The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review
General Indexes
All Titles
· A – B · C – D
· E – F · G – H
· I – K · L – M
· N – O · P – R
· S – T · U – Z
Reviews
Science-Fiction
· A – D · E – K
· L – Q · R – Z
Horror
· A – D · E – K
· L – Q · R – Z
Fantasy
· A – D · E – K
· L – Q · R – Z
New
· Most Recent Additions
Best & Worst
· 2007 · 2002
· 2006 · 2001
· 2005 · 2000
· 2004 · 1999
· 2003 · 1998


TALES FROM THE CRYPT PRESENTS DEMON KNIGHT
Rating

USA. 1995.
Director – Ernest Dickerson, Crypt Keeper Sequences Directed by/Producer – Gilbert Adler, Screenplay – Mark Bishop, Ethan Reiff & Cyrus Voris, Photography – Rick Bota, Music – Ed Shearmur, Visual Effects – Available Light Inc (Supervisor – John T. Van Vliet), Makeup Effects – Todd Masters Co & Kevin Yagher Productions, Production Design – Christian Wagener. Production Company – Crypt Keeper Pictures.
Cast:
William Sadler (Frank Brayker), Billy Zane (The Collector), Jada Pinkett (Jeryline), Thomas Haden Church (Roach), Dick Miller (Uncle Willy), C.C.H. Pounder (Irene), Brenda Bakke (Cordelia), Charles Fleischer (Wally Enfield), Gary Farmer (Deputy Bob Mandel), John Schuck (Sheriff Tupper), Ryan Sean O’Donahue (Danny), John Kassir (Voice of The Crypt Keeper)

Plot: The Crypt Keeper previews his new film ‘Demon Knight’: In the film, Frank Brayker seeks refuge in a fleabag hotel in Wormwood, New Mexico. But soon a bald-headed man known as The Collector comes in pursuit. The Collector controls demonic forces that surround the hotel and try to posses the other tenants to get in. The others discover that Brayker has in his possession a container that contains the blood of Christ, the only means of stopping The Collector.
Originally Tales from the Crypt (1950-5) was one of the horror comic titles developed by William C. Gaines, publisher of the infamous E.C. Comics. Gaines published a number of such titles – The Vault of Horror (1950-5), The Haunt of Fear (1950-4), Weird Science (1951-5), but Tales from the Crypt was the most famous of these. Each issue of Tales from the Crypt would feature several stories that would climax with the selfish nasty getting their just desserts and would feature a ghoulish narrator who would frame each story with outrageous puns. Gaines and E.C.’s controversy was immortalized by psychologist Frederic Wertham who published a book The Seduction of the Innocent (1953) and led an attack before a Senate Subcommittee, charging that the violence in comics was subverting the nation’s youth, where E.C.’s horror titles were held as the prime exhibit. The Comics Code Authority was instituted and thereafter many distributors refused to carry the E.C. line and Gaines was essentially forced out of business – Gaines of course bounced back with a new title Mad Magazine in 1954. But the E.C. horror comics are what Gaines’s name will forever be associated with. Two films were made adapted from the E.C. strips by Amicus in the early 1970s – Tales from the Crypt (1972) and The Vault of Horror (1973) – but these lacked the essential black humour of the originals. Filmic interest in the E.C. style was rekindled by George Romero’s Creepshow (1982) and several tv anthology series imitating the E.C. style such as Tales from the Darkside (1983-6) and Monsters (1988-90). There then came the Tales from the Crypt (1989-96) cable series, which was quite faithful to the comics and in fact adapted a number of stories, and proved popular, lasting seven seasons. Demon Knight was an attempt to then spin Tales from the Crypt out as a cinematic franchise. Demon Knight is directed by Spike Lee’s former cinematographer Ernest Dickerson, who made his debut the year before with the human-hunting film Surviving the Game (1994). The story is standard Tales from the Crypt fare – it just has a bigger budget and some more extreme splatter effects. It’s all fairly standard fare as the contemporary horror film goes – it is campy, it has a very tongue-in-cheek villain who fires off one-liners and lots of over-the-top splatter effects. As this sort of film goes it is competently done. It doesn’t insult the intelligence as badly as most of the moron-level films in this genre do, but on the other hand it doesn’t particularly distinguish itself either. The splatter effects are competent – fists through the head, arms ripped off, demons with exploding heads, a cool looking 12-foot-tall demon at the climax. But the script is very weak. Nothing is done with the intriguing concept of Christ’s blood – what is the point of the blood? Does The Collector spend all his time pursuing it because it can destroy him? If this is the case then how come, as the twist ending reveals, the blood does not destroy The Collector after all? William Sadler gives a not-too-bad performance of burned-out intensity. Jada Pinkett, later to become Mrs Will Smith, came to promising attention here, and is quite good. Only Billy Zane, from whom one expected good things in this part, disappoints in a rather intrusively campy playing. There was a sequel – Tales from the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood (1996) – which was terrible. Its lack of success fairly much brought about an end to the Tales from the Crypt film series – there was the subsequent Tales from the Crypt Presents Ritual (2001) but that dithered around in release li,bo for some time, eventually being dumped straight to video minus the Tales from the Crypt banner. Ernest Dickerson went onto direct the tv movie Futuresport (1998) and the interesting Blaxploitation/horror homage Bones (2001).
 

Copyright Richard Scheib 1995