Demons (film)
Demons | |
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English language theatrical film poster by Enzo Sciotti | |
Directed by | Lamberto Bava |
Produced by | Dario Argento |
Screenplay by |
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Story by | Dardano Sacchetti |
Starring | |
Music by | Claudio Simonetti |
Cinematography | Gianlorenzo Battaglia |
Edited by |
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Production company |
DACFILM Rome |
Release date |
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Running time | 88 minutes[1] |
Country | Italy |
Language |
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Budget | $1.8 million |
Demons (Italian: Dèmoni) is a 1985 Italian action-horror film directed by Lamberto Bava and produced by Dario Argento, starring Urbano Barberini and Natasha Hovey.[2] The screenplay was written by Bava, Argento, Franco Ferrini and Dardano Sacchetti, from a story by Sacchetti. Filming took place in Berlin and Rome.
The film was followed up by seven sequels (most of which are in-name only), beginning with Demons 2 in 1986.
Plot
On the Berlin subway, university student Cheryl gets off at her stop in the deserted subway station and is pursued by a mysterious, masked man. Rather than attacking her, the man offers her tickets to a free screening at the Metropol, an isolated and recently renovated local cinema. Cheryl talks her friend Kathy into going with her and they skip class to go see the film. At the crowded theater, they meet two preppy college boys, George and Ken, who take an immediate liking to the girls and help them get a can of cola out of the vending machine. The four sit together in the theater.
There are many people from all walks of life in the audience; a blind man and his guide daughter, an elderly married couple, a boyfriend and girlfriend, and a pimp named Tony along with his two prostitutes who look at the theater's display props in the foyer. One of the prostitutes, Rosemary, scratches her face with a bizarre display mask before they go in to watch the film. The film being shown is a violent, disturbing horror film which features a look-alike of the mask from the lobby; it is about four teenagers who discover an old tomb and dig up the grave of a sixteenth-century fortune teller called Nostradamus. When the teenagers dig up Nostradamus's coffin, they find no body and instead an old book and a mask identical to the strange mask in the foyer. When one of the movie's characters puts the mask and is scratched by it just like Rosemary was by its doppelganger, he then turns evil and slaughters his friends with a kitchen knife.
Rosemary feels ill and goes to the bathroom, where the scratch on her face bursts open and spews out pus, she then transforms into a bloodthirsty, red-eyed demon like the one in the film. Rosemary attacks her friend, Carmen, who then rips through the screen and transforms into a demon in front of the rest of the cinema-goers. The group of uninfected people race to any exit they can find, only to find that they have all been bricked up making escape impossible. Although they attempt to barricade themselves in the balcony, many are attacked and infected by the demons. One of the demons escapes into the city when four punks break into the building through a back entrance; the punks are soon transformed into demons as well.
In the cinema, only George and Cheryl remain uninfected. Using a display motorcycle and sword props from the foyer, they ride through the auditorium, slicing down many demons. George kills nearly all of them when suddenly, a helicopter crashes through the roof. George and Cheryl use an emergency grappling hook and winch to climb to the roof, where they are attacked by the mysterious man from the subway. They are able to kill him by impaling his head on an exposed bit of rebar. The two climb down to the street and discover that the demonic infection has spread throughout Berlin. They are then chased by a horde of demons before being picked up by a jeep of well-armed survivors (a father and his two children) and they make their escape. As they drive out of the city to safety, Cheryl transforms into a demon and is shot by one of the other passengers, having her body fall out of the jeep and onto the road. With George being the cinema's last survivor, he escapes with the family in the jeep into a distant unknown future.
Cast
- Urbano Barberini as George
- Natasha Hovey as Cheryl
- Karl Zinny as Ken
- Paola Cozzo as Kathy
- Fiore Argento as Hannah
- Geretta Giancarlo as Rosemary
- Michele Soavi as Man in Mask / Jerry (Horror Film)
- Bobby Rhodes as Tony
- Fabiola Toledo as Carmen
- Guido Baldi as Tommy
- Nicoletta Elmi as Ingrid the usherette
- Stelio Candelli as Frank
- Nicole Tessier as Ruth
- Lino Salemme as Ripper (as Pasqualino Salemme)
- Bettina Ciampolini as Nina
- Giuseppe Mauro Cruciano as Hot Dog (as Giuseppe Cruciano)
- Peter Pitsch as Baby Pig
- Eliana Miglio as Edith (Horror Film)
- Jasmine Maimone as Nancy (Horror Film)
- Marcello Modugno as Bob (Horror Film)
- Sally Day as Liz
- Alex Serra as Werner
- Claudio Spadaro as Liz's lover
- Enrica Maria Scrivano as Blonde Victim
- Liam Riley as Black Zombie
- Ambrose Burton as Homeless Zombie
Production
Dario Argento had an important influence on Dèmoni. In addition to co-writing the script, he also produced the film. Argento's daughter, Fiore, plays the character of Hannah. Michele Soavi, a devotee of Argento's work and his assistant director on several films, also served as an assistant director on Dèmoni and has two starring roles, as the man wearing the silver mask and as Jerry, one of the characters in the film playing at the Metropol. Nicoletta Elmi, who plays the usherette, appeared in Argento's 1975 classic giallo Deep Red, and she also had a small role in the 1971 horror film Twitch of the Death Nerve (directed by Mario Bava, the father of Dèmoni director Lamberto Bava).
