As tomorrow is Walpurgisnacht, we at Brutal As Hell decided this would be as good a time as any to celebrate Satan on screen. Kicking things off, here’s an appropriately devilish entry from Keri O’Shea…
The Devil’s relationship with cinema is a lengthy one. As the horrors of Hell have always found their way into art and literature, so the complex figure of Satan has always been at home on the silver screen – a medium which has long enjoyed playing with many of the ideas we associate with Old Scratch. From playful outrage to catastrophe, from the desire for power to the power of desire, Satan’s been a key player all along, and as such, we’ve seen him (or maybe even her) in lots of different guises down through the years. Well, the cloven feet aren’t always appropriate to the event, are they?
In putting together my list of my ten favourite representations of the Devil (and closely-related figures) on screen, I’ve tried to gather together examples which are as different from each other as they are memorable to me: yes, Satan may often be seen as an impresario with a good suit, but we don’t need or want just a cluster of good suits any more than we want a roomful of people with horns. I’ve also put together a fairly eclectic list; when I researched this article, and looked at what other people had made of the topic, I saw the same old faces and films, again and again, Robert de Niro, Al Pacino, and so on, and so on. I hope at least a few of my devils and unholy denizens are new and interesting, without ignoring too many characters who deserve their notoriety. So, without further ado…

10: Viggo Mortensen in The Prophecy (1995)
Biblical beings returning to Earth to effect changes in their own sphere: this has been the basis of a quite a few films through the years, but The Prophecy is an artistic take on this theme with a great cast, including Viggo Mortensen as Lucifer himself. Now, for my purposes here I’ll be conveniently ignoring the finer points of the plot to repeat – Viggo Mortensen. As Lucifer. As a very attractive Lucifer, it’s fair to say, especially when we remember that Satan has always been associated with the pleasures of the flesh. The Prophecy has a great many strengths, to be sure, but bringing a LILF to our screen is something I personally treasure it for.

9: Enrique Rocha in Satánico Pandemonium (1975)
Enrique Rocha’s deliciously camp turn as a Devil in red polyester definitely deserves a mention. His is a performance played with relish and a sense of fun, as he assaults the pious sister Maria at every turn, teasing her and tempting her to relinquish her high morals. A number of entertaining scenes are included to this purpose, such as Lucifer emerging naked from the river where Maria has gone to sit and enjoy the simple pleasures of God’s green earth, and the impish way Lucifer enjoys his (symbolically-loaded) apple, again, to Maria’s horror. People seem to really enjoy playing the Devil, and Enrique Rocha is absolutely one of them.

8: Peter Cook in Bedazzled (1967)
The Devil needn’t arrive intoning serious Biblical lore; in fact, one of the best on-screen Devils usually arrives with a cheery ‘Allo, Stanley!’ before wreaking sly and very funny, if plaintive, chaos on his unassuming charge. The Devil – or, as he walks amongst us by many different names, one of which is George Spiggott – saves the down-and-out Stanley (Dudley Moore) from the suicide he’s decided is the best way out of his miserable, unfulfilling life. Stanley decides to make a go of it instead, with George’s ‘help’: George buys his soul, and gives him seven wishes as compensation. However, every time Stanley uses a wish, George exploits some loophole in what he’s asked for to make poor Stanley all the more miserable. The verbal sparring between these two is a pleasure to watch, and Peter Cook brings one of the most likeable rogues ever to the screen here, all against the lost but ever-charming backdrop of Sixties London.

7: ‘Cernunnos’ [uncredited] in Alucarda (1975)
Before anyone comments to say I’m getting my mythology mixed up, consider the plot of the batshit-insane Mexican nunsploitation flick Alucarda: novice nun with a pathological attraction to dark forces signs a blood pact with a strange hunchbacked gypsy she and friend Justine meet in the woods. As you do. The coven they join with might be trying to raise Cernunnos, the horned god of the forest, but Alucarda keeps calling out to Judeo-Christian entities like Belial, so it’s not me that’s mixing up my mythology per se, it’s writer Juan López Moctezuma, and we wouldn’t have it any other way, now would we? The statuesque horned being which materialises to welcome the new girls and to oversee a nice celebratory orgy obviously has enough in common with depictions of the Devil to be allowed his place here, I reckon, especially as pagan gods have in the past been demonized by jittery religious folk.

