Night of the Demon (1980 film)
Night of the Demon is a 1980[3][4][lower-alpha 1] American horror film directed by James C. Wasson, written by Jim L. Ball and Mike Williams, and starring Michael Cutt, Jody Lazarus, 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.
Night of the Demon | |
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VHS released by VCII Incorporated | |
Directed by | James C. Wasson[1] |
Produced by | Jim L. Ball[1] |
Screenplay by | Mike Williams[1] |
Story by | Jim L. Ball |
Starring |
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Music by | Stuart Hardy Dennis McCarthy |
Cinematography | John Quick |
Edited by | Joy Rencher's Editorial Service |
Production company | Aldan Company |
Release date | November 24, 1980 |
Running time | 92 minutes[2] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Due to the film's graphic violence, it was listed as a "video nasty" by the British Board of Film Classification, and underwent heavy censorship.
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 murders–including 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 students—Roy, Pete, Gary, and Linda—on 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 her religious fanatic father, Emmet, 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, which appear to be more animal than human. The Bigfoot appears in the cemetery, and absconds with its dead spawn as Bill and the others fearfully 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 barricade 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.
Some time 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
- Michael Cutt as Professor Bill Nugent
- Melanie Graham as Wanda McGinty
- Shannon Cooper as Carla Thomas
- Bob Collins as Roy
- Jodi Lazarus as Linda
- Michael Lang as Pete
- Ray Jarris as Gary
- William F. Nugent as Lou Carlson
- Paul Kelleher as Sheriff
- Barrett Cooper as Reverend Emmet McGinty
- Lynn Eastman-Rossi as Susan Nugent
- Joy Allen as Female Student
- Eugene Dow as Doctor Paxton
- Don Hurst as Doctor Harris
- Terry Wilson as Inspector Stack
- Shane Dixon as Monster
- Richard Fields as Carla's Father
- Sally Swift as Van Lover
- Greg Langdon as Van Lover
- Rob Camp as Motoryclist
- Kathy Stimac as Girl Scout Jr.
- Renata Lee as Girl Scout Sr.
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.[6] 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.[7] 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.
Home media
The film was released on VHS by Vipco on September 13, 1993.[8] 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.[9] Code Red released the film as a part of its Maria's "B" Movie Mayhem series on October 11, 2011.[9] It was last released by Mr Fat - W Video on June 21, 2016.[9]
Reception
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."[10] 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".[11] 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".[12]
Notes
References
- "Night of the Demon (1983)". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on April 24, 2020.
- Night of the Demon (DVD). Code Red. 2011 [1980].
- "Night of the Demon" (in Dutch). VPRO Cinema. Archived from the original on May 13, 2020.
- Scheuer 1990, p. 30.
- Nash & Ross 1987, p. 4160.
- Kerswell, Justin. "A-Z of Video Nasties". hysteria-lives.co.uk. Hysteria Lives!. Retrieved 24 June 2014.
- "Night of the Demon". British Board of Film Classification. Archived from the original on May 7, 2020.
- "Night Of The Demon [VHS]: Michael Cutt, Joy Allen, Bob Collins, Jodi Lazarus, James C. Wasson: Amazon.co.uk: Video". Amazon.com. Amazon. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
- "Night of the Demon (1980) Releases". AllMovie. Archived from the original on May 7, 2020.
- Bertsch, Devon (8 November 2011). "Night of the Demon (1980)". digital-retribution.com. Digital Retribution. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
- Kerswell, Justin. "Night of the Demon (1980, US)". hysteria-lives.co.uk. Hysteria Lives!. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
- 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.