
  13. Kerswell, Justin. "A-Z of Video Nasties". hysteria-lives.co.uk. Hysteria Lives!. Retrieved 24 June 2014.
  14. "Night of the Demon". British Board of Film Classification. Archived from the original on May 7, 2020.
  15. Bertsch, Devon (8 November 2011). "Night of the Demon (1980)". digital-retribution.com. Digital Retribution. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  16. Kerswell, Justin. "Night of the Demon (1980, US)". hysteria-lives.co.uk. Hysteria Lives!. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  17. Haberman, Chris (June 20, 2010). "Retrospective: 1980's Slice of Sasquatchploitation - Night of the Demon". Dread Central . Archived from the original on May 24, 2010.
  18. Von Doviak 2004, p. 152.
  19. Hunter, Rob (April 4, 2020). "It's Played Completely Straight, But 'Night of the Demon' Is Gloriously Bonkers". Film School Rejects . Archived from the original on August 13, 2020.
  20. Night of the Demon (VHS). Los Angeles, California: VCII, Inc. 1983. VC 123.
  21. Night of the Demon (VHS). Los Angeles, California: VCII, Inc. 1986. VC 123.
  22. Night of the Demon (VHS). Charlotte, North Carolina: Gemstone Entertainment. 1987. 5067.
  23. "Night Of The Demon [VHS]: Michael Cutt, Joy Allen, Bob Collins, Jodi Lazarus, James C. Wasson: Amazon.co.uk: Video". Amazon . 13 September 1993.
  24. "Night of the Demon". British Board of Film Classification . Archived from the original on November 20, 2021.
  25. 1 2 3 "Night of the Demon (1980) Releases". AllMovie . Archived from the original on May 7, 2020.
  26. "Night of the Demon Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Archived from the original on November 27, 2021.
  27. "Severin Films Online Store". Severin Films . Archived from the original on December 14, 2021.

Sources