Most of the interior cinema scenes were shot in an actual closed down movie theatre. The building still exists but is now a bank. At the same time, the building used for the exterior shots of the movie theatre still exists; it's a club called "Goya", whose appearance in the film has brought it fame and now regularly hosts horror conventions today. Filming took place in Germany and Italy, and as a reference to these countries' cinema, posters for Werner Herzog's Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht and Argento's Four Flies on Grey Velvet can be seen hanging in the Metropol's lobby. The music chosen for the film features several Heavy metal classics, and there is also an AC/DC poster in one scene.
Release
Demons was released to screens on 4 October 1985 in Italy and didn't see a release in the United States until the following year by the film distributor, Ascot Films, (an American small independent company that only released three films, Dèmoni, Bava's A Blade in the Dark, and The Check Is in the Mail..., and is no longer in existence today) which released the film unrated to theaters and drive-ins across the U.S. on 30 May 1986. Months later that year, Dèmoni was released on VHS by New World Home Video. In 1999, the film saw a DVD release along with Demons 2 by Anchor Bay Entertainment, also re-released on VHS. Two years later, Dèmoni was released in a double pack limited edition called the Dario Argento Collection. In 2007, Dèmoni was once again released by Anchor Bay in a new edition and fully widescreen transfer.
Arrow Video was the first to release the two films on Blu-ray/DVD in the UK. Demons and Demons 2 were first released on the Blu-ray Steelbook Case on April 30, 2012. Then later on May 21, 2012, the two films were released separately on Blu-ray.
Reception
Demons holds a 56% approval rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes based on nine reviews.[3] Leonard Maltin gave the film 1 1/2 out of 4 stars, criticizing the film's lack of characterizations, logic and plot.[4]
The film was listed at number 53 on US TV channel Bravo's The 100 Scariest Movie Moments countdown.[5]
Soundtrack
The soundtrack was released on LP. It has 1980s rock and Heavy Metal themes, while the sequel was pop and new wave oriented. The soundtrack was live performed during the twenty year Anniversary at Shock Pop Comiccon in February 2015.[6] The instrumental soundtrack was composed by Claudio Simonetti.[7]
- Billy Idol - White Wedding
- Accept - Fast as a Shark
- Mötley Crüe - Save Our Souls
- Claudio Simonetti - Demon
- Claudio Simonetti - Killing
- Claudio Simonetti - Out of Time
- Rick Springfield - Walking on the Edge
- Pretty Maids - Night Danger
- Go West - We Close Our Eyes
- The Adventures - Send My Heart
- Saxon - Everybody Up
Sequels
Some of the films mentioned below are not sequels, and are related in title only as a marketing strategy to gain popularity.
Original title | English title | Release year | Alternate title(s) |
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Dèmoni 2 | Demons 2 | 1986 | |
"La casa dell'orco" | Demons 3: The Ogre | 1988 | "The Ogre: Demons 3", "House of the Ogre" |
La chiesa | The Church | 1989 | Demons 3 |
Dèmoni 3 | Black Demons | 1991 | Demons 3 |
La setta | The Devil's Daughter | 1991 | Demons 4, The Sect |
La maschera del demonio | The Mask of the Demon | 1989 | Demons 5: The Devil's Veil |
Il gatto nero | The Black Cat | 1989 | Demons 6: De Profundis / From The Deep |
Dellamorte Dellamore | Cemetery Man | 1994 | Demons '95 |
See also
References
- ↑ "DEMONS (18) (CUT)". British Board of Film Classification. 12 January 1987. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
- ↑ Goodman, Walter (May 31, 1986). "Demoni (1985) SCREEN: 'DEMONS,' BY BAVA". The New York Times.
- ↑ "Dèmoni (Demons) - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
- ↑ Maltin, Leonard. Leonard Maltin's 2014 Movie Guide. Penguin Press. p. 347. ISBN 9780451418104.
- ↑ "The 100 Scariest Movie Moments: 100 Scariest Moments in Movie History - Official Bravo TV Site". bravotv.com. Archived from the original on 30 October 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
- ↑ Claudio Simonetti To Appear At Shock Pop Comiccon For ‘Demons’ Reunion
- ↑ Celebrate The ‘Demons’ 30th Anniversary With This Deluxe Bag Of Goodies
External links
- Demons on IMDb
- Demons at Rotten Tomatoes