6: Siobhan McKenna in Daughter of Darkness (1947)
A little-known film filled with ambiguity and undercurrents of repressed sexuality, Daughter of Darkness introduces us to the at-first gentle and persecuted Emmy, a young woman inexplicably hated for her supposed malign influence on the town’s menfolk by the women of the small Irish village where she lives. Emmy protests her innocence, and seems genuinely afraid of the situation unfolding around her, but the women have their way: the orphan girl is soon sent into service in England, far away from them, and their men. But is she truly as bewildered and innocent as she protests? Before long, we see a subtle darkness to her character. She does seem to have a chaotic effect on the males of our species after all, and we see – though never fully understand, to the film’s credit – the damage she does in her new place of residence. Emmy’s position as a temptation, an unknown force and a threat to order makes her an effective devil’s advocate if not a manifestation of Satan, and Daughter of Darkness manages to explore these themes with a subtlety which is years ahead of its time. The Devil could, indeed, be a woman…

5: Chernabog in Fantasia (1940)
The Disney Corporation, getting a mention on a site like Brutal as Hell? Really? Well, it turns out that many horror fans have a soft spot for their early animated fairy stories – which are themselves full of the sorts of details we’d probably spare overprotected children nowadays – and then of course, the ‘Night on Bald Mountain’ sequence in Fantasia has that fantastic, though brief, appearance from the Slavic ‘dark god’ Chernabog – another example of Old Nick getting mixed up with European pagan deities, but, with his majestic, winged and horned appearance, his skills as a necromancer and having his fun curtailed by church bells, he’s obviously has a great deal in common with Satan. As a child, incidentally, I was bitterly disappointed when he and his cohorts were vanquished by the insipid strains of Ave Maria…

4: Emil Jannings in Faust (1926)
We travel back further still for our next two on-screen devils, first with Murnau’s stand-out exploration of the enduring myth of souls-for-sale in Faust. If ever a film embodied the phrase, ‘the road to Hell is paved with good intentions’ then it is this one, because Faust the alchemist wants to save his village from a deadly pestilence by selling his soul. He wants to help people. Mephisto (Jannings), whose fault the plague is anyway, manipulates Faust, providing him with youth and lust, but always nurturing human misery along the way. It’s a technically-staggering early film with a versatile and conniving antagonist.

3: Benjamin Christensen in Häxan: Witchcraft Through the Ages (1922)
A staggering ninety years old this year, Häxan is still a breathtaking piece of film. Possibly in part thanks to how early it was made, it plays with structure and format in innovative ways which many filmmakers would avoid even now, but when Christensen made this film, there was very little to tell him how he should do it. Nothing had been set in stone at this stage. He felt free to go for a series of vignettes on the topic of sorcery, spanning from the 14th Century to the society Christensen knew, ostensibly forming a documentary on witchcraft, but with fantastical sequences forming part of it. Could he resist imagining witches’ sabbats on-screen, if this was his subject matter? No, absolutely not, and not only that, but Christensen himself features as the Djævlen (Devil) in his film, having the usual great time doing so. The Devil here is a traditionalist – horned, cloven-hooved, fleshly and insurrectionist.

2: Tihomir Stanic in The Enemy (2011)
The mysterious man here is certainly not a traditional devil in the sense of how he appears, but in how he behaves – dividing friends, exploiting weaknesses – his character is an interesting interpretation of the Devil. This comes through a stunning, low-key performance from Stanic as Dana, a man whom a group of soldiers find walled into a derelict factory as they perform a sweep of the nearby area at the end of the Bosnian War. They take him back to base, give him shelter but – there is something indefinable and threatening about him. When he talks to the men alone, he sends them into panic, or rage, or self-doubt. He is clever, and elusive, but gradually the soldiers ascertain who he is, but not yet what he can do or what he wants with them. A genuinely novel approach to some age-old themes, The Enemy (or Neprijatelj, to give it its Serbian title) deserves to be seen by far more people than have so far had the chance.

