Contains mild spoilers.
To get
the most out of writer and director William Hopkins dark and twisted
Lovecraftian exploitative zombie opus, one has to have patience. Patience not
just to sit through thirty minutes of laboured exposition, an avalanche of
superfluous characters, motivations and ideas, and a narrative that
occasionally wanders but patience to see through a film that could easily be
dismissed as amateurish and trite. First impressions aren't great; the acting
is hit and miss, the dialogue hokey and the story audaciously confident in its
presentation given how excessive the content. But if one perseveres, makes it
to the thirty minute mark and is still awake, invested, and at some level open
to the ideas presented, then the rewards are more than worth it.
There's
mysticism, ancient races, strange cults, an ancient burial ground, a magic
stick, path-working, and even an appearance from some old god shrouded in CG
green mist to have his wicked way with the very naked star / victim of the
story Grace (Alexis Golightly). There's a lot going on yet as fanciful as it
gets, Hopkins pulls the Lovecraftian world together in a believable and
coherent way. As Grace's friends begin their intervention confronting her and
her boyfriend John (Damian Ladd), the real world as they perceive it slowly reveals a far darker one beneath, and their concerns start moving away
from relationships, phone signals and what coke and snacks might be in the
fridge to life, death and whether they might go the night without having their
innards ripped out.
The long
build up is approached with solemnity and absolute seriousness which can be a
bit risky given the low budget and unfortunately it can't avoid the many
pitfalls that come with amateur and b-movie yet Hopkins sticks with it and it never unravels enough to fall apart. Also this confidence and self-assuredness
to stick to the plan no matter what is maybe the actual reason why with the
arrival of undeniably the star of the feature, everything works so well.
The
grotesque Fulci / Amando de Ossorio / Mattei zombies that pull themselves up
out of mass grave to begin their siege of the house and brutal exploitative
slaughter of anyone who happens to find themselves caught out is a full on
return to the great zombie continental blood soaked lunacy we've come to look back on with great fondness, and never thought we'd get to see again. Innards get
ripped out, eyes get pierced, skin gets lacerated with full on exploitative
attention to detail, and the zombies advance like an unstoppable tide of death
(as they should); it's breath-taking stuff from Hopkins and masterfully
constructed from someone who obviously holds great respect for the genre he's
not just imitating but in my opinion now contributing towards.
Yes it's
another Romero farm house siege, though more Burial Ground than Night of the Living Dead, yes there's nothing we've not really seen before, and yes the
masks / coloured CG mist are easy to mock, but it's intense and gripping,
utterly and brutally brilliant and works on every level because it's dark, base
and serious. Derivative is a term that's easy to throw at zombie films, but
Demon Resurrection manages to dodge this label precisely because in the new zombie
world of The Walking Dead and Shaun it's everything that they're not. Ok I'm
playing with semantics but watching something old, nasty and no longer the vogue, that's actually new
with the ink still wet is refreshing, even if it could be accused of rehashing
the same mistakes.
The
zombies look and behave much like the non-skeletal long dead murder-machines
Amando de Ossorio fashioned for Tombs of the Blind Dead. They're chunky, brutal
and slow staggering monsters that move and grunt under the control of
Toth and seem to enjoy a sadistic pleasure in killing their (his) foes and
eating their flesh. There's no blue skin here or parody uniformed recently
deceased leaping about; they're methodical, they know where their enemies are
and they will get back up after being knocked down. There's no head shooting
and no hope; they're evil and desperately inhuman and seemingly invincible.
And there's John...
John is
also brought back from the dead by Grace who has a book and knows the right
words. John however is not a Blind Dead gut muncher but a white vest top
Gandalf / Jesus mystic zombie with an inscribed magic totem of power that's capable of
blasting Hoth's army of darkness into dust. His return is poignant, spiritual
and temporary, and though he's a bit Casper the friendly zombie, rescuing the scant
surviving friends he does show a darker side, enacting brutal vengeance given the opportunity. I
will add that a third zombie type makes a brief appearance too in the guise of Hoth's zombie victims who are now dead and hungry in the traditional
western Romero way. I'm not going to over think how these guys got turned or how
their eaten insides are now tucked back in but like in The Beyond a little mystery always goes well Z.
A mash
up Rosemary's Baby, Night of the Living, Dead Zombie Flesh Eaters / Burial
Ground with a good sprinkle of Lovecraft, Hopkins low budget dark and twisted
exploitative zombie opus Demon Resurrection is a triumph of amateur horror film
making. Oozing with dark passion with a self-assured unique personality all of
its own one has to applaud what has been achieved. Demon Resurrection is a
confident and self-assured film remaining intense and serious despite playing
with the most far-fetched edges of the Cthulhu mythos. It has its faults;
mainly born from its shoestring budget and perhaps trying too hard, but it's a film that ultimately prevails in many ways because of them. A full on return to past zombie craziness, with carnage, death, boobies and brutal bloody gore; it's a triumph and a zombie film made for zombie film fans, 8/10.
Steven@WTD.
This sounds spectacular. I will definitely seek this out based upon your recommendation. Upon cursory examination, it doesn't seem to be very readily available on this side of the pond.
ReplyDeleteHi Brandon,
ReplyDeleteI'm the film's director and I thought I'd just offer a few words about the film's availability.
Demon Resurrection is being self distributed by the producer and myself, so the best and safest way to buy the DVD is to go to http://www.demonresurrection.com. The DVD is region-free and we've shipped many copies to buyers in the UK and many other countries with no problem.
As for streaming, again, the best way to go is to visit http://www.demonresurrection.com. We're offering the film to viewers worldwide, subtitled in English and Spanish, with over 30 minutes of supplementary material. You can watch the movie online on your web browser or download it to own, all for just $3.99, payable by Paypal or credit card. The MPEG-4 file is DRM-free and can be downloaded for use on your computer or your favorite device. The streaming service is powered by vhx.tv, a safe, reliable company that viewers can buy from with confidence. So, for the DVD or to stream Demon Resurrection, the best option for viewers worldwide is http://www.demonresurrection.com.
My thanks to Steven for his terrific review and for helping to get the word out about the film. It's greatly appreciated.
I hope everyone enjoys Demon Resurrection : )
William Hopkins
Thank you for the info, William. Thanks, too, for providing me with the screener link. I look forward to seeing Demon Resurrection myself.
DeleteGreat review, Steven!
Excellent and thanks; just remember... patience!
Delete