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Enter The Devil

3.1 out of 5 stars 9 customer reviews

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(May 27, 2008)
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Special Features

None.

Product Details

  • Directors: Sinister Cinema
  • Format: NTSC
  • Region: All Regions
  • Studio: Sinister Cinema
  • DVD Release Date: May 27, 2008
  • Run Time: 81 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B001AD54ES
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #87,708 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

When going into a 70's Devil movie, you have to realize that if you have any expectations coming into one of the 70's Devil films, it's guaranteed that you'll think they're the worst movies you've ever seen.

If you come into it thinking that it's the worst movie you'll ever see, then you may find to be pleasantly surprised, just like I was when I watched Enter The Devil (1972).

Of course, it goes without saying that the movie is incredibly low budget and it shows through and through, but it still means something that I enjoyed it.

What mainly caught my eye about this film was that though I was aware of how low budget the movie actually was, I couldn't help by find myself being creeped out at different parts throughout, which is something I never expected out of a 70's Devil movie like this.
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Another of those early-70s devil flicks that sprouted out everywhere after Polanski's landmark, ROSEMARY'S BABY [1968]. A guilty pleasure for lovers of obscure bad films. At least a novel plot: satanism in the Southwest, predating the similarly-plotted THE DEVIL'S RAIN [1975]. In terms of the G factor (gore/guts/gals) it is as dry as the landscape with no blood splatter, no limbs or viscera flying around, and the main babe fully-clothed throughout [don't let the cover art fool you]. Basically, stingy, low-budget stuff with rattlesnakes doing most of the damage. Except for familiar-face Joshua Bryant [MASH, DALLAS and a bunch of other TV series] and Irene Kelly [STAR TREK episode, The Omega Glory, 1968] the cast is comprised of a bunch of 'how-am-I-doin?' unknowns. You do get the craggy-faced Sheriff, the rotund town doc with askew hat and the beer-guzzlin and incompetent deputy Sheriff who prefers to fix cars and chase gals. Nothing scary here but the chanting, shrouded devil worshipers walking about does make you want to get under the covers. Basically torpid fare recommended only for bad-movie nation, collectors of period-piece cinema or lovers of the satanism-in-the-woods subgenre (yep, that's me) of which EQUINOX [1970] is the seminal work. If you like the idea of satanism in the Southwest you're better off watching the more entertaining, THE DEVIL'S RAIN, the offbeat BROTHERHOOD OF SATAN [1971] or the underrated RACE WITH THE DEVIL [1975]. If you like to get creeped out by the chanting undead then HORROR HOTEL [1960, aka THE CITY OF THE DEAD] is definitely worth watching. As for the Sinister Cinema DVD quality the film appears bleached with colors muted and a vertical thin light-green line appears a couple of times. Still gotta thank Sinister for getting this lost bad flick on disc to be used as a hypnotic or just to piss off your friends on Halloween night.
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This is clearly a home-made bootleg item:

1. it is a DVD-R (purple media recording surface), not a commercial-grade DVD (silver media recording surface).
2. The front artwork is blurry, clearly copied form another source and printed on cheap home equipment.
3. The content is a low quality (bad color shifts and chrominance levels, incorrect exposure-levels, un-calibrated black levels, blurry, etc.) junk quality bootleg movie transfer.
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Enter the Devil (Frank Q. Dobbs, 1972)

It's been a long, long time since my experiments with illicit hallucinogens, well over two decades now, and that is not a bad thing. There are, however, times when I wish I still had access to them. And the entire length of Enter the Devil was one of those times. I get the feeling that this movie would be a complete hoot were the viewer under the influence. Dobbs, who was much better known as a writer (Gambler V: Playing for Keeps), directed four films in his lifetime, of which this is the first; it's coherent, though barely, and everyone in it's having way too good a time. As a side note, I'm not sure if it's the genesis of so many monster-movie clichés or just recycling them for our use, but a quick mental rummaging doesn't come up with any previous flicks to use a few of the conventions that pop up here. That alone may make it worth tracking down (as hard as that may be to do these days).

Story: hot grad student Leslie Culver (Irene Kelly, whose only other credited film role came in Dirty Dingus Magee, but who appeared in some of the swingin' sixties and seventies' most popular TV shows, including Star Trek and BJ and the Bear) heads to a remote area of the American southwest in order to study Satanic cult activity. She finds herself in an upright, and maybe a little uptight, conservative-Christian town. There are rumors of human sacrifice there, but as small as the town is, you gotta wonder where they're getting the bodies. In any case, hot chicks are few and far between in the middle of nowhere, so she finds herself romanced by the local hotelier ('Salem's Lot's Joshua Bryant) and the local law (stuntman, character actor, and director David S. Cass).
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When going into a 70's Devil movie, you have to realize that if you have any expectations coming into one of the 70's Devil films, it's guaranteed that you'll think they're the worst movies you've ever seen.

If you come into it thinking that it's the worst movie you'll ever see, then you may find to be pleasantly surprised, just like I was when I watched Enter The Devil (1972).

Of course, it goes without saying that the movie is incredibly low budget and it shows through and through, but it still means something that I enjoyed it.

What mainly caught my eye about this film was that though I was aware of how low budget the movie actually was, I couldn't help by find myself being creeped out at different parts throughout, which is something I never expected out of a 70's Devil movie like this.
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