1: Eddie Powell in The Devil Rides Out (1968)
He’s officially uncredited for the part of The Goat of Mendes, otherwise known as Baphomet, in this lurid, clever adaptation of Dennis Wheatley’s novel, but stuntman Eddie Powell is almost certainly the man behind the goat, so to speak, in one of the strongest of the pop-occult movies of the 60s. One of its many strengths (not least the performance of Charles Gray as Mocata, who summoned our horned f(r)iend in the first place) is that it’s a film with some research behind it. The creature being played by Powell – allowing for the fact that the make-up used looks rather dated – is indeed Baphomet, as imagined by famed 19th Century occultist and magician Eliphas Lévi, a man whose influence on the occult revivals which came after his lifetime is not to be underestimated. Baphomet has a long pedigree, going right back to the fall of the Knights Templar in the 1300s. It also has a complex history, embodying anything from early Christian fear of Islam (‘Baphomet’ as a name is thought to stem from the word ‘Mahomet’, an early word for Muhammed) to those ever-balanced Christian perceptions of paganism, taking on various characteristics along the way. Essentially, Baphomet is an icon to fear and misunderstanding which has taken on a life and image of its own, and the team behind The Devil Rides Out were aware of this, using Lévi’s vision of the Goat of Mendes to powerful effect in an excellent film.
Festival Report by Nia Edwards-Behi
My three favourite films from the festival are vastly different. A devastating, harrowing and utterly compelling film, Kotoko is the latest from Testuo director Shinya Tsukamoto. The legendarily vocal BIFFF audience appeared to detest the film, but it was by far the festival stand out for me. It’s an incredibly slow moving film, but it never felt boring to me. Japanese singer Cocco takes the lead role of a woman who suffers a mental breakdown when her perceptual disorders make raising her child alone unbearable. It’s hard to do it justice, and it’s a film that’s going to take a few more viewings to fully appreciate, but it feels like a perfect, quiet companion piece to Tetsuo, in many respects, and even though it feels overwhelmingly serious, it has its moments of dark humour, like its predecessor. As breath-takingly difficult the film was, I cannot wait to see it again.
Father’s Day is the latest offering from Troma, and boy, does it deliver. Impressively well-made and fantastically irreverent, the film is genuinely funny whilst being incredibly inappropriate. What starts off as a serial killer movie turns into something else entirely, without seeming out of place. The film boasts some strong performances and a wicked soundtrack, and benefits from a truly funny framing device of being a TV show, complete with mid-film ad-break. I absolutely cannot wait to see this film again with a crowd.
Two incredibly silly films of varying levels of depth are Iron Sky and Zombie Ass. Both were films I highly anticipated and while one only just met my expectations, the other thoroughly surpassed them. Zombie Ass is as it sounds. It’s the latest Japanese splatter fest and while I found it thoroughly entertaining and, yes, even funny, it’s hardly a good film. It’s clear that Iguchi & co. are truly scraping the barrel (so to speak), and it shows most clearly through the use of a single-location (methinks their budgets are rapidly decreasing) and the almost entirely CGI effects. While Machine Girl and the like were glorious examples of fantastic practical effects, the over-abundance of CGI blood and fluids in these films are now verging on the… well, sad. Iron Sky, on the other hand was significantly cleverer than I expected, and even quite sweet. It’s a film about moon Nazis, and is massively entertaining (and in thoroughly bad taste, at times), but yet, it feels like a film that has something to say. Some great performances really round off what is a truly enjoyable film.
Beast is a completely different, er, beast: all slow and ambiguous and pretentious…so, naturally, I liked it. Reminiscent of a film like Trouble Every Day, I wasn’t ever sure if I was bored, while at the same time captivated. It’s a beautiful film to look at, and it’s central theme of sexual obsession and consumption is fascinating. It’s lead performances are powerful, particularly that of Nicolas Bro, who is, at times, truly repulsive, and yet, never unsympathetic.
Sennentuntschi: Curse of the Alps is a film that indulges in being far too long, not least of all through its wholly unnecessary present-day framing device around a film set in the 70s. Otherwise, it’s entertaining enough, particularly as the story it tells is relatively unfamiliar. Roxane Mesquida is particularly fabulous, as ever, even if the film is a little heavy on the men-abusing-women thing.
Another film which reminded me of better work was Game of Werewolves. In fairness to the film, perhaps it’s my lack of a sense of humour that’s the problem here – everyone else I spoke to adored this film, but I can genuinely say it didn’t make me laugh once. It had other things going for it, that is, a strong cast and some good transformation effects, but overall the film bored me to pieces, and reminded me a lot of Faye Jackson’s Strigoi, a film I enjoyed a lot more.
Invasion of Alien Bikini was perhaps the most misleading film I saw. Both its title and poster imply a fun, Sushi Typhoon-esque romp, but instead, the film is a 74-minute mess that feels like losing around 3 years of your life. The film spends about 20 minutes on a scene of two characters playing Jenga, before descending into a depiction of forced alien sex, the brutal beating of the alien-woman, and then some bizzaro political subplot…I think? I genuinely am not sure.

