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Synopsis

As the movie opens, a priest has just passed away, and on his person is a key to a basement room inside a condemned church/hotel. Father Loomis (Donald Pleasence) inherits the key and calls on an old friend, physicist/philosopher Howard (Victor Wong), for help. After discovering a greenish liquid being held in prison inside an ancient cylinder in the basement of the church, Howard assembles a group of scientists and graduate students to spend a weekend at the church to investigate the cylinder and its content.

As soon as the group begin arriving at the church, a small army of homeless people also begins showing up. Soon, the homeless army has surrounded the church and sealed everyone inside, just as the greenish liquid inside the cylinder in the church’s basement is beginning to come “alive”… —Beyondhollywood.com

Director

Original

John Carpenter

John Howard Carpenter (born January 16, 1948) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, editor, composer, and occasional actor. Although Carpenter has worked in numerous film genres, his name is most commonly associated with horror and science fiction.

Carpenter was born in Carthage, New York, the son of Milton Jean (née Carter) and Howard Ralph Carpenter, a music professor. He and his family moved to Bowling Green, Kentucky in 1953. He was captivated by movies from an early age, particularly the westerns of Howard Hawks and John Ford, as well as 1950s low budget horror and science fiction films, such as Forbidden Planet and The Thing from Another World and began filming horror shorts on 8 mm film even before entering high school. He briefly attended Western Kentucky University where his father chaired the music department, but transferred to the University of Southern California’s School of Cinematic Arts in 1968 and graduated in 1971.

At USC Cinema, one of… read more

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Displaying 4 of 12 wall posts.
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film_lies101

12May12

I remember the devil's hand being so much bigger as a kid

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Mike

30Mar12

There are some ingenious things going on in this film, like the foundational struggle between science and spiritualism. I also admire Carpenter's use of mirrors as a passage for evil, and his depiction of supernatural transmission through dreams. Shot and edited with expertise.

Mr. Arkadin and Jack Lehtonen like this

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Jason Callen

18Feb12

I'd go 3 1/2 stars actually. Really creepy, underrated Carpenter.

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serotoninronin

10Jan12

Let's call this film what is clearly is, namely, Carpenter's second best film. It fits quite perfectly between his best, which is even more clearly The Thing, and the rest, which range from brilliant (this and The Thing are transcendently brilliant) to foolhardy. Jack's comments about the distillation of evil here are on point, though I disagree that the film is a better taste of Carpenter's essence than The Thing.

johnsonisjohnson and 2 others like this

Trevor Tillman, Jack Lehtonen

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    serotoninronin

    10Jan12

    Indeed, I've always taken The Thing to be Carpenter's major moral statement. The Thing is not a morally neutral presentation of humanity's nightmare scenario, though I admit that there are elements of that in the film. More importantly, though, it strikes me that Carpenter does not hesitate to deal with the titular Thing as if it itself were evil, though it is not conscious in the way that we normally require moral agents to be, and the way the Devil is portrayed in PoD. This point, I think, is evidenced by the fact that the Devil must 'actualize' himself in a human form in order to be fully effective and, by extension and more importantly, fully evil. The Thing never requires this of its evil, and yet it is still evil. Evil exists for Carpenter as such a strong objectivity that humanity need not even be here for it to exist and persist. It is an incredibly strong moral claim, and THIS is the point of The Thing. Either way, Prince of Darkness kicks ass.

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