I'm
afraid this is going to be a short one but that's not without good
reason. Simply put, NIGHT OF THE DEMON, known in the U.S. as CURSE OF
THE DEMON, gets my vote as the best black magic-oriented horror film
ever made, and I would be a colossal asshole worthy of a well-aimed ski
boot right to the balls if I revealed more than just the briefest
outline of its particulars... Ya know, ROSEMARY'S BABY is also right up
there and now that I think about, the great narrative strength of both
films stems from their fantastic/supernatural events being set firmly
within a then-modern 20th century world in which the characters (and by
association, the audience) simply cannot believe in the likes of
superstition and Satanic cults because they supposedly know better, only
to be proven completely and utterly horribly, horribly wrong. Here it is in brief:
Dr. Julian Carswell (Niall MacGinnis) is the head of a devil-worshiping
cult who by means of the darkest of "olde magicks" disposes of those who
would ridicule his activities as bunk or try to expose him, which we
witness during the opening moments of the film. Basically, Carswell is
quite capable of summoning a demon straight from Hell itself to tear his
enemies limb from limb, and next on his list is American psychiatrist
and debunker of mystical shit, Dr. John Holden (Dana Andrews), who is in
England to follow in his now-dead predecessor's footsteps in exposing
Carswell as a presumed bullshit artist during an international
convention of assorted learned types. When Holden scoffs at Carswell's
ominous cease-and-desist warnings, he finds himself immediately plunged
headlong down a path of events that any rational person would deny were
happening, and though joined by his dead colleague's niece (Peggy
Cummins) who has come to believe in a lot of dark shit after reading her
uncle's journal and notes, the guy has to be convinced the hard way
that his world has now got enough evil in it to fuel twenty King Diamond
albums and that his demise at the talons of a thirty-foot demon is
imminent...
I assure you that I have not given away any of the whys and wherefores of the story and now I urge you to get your hands on it immediately. I had not seen this film since I was a kid and even though I enjoyed it back then, it's that much more potent when experienced from a grownup's perspective. Trust me, you will not be disappointed.

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