Belial Bradley is, to put it mildly, a vile piece of work: the film makes us wait thirty minutes for the big reveal of what or whom Duane is talking to, and when we finally see his dear twin brother, it ain’t pretty. The special effects make-up team, headed up by John Caglione Jr., strikes a very fine balance between the ridiculous and the sublime here! Voilà a distorted, adult-sized head, albeit with basically normal facial features (modelled by Kevin Van Hentenryck, who plays Duane), attached to a short, lumpen torso, and not much else: the only limbs are two claw-like hands, and if you can get past Belial’s appearance, then you have to contend with that raspy breathing and screeching (also down to Van Hentenryck). Shouldn’t judge a book by its cover? Belial is also murderous, jealous, petty, controlling, prone to wild tantrums, oh, and not averse to sexual assault either. Nice. It’s pretty obvious that we are not meant to warm to him at first, but perhaps another reason he has stuck in our minds so much is because, like a lot of memorable on-screen monsters, he’s not just a grotesque creature. He has a back-story as well. As we find out how people have treated him during his life, it all gets more complicated. If a person is treated like nothing more than a parasite, removed from their conjoined twin’s body by force and then put out in the garbage to die, would we expect them to be a well-adjusted human being? It’s not as simple as good twin/bad twin, either. We may start out feeling nothing but sorry for Duane, the physically-normal and naïve guy left holding the basket, but he’s not just a victim in all of this: he’s responsible for aiding and abetting his brother’s violence from the start, and obviously agrees with what Belial wants to do, right up until he starts hurting people who have nothing to do with their sad story. There is a moral ambiguity behind Basket Case after all, regardless of the lurid way it is played out. Everyone has an idea of ‘what’s best’ for the brothers Bradley, and the problem of Duane having a ‘normal life’ causes the problems which follow. Belial acts like a shit, but he’s only doing unto others what has been done unto him. And, hey, the fact that he unleashes vengeance on the doctors (and vet!) who cut him and Duane apart against their will allows for some heavy on-screen gore, which is yet another reason Basket Case retains a special place in the hearts of so many…
For a film made on a minuscule budget, then, Basket Case achieves a hell of a lot. It balances the very nasty with the ludicrous, it tips the hat to the gritty grindhouse fare which inspired it whilst standing on its own as an original piece of film, and – whether it was meant as such or not – it heralds the beginning of the Henenlotter ‘body horror’ genre with its deserved cult following. Whilst Henenlotter hasn’t made a great number of films during his career to date, the ones he does have to his name are instantly recognisable. For them, we must thank the surprise success of Basket Case, with its blend of body shock and 80s culture shock which is still a pleasure to watch, even after thirty years on the circuit. So happy birthday, Bradley brothers! Your place in horror history is well deserved. 
It’s not really too surprising that the Cat People remake isn’t so widely spoken of in fanboy circles. It has a female protagonist, a somewhat abstract tone, and only sporadic moments of gore and creature effects. Not to imply that fanboys are anti-intellectual by nature, but if a film defies easy description and isn’t specifically designed to appeal to young men, it tends to get swept under the carpet; I’ll admit, for that very reason I had pondered whether I should write this retrospective, uncertain as to whether or not the film is of interest to our (wince) core demographic. But the long and short of it is, whether the 1982 Cat People is highly regarded within horror fandom or not – it damn well should be. If remakes must keep being made – and, let’s not delude ourselves, they will – then the filmmakers responsible would do well to consider Schrader’s take on Lewton/Tourneur. It does what all remakes should set out to do: revise the central conceit for a contemporary audience, and make it stand apart as a unique and interesting piece of work in its own right. On top of that, it is a kind of film that is so rarely allowed to get made these days: a genuinely adult fantasy, not simply in the sense that it features lots of sex (though of course it does), but in that it is specifically oriented towards a grown-up audience, reflecting grown-up concerns, rather than the typically adolescent sensibilities that tend to dominate genre films (a comment, not a slur).

Now let’s consider the other half of that poster tagline; yes, the ‘erotic’ part. I’ve always found erotic a very strange word, perhaps down to how commonly misused it is in application to anything that involves sex; say, all those repetitive Sharon Stone or Shannon Tweed movies which generally present intercourse as a performance sport, the performers on the whole too infatuated with themselves to be particularly appealing to watch (remember Stone and Stallone in The Specialist? Shudder.) There’s a different vibe to Cat People, owing in no small part to the casting. Nastassja Kinski was an inspired choice for Irena; as a European actress not speaking in her native tongue, she is wholly believable as a stranger in a strange land, on top of which her short hair and slender figure lend her a certain androgyny which, while it may clearly flag the film as a product of the gender-bending early 80s, makes her stand out that bit more, particularly by comparison with Annette O’Toole’s softer-bodied, long-haired all-American girl. Also, Kinski’s sharp features and piercing eyes are, appropriately enough, somewhat feline, which doesn’t hurt. Even so, she has an unassuming quality which makes you believe she could be entirely unwitting in attracting the lust of others, and just about convinces you that she could indeed be a virgin. Without wishing to get too Freudian about it all (Schrader left his wife for Kinski during production) the film takes a slow-burn approach, lulling us to gradually fall in love with Kinski; while her naked body is a familiar sight by the end, its first appearance is not until over an hour in.








































